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Eisosomal proteins are essential for plant-fungal interaction of Neurospora crassa and the sweetgrass Brachypodium distachyon.

PubMed · 2026-06-09

Scientists discovered that a common bread mold (Neurospora crassa) can quietly live inside the roots of a grass without causing disease, and identified two specific proteins—located in specialized membrane compartments called eisosomes—that are essential for the fungus to establish this peaceful partnership.

1

Neurospora crassa, previously classified as strictly saprotrophic (feeding only on dead matter), colonizes roots and vascular bundles of Brachypodium distachyon without triggering disease symptoms.

2

Deletion of either ncw-6 or div-23—two proteins localized to eisosomes (plasma membrane microdomains)—completely abolished root colonization, while disrupting MAP kinase and NADPH oxidase signaling pathways did not.

3

This is the first report implicating eisosome-associated proteins as essential components of a plant-fungal interaction, suggesting eisosomes may play a broad role in how fungi interface with living plant tissue.

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