Wednesday, October 01, 2025

 

Fungi set the stage for life on land hundreds of millions of years earlier than thought



From fossils and rare genetic ‘gene-swap’ clues, researchers reconstruct fungi’s deep timeline and reveal how they helped shape early Earth ecosystems.



Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) Graduate University

Dickinsonia observed at Nilpena Ediacara National Park, with negative relief 

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Clear fossil evidence can be found most of the five major groups – here we see a Dickinsonia fossil, providing evidence of ancient animal life.

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Credit: Citronnel/Wikimedia Commons, copyright CC-BY-SA-4.0





New research published in Nature Ecology & Evolution sheds light on the timelines and pathways of evolution of fungi, finding evidence of their influence on ancient terrestrial ecosystems. The study, led by researchers from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) and collaborators, indicates the diversification of fungi hundreds of millions of years before the emergence of land plants.

The five paths to a complex world

Professor Gergely J. Szöllősi, author on this study and head of the Model-Based Evolutionary Genomics Unit at OIST explains the foundations of this research. “Complex multicellular life — organisms made of many cooperating cells with specialized jobs — evolved independently in five major groups: animals, land plants, fungi, red algae, and brown algae. On a planet once dominated by single-celled organisms, a revolutionary change occurred not once, but at least five separate times: the evolution of complex multicellular life. Understanding when these groups emerged is fundamental to piecing together the history of life on Earth.”

Emergence here was not simply a matter of cells clumping together; it was the dawn of organisms, where cells took on specialized jobs and were organized into distinct tissues and organs, much like in our own bodies. This evolutionary leap required sophisticated new tools, including highly developed mechanisms for cells to adhere to one another and intricate systems for them to communicate across the organism, and arose independently in each of the five major groups.

The difficulties of dating evolutionary divergence

For most of these groups, the fossil record acts as a geological calendar, providing anchor points in deep time. For example, red algae show up possibly as early as about 1.6 billion years ago (in candidate seaweed-like fossils from India); animals appear by around 600 million years ago (Ediacaran fossils such as the quilted pancake like Dickinsonia); land plants take root roughly 470 million years ago (tiny fossil spores); and brown algae  (kelp-like forms) diversified tens to hundreds of millions of years later still. Based on this evidence, a chronological picture of life’s complexity emerges.

There is, however, a notable exception to this fossil-based timeline: fungi. The fungal kingdom has long been an enigma for paleontologists. Their typically soft, filamentous bodies mean they rarely fossilize well. Furthermore, unlike animals or plants, which appear to have a single origin of complex multicellularity, fungi evolved this trait multiple times from diverse unicellular ancestors, making it difficult to pinpoint a single origin event in the sparse fossil record.  

Reading the genetic clock

To overcome the gaps in the fungal fossil record, scientists use a "molecular clock." The concept is that genetic mutations accumulate in an organism's DNA at a relatively steady rate over generations, like the ticking of a clock. By comparing the number of genetic differences between two species, researchers can estimate how long ago they diverged from a common ancestor.

However, a molecular clock is uncalibrated; it can reveal relative time but not absolute years. To set the clock, scientists need to calibrate it with "anchor points" from the fossil record. Given the scarcity of fungal fossils, this has always been a major challenge. The OIST-led team addressed this by incorporating a novel source of information: rare gene "swaps" between different fungal lineages, a process known as horizontal gene transfer (HGT).

Prof. Szöllősi explains this concept. “While genes are normally passed down "vertically" from parent to child, HGT is like a gene jumping "sideways" from one species to another. These events provide powerful temporal clues,” he says. “If a gene from lineage A is found to have jumped into lineage B, it establishes a clear rule: the ancestors of lineage A must be older than the descendants of lineage B.”

By identifying 17 such transfers, the team established a series of "older than/younger than" relationships that, alongside fossil records, helped to tighten and constrain the fungal timeline.

new history for an ancient kingdom

The analysis suggests a common ancestor of living fungi dating to roughly 1.4–0.9 billion years ago—well before land plants. That timing supports a long prelude of fungi–algae interactions that helped set the stage for life on land.

