Author:
Strobel Gary A.,Hess W. M.,Li Jia-Yao,Ford Eugene,Sears Joe,Sidhu Rajinder S.,Summerell Brett
Abstract
Wollemia nobilis (Wollemi pine), an araucariaceous
plant, whose closest known relatives are from the Jurassic period, occurs in
the Wollemi National Park near Sydney, Australia. This tree is host to many
endophytic fungi, including Pestalotiopsis guepinii
which produces taxol, an important anticancer drug. It was shown by
immunological, spectroscopic and chromatographic means to be identical with
authentic taxol obtained from Taxus brevifolia (Pacific
yew). Since the Wollemi pine does not produce taxol, how might a
taxol-producing fungus be present in this unusual tree? Spores of
P. guepinii possess several appendages which strongly
interact with hydrophobic surfaces including plastics and the pinnae of
birds’ feathers. Scanning electron microscopy of the conidia of
P. guepinii clearly shows the spores on the feathers of
a green-checked conure and a cockatiel. Conceivably, the fungus may have
acquired the ability to produce taxol from a foreign or local yew and then is
carried to the Wollemi pine site by native birds.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
115 articles.
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