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Functional characterization of LbCDF-A, an ER-localized Zn transporter of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria bicolor

Mycorrhizal Networks

Every pine, oak, birch, and spruce you walk beneath relies on root fungi like Laccaria bicolor to mine zinc and other minerals from the soil — and this discovery reveals a molecular switch the fungus uses to control how much zinc it holds, which ultimately shapes whether forest trees thrive or struggle on nutrient-poor ground.

Trees in forests can't survive without fungi living in their roots, and those fungi need to carefully manage minerals like zinc — essential in small amounts, poisonous in large ones. Scientists found a tiny molecular 'gate' inside the root fungus Laccaria bicolor that sits in a specific compartment of its cells and controls how zinc moves around. Understanding this gate helps explain how forest trees and their fungal partners stay healthy together, even in soils with unusual mineral levels.

Key Findings

1

LbCDF-A is an ER-localized transporter, making it one of relatively few Cation Diffusion Facilitator proteins in fungi confirmed to reside in the endoplasmic reticulum rather than the cell membrane or vacuole

2

The protein functions as a zinc transporter in the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria bicolor, suggesting the ER plays an active role in zinc sequestration or buffering within fungal cells

3

Functional characterization of LbCDF-A expands the known toolkit of metal homeostasis mechanisms in ectomycorrhizal fungi, with implications for how tree-fungus symbioses tolerate variable zinc availability in forest soils

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists identified and characterized a zinc-transporting protein (LbCDF-A) in Laccaria bicolor, a fungus that colonizes tree roots, finding it sits inside a cellular compartment called the endoplasmic reticulum where it likely sequesters or redistributes zinc to keep the fungus — and its tree host — healthy.

hub This connects to 14 other discoveries — Pine, Oak, Birch +1 more mycorrhizal-networks, soil-health, forest-ecology +2 more 5 related articles

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Pine

A pine is any conifer in the genus Pinus of the family Pinaceae. Pinus is the sole genus in the subfamily Pinoideae. The species are evergreen trees or shrubs with their leaves in bunches, usually of 2 to 5 needles. The seeds are carried on woody cones, with two seeds to each cone scale.