Low Temperature Enhances N-Metabolism in Paxillus involutus Mycelia In Vitro: Evidence From an Untargeted Metabolomic Study
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 8/12/2025
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Summary
Background
Ectomycorrhizal fungi (ECMF) are major plant symbionts that influence nutrient uptake and stress resistance. While most molecular studies on ECMF have been conducted at laboratory temperatures around 21°C, ECMFs naturally occur in cold northern hemisphere habitats and are frequently exposed to low temperatures. Despite their prevalence in cold environments, molecular research on ECMF response to low temperature is sparse.
Objective
This study investigated the molecular response of Paxillus involutus mycelia to prolonged low temperature (4°C) exposure using untargeted GC-MS/MS metabolomic analysis. The goal was to understand how nitrogen and carbon metabolism shift under low temperature conditions and what this reveals about fungal cold adaptation mechanisms.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Environmental Microbiology,
- Study Type:Experimental Study,
- Source: PMID: 40796359