Co-first author on this study, Dr. Lénárd L. Szánthó, emphasizes the importance of these findings. “Fungi run ecosystems—recycling nutrients, partnering with other organisms, and sometimes causing disease. Pinning down their timeline shows fungi were diversifying long before plants, consistent with early partnerships with algae that likely helped pave the way for terrestrial ecosystems.”

This revised timeline fundamentally reframes the story of life's colonization of land. It suggests that for hundreds of millions of years before the first true plants took root, fungi were already present, likely interacting with algae in microbial communities. This long, preparatory phase may have been essential for making Earth's continents habitable. By breaking down rock and cycling nutrients, these ancient fungi could have been the first true ecosystem engineers, creating the first primitive soils and fundamentally altering the terrestrial environment. In this new view, plants did not colonize a barren wasteland, but rather a world that had been prepared for them over eons by the ancient and persistent activity of the fungal kingdom.

 

About the authors

This work grew from the OIST Model-Based Evolutionary Genomics Unit, co-led by Prof. Gergely J. Szöllősi and Dr. Eduard Ocaña-Pallarès, with Dr. Lénárd L. Szánthó and Zsolt Merényi as first authors. They teamed up with colleagues across Europe, including Professor László G. Nagy’s group, which includes Zsolt Merényi, at the HUN-REN Biological Research Centre in Szeged, Hungary—a team known for fungal evolutionary genomics and the evolution of multicellularity. Further collaborators on this study include Prof. Philip Donoghue, who heads the University of Bristol’s Paleobiology Group, UK, and Prof. Toni Gabaldón, of the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB) and the Barcelona Supercomputing Centre (BSC), Spain, an expert in comparative genomics.

Uncovering links between depression and hypertension in African populations



Dr Vivien Chebii receives Wellcome Early Career Award to study whether mental illness and cardiometabolic disorders share genetic pathways.




University of the Witwatersrand





In Africa, 150 million people live with hypertension, 54 million with diabetes, and over 40 million battle depression or bipolar disorder.

“In Africa, the twin burden of mental illness and cardiometabolic disease is a silent crisis,” says Dr Vivien Chebii, a researcher at the Sydney Brenner Institute for Molecular Bioscience (SBIMB) who was awarded the prestigious Wellcome fellowship.

 

This dual burden of the diseases is particularly challenging, says Chebii, as one condition may exacerbate the other. Those who live with poor mental health face an increased risk of developing cardiometabolic diseases and vice versa.

The Wellcome fellowship therefore enables Chebii to uncover whether one possible gene in African populations can affect multiple disorders, like depression and cardiometabolic diseases. Emerging studies  show they share biological mechanisms such as disrupted stress pathways, circadian rhythm chaos and chronic inflammation.

“This fellowship will fill an important gap in our research. It provides a crucial foundation for future studies exploring genetic traits across multiple conditions, ultimately paving the way for better clinical care,” says Chebii.

This study will focus on African populations, where genomic research remains sparse despite the continent’s rich diversity. Harnessing Africa’s genetic diversity can provide critical insights into the foundations of complex diseases, benefiting humanity at large.

Globally, 350 million people live with depression or bipolar disorder, while a staggering 2.5 billion are affected by conditions like diabetes and hypertension.

With additional research, more inclusive, precise and effective therapeutic strategies can be implemented. In particular, targeting “pleiotropic” mechanisms for the treatment of multiple conditions is possible. Pleiotropy is where a single gene influences multiple, seemingly unrelated, phenotypic traits.

Chebii notes that rapid urbanisation is driving a surge in both, but that mental health remains underdiagnosed, underfunded and affected by stigma.

“In Kenya, where I come from, one in two people with diabetes also suffer from depression. Yet we continue to study and treat these conditions in silos.”  

Beyond co-occurrence, these conditions amplify each other’s impact and overwhelm families and strain already-fragile health systems. Chebii’s research underscores the possibility and importance of integrated healthcare approaches to manage interconnected conditions.

