Major Intrinsic Proteins in Fungi: A Special Emphasis on the XIP Subfamily
Jean-Stéphane Venisse, Gisèle Bronner, Mouadh Saadaoui, Patricia Roeckel-Drevet, Mohamed Faize, Boris Fumanal

TL;DR
This paper reviews fungal aquaporins, focusing on the XIP subfamily, and highlights their roles in fungal adaptation and physiology.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of the understudied XIP subfamily of fungal aquaporins.
Findings
Fungal aquaporins are crucial for adaptation to diverse environments.
The XIP subfamily remains poorly understood compared to other MIP subfamilies.
MIPs facilitate transport of water, solutes, and gases across fungal cell membranes.
Abstract
The fungal kingdom, with an estimated five million species, has undergone extensive diversification over the past billion years and now occupies a wide array of ecological niches from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystems. To thrive in such diverse environments, fungi must exhibit finely tuned physiological and morphological responses orchestrated by conserved molecular pathways. Increasing evidence suggests that aquaporins (AQPs) play a key role in mediating these adaptive responses, particularly under varying abiotic and biotic stress conditions. However, despite notable advances in recent decades, the precise functional roles of AQPs within the fungal kingdom remains largely unresolved in the field of cell biology. AQPs are transmembrane proteins belonging to the major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) superfamily, which is characterized by remarkable sequence and structural diversity. Beyond…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIon Transport and Channel Regulation · Protist diversity and phylogeny · Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms
