Anti-Therapeutic Action: inhibits alpha-mannosidase and mannosidase II causing lysosomal storage disease

Fungal alkaloids mediate defense against bruchid beetles in field populations of an arborescent ipomoea

Morning glory trees (Ipomoea murucoides) form beneficial relationships with fungal partners that live inside their tissues and produce toxic compounds called alkaloids. These alkaloids accumulate in the tree’s seeds and protect them from beetle damage. Trees hosting the common fungal partner Ceramothyrium produce more of the protective alkaloid swainsonine and suffer less seed damage than those with a different fungal partner, demonstrating how this natural partnership helps the plant defend its offspring.

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Fungal alkaloids mediate defense against bruchid beetles in field populations of an arborescent ipomoea

Certain morning glory trees form partnerships with special fungi that produce protective chemicals called alkaloids. These chemicals are made by the fungi and travel through the plant to the seeds, where they protect them from seed-eating beetles. Trees with more effective fungal partners produce higher levels of these protective chemicals and suffer less damage from the beetles, demonstrating a remarkable example of how plants and fungi work together to survive in nature.

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