Psilocybin is so nice, mushrooms evolved it twice.

Scientists found that the magic behind so-called “magic mushrooms”—psilocybin, a psychedelic compound—has evolved at least twice in mushrooms, and in very different ways.

Researchers in Germany and Austria examined two different types of magic mushrooms. They showed that while both kinds make psilocybin, the biochemistry each relied on to produce the natural compound were entirely distinct. The findings suggest psilocybin may be an example of convergent evolution, in which two, unrelated forms of life nevertheless evolve to develop similar traits or features.

“Mushrooms have learned twice independently how to make the iconic magic mushroom natural product psilocybin,” the authors wrote in the paper, published last month in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

  • phdeeznuts@mander.xyz
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    3 days ago

    Or the universe is working doubly hard to make sure we can all experience enlightenment.

  • drkt@scribe.disroot.org
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    3 days ago

    I skimmed over the Psilocybin wikipedia page and couldn’t get a clear answer, and I always assumed it was a fluke of evolution, but what is the purpose of Psilocybin in mushrooms? What does it do? If it has evolved twice, surely it’s not a fluke.

    • Redacted@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      My guess: if you eat the mushrooms as an animal its basically guaranteed a predator is gonna kill you. Sorta like those trees that use chemicals to call over wasps when they sense a pest species

      • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        Fixation (being locked in a trance staring at pretty colors and shapes) could also be positive. There is a theory that it might increase the chances that spores get stuck to fur (or clothes) and be transported to a wider area.

        If I could positively ID all mushrooms I found in the wild, those spores would absolutely be transported somewhere else. ;)

        • Tinidril@midwest.social
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          3 days ago

          Ingested psilocybin takes at least a half hour to become psychoactive in the body, so I doubt it would be all that helpful in making an animal loiter to gather more spores.

          • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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            3 days ago

            Cattle or other grazing animal would be a prime candidate for loitering and then for some extended loitering. (Sorry for the shorts link, but it’s for science and it’s a time lapse of cattle in a field: https://youtube.com/shorts/hXPw-mxEBIY)

            A side thought is that kind of movement would be perfect for spore distribution in a smaller area with similar growing conditions. It probably would increase the chance that similar strain momma and daddy spores meet. (Large dung piles also happens to be a decent medium for some mushroom strains.)

            That still doesn’t prove anything scientifically or even build a case, but at least you got a time lapse video of cattle in a field.

          • brawndo@piefed.social
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            3 days ago

            I once had APE aborts. I bought 2 grams and within 2 minutes, while I was still eating them, I began to feel it. I only ate about 1.5 grams and it broke my brain. It was not my first time with psilocybin but it was my last. I’m afraid of it now.

            All that to say it does not take half an hour in all cases.

            • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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              3 days ago

              Geez! I grow and eat some weird strains, but that is kind crazy. Did you eat them fresh? (I have never had the balls to eat any cubes that were fresh picked, but I hear it can be a potent experience.)

              • brawndo@piefed.social
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                3 days ago

                They were dried. I estimate there were about 30 tiny mushrooms in that 2 grams. I ate about 20 of them.

                I have read that an abort contains the same amount of psilocybin as a full grown mushroom. If so, I overdid it by 18 mushrooms.

                I knew they would be potent but didn’t think they would be that strong.

    • Cryptagionismisogynist@lemmy.worldBanned
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      3 days ago

      It’s hard to say, because we aren’t mushrooms/fungi. It’s possible it has antifungal, anti-insect, or other properties allowing it to communicate with itself or trees etc that just so happen to trigger our cells too. Please keep in mind that we believe many of our organelles and multicellular stuff came from incorporating microorganisms of different types with each other. We are sorta part fungus

      • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        Psilocybin is also produced by massospora cicadina, which is a fungus that infects cicadas in a manner similar to cordyceps. Not only are the cicadas turned into zombies, they are also tripping balls at the same time.

        That isn’t particularly relevant to what you were saying but I was reminded of that when you suggested anti-insect.

        Anti-fungal aspects of fungi are usually in metabolites excreted by mycelium.

          • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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            3 days ago

            I wanted to help clarify that many fungi do actually produce anti-fungal compounds. It doesn’t make sense at first, but mycelium can be insanely competitive and it’s usually “at war” with other types of fungi where growing conditions are ideal.

            Edible mushroom growers may have to deal with trichoderma infections from time to time. That little bastard fights mainly by mass multiplication and rapid growth. It’ll choke out and dominate other strains before they have a chance to produce any effective defense.

            When starting a mushroom grow, it’s basically just tilting the initial mycelium battles in the favor of the strain you want so it has a chance to dominate and kill other strains of fungi.

            It’s not a far stretch to assume that fungi developed odd chemical compounds if it even slightly increased survival odds. Any psychedelic aspects could be just an unintentional side effect that helped promote cultivation.

            • Cryptagionismisogynist@lemmy.worldBanned
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              3 days ago

              I don’t personally think it’s a far stretch, as we are basically cities of microorganisms and many battles are fought at a cellular and chemical level. Some plants produce pesticides that ward off other plants, like creosote bushes. It seems sensical that fungi might do something similar, especially because like you’ve noted, growing conditions for one type of fungus are often ideal for other types, leading to competition.

    • Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org
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      3 days ago

      You can order grow bags online (legality depends on your location). Easier to grow than a cactus as long as everything’s sterile.

      I used to suffer from depression and social anxiety. Became a shut in and made little to no progress in therapy. Ended up taking shrooms a couple of times and poof. Healthy again.

      Milage may very much vary though. It’s important to do some reseach before attempting this. Also definitely don’t try if there are cases of schizophrenia in your family. And if you are in therapy tell your therapist about it.

      I think what made it work so well for me is that I took them fully aware that they might make me confront my fears. I just felt ready to experience it all, good or bad. That mindset got reinforced with every trip and now carries me through life. I was also ready to let go of beliefs that don’t serve me - which ended up being just about all of them. If neither of those experiences sound desirable to you then it won’t be for you. Otherwise best of luck and safe travels.

      • the_q@lemmy.zip
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        3 days ago

        Yeah, but illegal once they’ve reached a certain point. Plus you need a therapist trained in this form of treatment. It’s a whole thing.

        • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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          3 days ago

          Just a quick note that many psychedelics were legalized in Colorado a couple years back. Anyone can grow and consume them, but we can’t legally sell them which is fine by me.

          Usually, it’s spores that are 100% legal since mycelium can contain trace psilocybin, so legality is questionable.