Journal
MYCOLOGICAL PROGRESS
Volume 21, Issue 9, Pages -Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11557-022-01831-y
Keywords
Lichen-forming fungi; Symbiosis; Photoprotection; Acetone rinsing; Seasonality; Lichenicolous fungi
Categories
Funding
- ELKH Centre for Ecological Research
- National Research Development and Innovation Fund [NKFI K 124341-PI: EF]
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This study investigated the effect of decreased UV-protectant metabolites on algal photoprotection in lichens and examined the dynamics of metabolite production. The results showed that seasonality had a greater impact on lichen function than acetone treatment, and the level of photoprotection in the algae remained unchanged.
Terricolous lichens are abundant in semi-arid areas, where they are exposed to high irradiation. Photoprotection is essential for the algae as the photobiont provides the primer carbon source for both symbionts. The UV-protectant lichen metabolites and different quenching procedures of the alga ensure adequate photoprotection. Since the long-term effect of diminishing UV-protectant lichen metabolites is unknown, a major part of lichen secondary metabolites was removed from Cladonia foliacea thalli by acetone rinsing, and the lichens were then maintained under field conditions to investigate the effect on both symbionts for 3 years. Our aim was to determine if the decreased level of UV-protectant metabolites caused an elevated photoprotection in the algae and to reveal the dynamics of production of the metabolites. Photosynthetic activity and light protection were checked by chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics measurements every 6 months. The concentrations of fumarprotocetraric and usnic acids were monitored by chromatographic methods. Our results proved that seasonality had a more pronounced effect than that of acetone treatment on the function of lichens over a long-term scale. Even after 3 years, the acetone-treated thalli contained half as much usnic acid as the control thalli, and the level of photoprotection remained unchanged in the algae. However, the amount of available humidity was a more critical limiting environmental factor than the amount of incoming irradiation affecting usnic acid production. The lichenicolous fungus Didymocyrtis cladoniicola became relatively more abundant in the acetone-treated samples than in the control samples, indicating a slight change caused by the treatment.
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