Myco-fluidics: The fluid dynamics of fungal chimerism

ORAL

Abstract

Chimeras--fantastical creatures formed as amalgams of many animals--have captured the human imagination since Ancient times. But they are also surprisingly common in Nature. The syncytial cells of filamentous fungi harbor large numbers of nuclei bathed in a single cytoplasm. As a fungus grows these nuclei become genetically diverse, either from mutation or from exchange of nuclei between different fungal individuals, a process that is known to increase the virulence of the fungus and its adaptability. By directly measuring nuclear movement in the model ascomycete fungus {\it Neurospora crassa}, we show that the fungus' tolerance for internal genetic diversity is enabled by hydrodynamic mixing of nuclei acting at all length scales within the fungal mycelium. Mathematical modeling and experiments in a mutant with altered mycelial morphology reveal some of the exquisite hydraulic engineering necessary to create these mixing flows from spatially coarse pressure gradients.

Authors

  • Marcus Roper

    • UCLA
    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Patrick Hickey

    • UCLA
  • Emilie Dressaire

    • Trinity College, CT
  • Sebastien Roch

    • U. Wisconsin-Madison