Professor Michèle Ramsay, Director of the SBIMB, explains that while the diseases share key risk factors, such as lifestyle and environment, “there is a genetic foundation we don’t fully understand. Africa carries the richest genetic diversity in the world and faces an alarming rise in dual-disease burdens. Dr Chebii’s study is timely and urgent.”

Chebii’s winning study, Shared Genetics of Cardiometabolic and Mood Disorders: African Genomic Insights, will run for five years. The fellowship also allows for local research capacity development.


UC Davis researchers develop theoretical model to determine how pilgrimages can emerge



University of California - Davis
Peru pilgrimage site 

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Pilgrims at Nuestro Señor de Pucara, a pilgrimage site in Peru. (Cristina Moya, Courtesy photo)

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Credit: Cristina Moya, UC Davis





By Gregory Watry | October 1, 2025

Pilgrimages are ubiquitous across all major world religions. From the Camino de Santiago, a Christian pilgrimage that encompasses routes in southern Europe and ends in Spain, to the Kumbh Mela, a Hindu festival on the banks of India’s Ganges River, hundreds of millions of people travel to various sites across the globe to engage in rituals and connect with their faith. 

But how do pilgrimages get established? How do people become convinced to try something new? What makes a pilgrimage so special that it persists over generations, drawing people to it repeatedly? 

Using a theoretical game model, University of California, Davis, anthropologists suggest that lucky outcomes — such as a lone miner discovering gold after a pilgrimage — can sometimes give rise to the perception that a new site cures, blesses, grants miracles or otherwise produces great outcomes in pilgrims’ lives. 

If these are common enough in a group, it can drive a critical number of people to journey to a new site. This then leads to the collective ritual becoming institutionalized, researchers suggest in a new study published in The Royal Society journal on Sept. 10. 

Author Cristina Moya, an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology, said the model was informed by ongoing research she and her co-author are conducting at a new pilgrimage site in the Peruvian Altiplano known as Nuestro Señor de Pucara.

The ingredients of a pilgrimage

Nicolas Restrepo Ochoa, co-author and a postdoctoral scholar at UC Davis, noticed that pilgrimages share many features with an assurance game, also known as a stag hunt. 

In the stag hunt, players choose whether to hunt a hare or a stag. The former can be achieved with a single player, while the latter requires multiple people and coordination for it to pay off. 

“It’s not really a pilgrimage if you go by yourself,” said Restrepo Ochoa. “There is an element of coordination that is needed for a pilgrimage to be recognized by a community of believers as something worth doing.” 

Using the assurance game as a foundation, the researchers customized their theoretical model to include three factors relevant to the emergence of collective rituals. Those factors included prior beliefs about the payoff for participation, one’s own economic uncertainty and the size of social groups involved in the pilgrimage. 

The researchers incorporated those factors into a mathematical framework that models the likelihood that a new pilgrimage crosses a threshold to become established and persist. They found that uncertain conditions make it more likely for new collective rituals, like a pilgrimage, to emerge since it makes it more likely that people will perceive positive outcomes are a result of the new practice. 

“It’s exciting to be able to provide a simple statistical mechanism that can explain a long-standing empirical finding — that uncertainty is associated with ritualistic or religious practices,” said Restrepo Ochoa. 

A test site in Peru

On the north side of Lake Titicaca, at the base of a small mountain, is a sanctuary site known as Nuestro Señor de Pucara. Every August, thousands gather in the area to honor an image of Jesus that appeared on the side of a rock face, among other figures important to Andean traditions, including a toad and eagle. The pilgrimage site is adorned with flowers, bottles of champagne and other objects brought by pilgrims as offerings since 2014. 

The origin story of the pilgrimage is that a miner saw the face of Jesus, prayed to it and then went to a nearby mine called La Rinconada and struck gold, Restrepo Ochoa said. “The miner then became rich and hosted the first celebrations. This matches well with the model’s focus on uncertain economic outcomes.”

With their theoretical model established and years of data collected from the site and pilgrims, Moya and Restrepo Ochoa are now homing in on the psychological motivations of the pilgrims who visit the site. 

“If there is a way of capitalizing on those early associations — for example, because of the collective benefit provided in the assurance game,” Moya said, “then those practices can spread and become institutionalized.”