Fungal Species: Penicillium griseoroseum

PEG-Mediated Protoplast Transformation of Penicillium sclerotiorum (scaumcx01): Metabolomic Shifts and Root Colonization Dynamics

Scientists developed a new method to genetically modify a fungus called Penicillium sclerotiorum by using protoplasts, which are fungal cells with their protective outer walls removed. They added a glowing green protein (GFP) to track the fungus and discovered that this modification changed how the fungus uses fats and lipids. When they treated tomato seeds with enzymes before exposing them to the modified fungus, it enhanced the fungus’s ability to colonize plant roots, potentially helping plants grow better.

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PEG-Mediated Protoplast Transformation of Penicillium sclerotiorum (scaumcx01): Metabolomic Shifts and Root Colonization Dynamics

Scientists developed a new method to genetically modify a beneficial fungus called Penicillium sclerotiorum by removing its cell wall and introducing new genes. They added a glowing green marker (GFP) to track the fungus as it colonizes tomato plant roots. The study shows that enzymatic treatment of seeds significantly improves how well the fungus attaches to roots, potentially helping plants grow better while revealing how the genetic modification affects the fungus’s internal chemistry.

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