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Growth rate trades off with enzymatic investment in soil filamentous fungi

Weishuang Zheng, Anika Lehmann, Masahiro Ryo, Kriszta Vályi, Matthias C. Rillig

2020Scientific Reports46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Saprobic soil fungi drive many important ecosystem processes, including decomposition, and many of their effects are related to growth rate and enzymatic ability. In mycology, there has long been the implicit assumption of a trade-off between growth and enzymatic investment, which we test here using a set of filamentous fungi from the same soil. For these fungi we measured growth rate (as colony radial extension) and enzymatic repertoire (activities of four enzymes: laccase, cellobiohydrolase, leucine aminopeptidase and acid phosphatase), and explored the interaction between the traits based on phylogenetically corrected methods. Our results support the existence of a trade-off, however only for the enzymes presumably representing a larger metabolic cost (laccase and cellobiohydrolase). Our study offers new insights into potential functional complementarity within the soil fungal community in ecosystem processes, and experimentally supports an enzymatic investment/growth rate trade-off underpinning phenomena including substrate succession.

Topics & Concepts

EnzymeLaccaseBiologyEcosystemAminopeptidaseComplementarity (molecular biology)BotanyEcologyBiochemistryLeucineAmino acidGeneticsMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsForest Ecology and Biodiversity StudiesPlant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases
Growth rate trades off with enzymatic investment in soil filamentous fungi | Litcius