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The Last of Us HBO Max: How does the fungus spread? - Vox

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  perrie-halpern  •  last year  •  7 comments

By:   Benji Jones (Vox)

The Last of Us HBO Max: How does the fungus spread? - Vox
The HBO show, starring Pedro Pascal, is inspired by a real fungus known as Cordyceps. It can turn ants into zombies.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


The good news: You're safe if you're not an ant.

By Benji Jones@BenjiSJones Jan 21, 2023, 8:00am EST anna_torv_pedro_pascal_0.0.jpg A new HBO show, The Last of Us, is about a fungi-fueled apocalypse. Above, lead characters Joel (Pedro Pascal) and Tess (Anna Torv) discover a human body that was taken over by a fungus.Liane Hentscher/HBO Benji Jones is a senior environmental reporter at Vox, covering biodiversity loss and climate change. Before joining Vox, he was a senior energy reporter at Insider. Benji previously worked as a wildlife researcher.

The scariest shows and movies are often the ones rooted in reality — about psychopathic serial killers, late-night home invasions, and AI robot dolls. Zombie apocalypses typically don't count.

But a new show on HBO, called The Last of U s, presents a compelling case that perhaps there's such a thing as a realistic zombie. Or realistic-ish. And it's definitely scary.

The premise of the show, which is based on the popular video game of the same name, isn't that different from your typical post-apocalyptic horror story: US cities are crumbling, there are rabid humans everywhere, and a manly man has to protect a young girl as they travel across the country.

The zombies, however, are truly inspired. More specifically, they are inspired by nature — by real zombies that live on Earth.

pedro_pascal.jpg Pedro Pascal, of The Mandalorian and Narcos , stars in HBO's The Last of US as Joel Miller, the lead protagonist.Liane Hentscher/HBO

In the show, which premiered last Sunday, it's not a virus that turns people into brainless automatons but a kind of fungus called Cordyceps. The fungus takes over their minds and bodies and makes them want to spread the fungus to the uninfected.

This fungus is real.

In tropical, subtropical, and even temperate forests around the world, there are many species of fungus in the genuses Cordyceps and Ophiocordyceps (these fungi were formerly called just Cordyceps) that infect insects like ants and other invertebrates. And they do essentially turn them into zombies. The fungi take over their minds and bodies, causing them to behave in such a way as to spread spores to others of their kind.

The fungi were popularized in 2006 by the show Planet Earth , which captured an Ophiocordyceps parasitizing a bullet ant. And it was actually the clip below — in which the fungus causes the ant to climb up a branch, before killing it and sprouting a spore-producing mushroom from the ant's head — that inspired the game's creator, Neil Druckmann.

So, the fungus is real and it can turn bugs into zombies. That's pretty rad. But does it pose a threat to us?

A comforting fact is that people have been eating Cordyceps for centuries now without turning rabid. It's a traditional Chinese medicine, used to treat kidney disease and other ailments. Even wellness brands are now marketing it.

But to be sure — because one really can't be sure enough, right? — I reached out to Charissa de Bekker, a mycologist who researches Ophiocordyceps. A professor of biology at Utrecht University in the Netherlands, de Bekker has not seen the show but is familiar with the game. Our conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

To be clear, the fungus in the show The Last of Us is real, right?

Yes. Cordyceps and Ophiocordyceps fungi are real and infect insects in the wild. There are many different species out there.

Many!? How many?

Researchers have described at least 30 Ophiocordyceps species that parasitize ants, but we know there are many more, because every ant species that gets infected has its own specialized Ophiocordyceps species.

There are also Ophiocordyceps and Cordyceps fungi that infect other insects like wasps and flies. We also see this go beyond insects to arthropods like spiders. Then there's a whole other group of fungi, in the order Entomophthorales, that does manipulation as well — and these species don't look anything like Ophiocordyceps.

Manipulation has evolved multiple times across the fungi kingdom. The biodiversity of these fungi is probably really high, we just haven't discovered them all yet.

GettyImages_1136255968.jpg A type of Cordyceps fungus growing on a bullet ant near Puerto Viejo de Sarapiqui, Costa Rica.Kevin Wells/Getty Images GettyImages_667506816.jpg Another kind of "zombie" fungus grows out of a dead winged insect in a rainforest in Vietnam.Quang Nguyen Vinh/Getty Images

How do these fungi manipulate their hosts in the wild?

What we see, specifically with ants, is that they pick up spores [which are kind of like seeds for fungus] when they go out to forage for food. The spore infects the ant and fungal cells start growing inside its body.

In the beginning, this ant might act normally. But eventually, it stops participating in the foraging efforts of the colony. It doesn't communicate well with its nest-mates anymore.

And then this ant starts to become hyperactive and no longer has the same daily rhythms of the other ants. Most carpenter ants, for example, forage during the nighttime, but the infected ant basically becomes active all the time.

GettyImages_1341415598.jpg A "zombie" fungus sprouts a fruiting body (mushroom) out of an ant in Indonesia.Reza Saputra/Getty Images

At one point, the infected ant wanders off from the colony to find a spot in the forest to climb and bite [down on the twig or vine]. This is where the fungus will quickly start to consume everything inside, which kills the host. The fungus uses that energy to sprout a stalk with a fruiting body — the mushroom, if you will — which has spores that will fly out and infect more ants.

By climbing higher up in the forest, the ant basically helps the fungus spread its spores. The specific spot it chooses to climb may actually help with the development of the fungus.

This whole process could take days or weeks, or even months. What you often see in zombie movies, or The Last of Us, things happen a lot quicker. In nature, things take some time.

Are Ophiocordyceps actually controlling the minds of ants?

We think this fungus is secreting certain chemicals that can bind to or interact with receptors or other sorts of proteins that are related to the nervous system, and normally give rise to different behaviors. For instance, these could be receptors that normally would bind to dopamine or serotonin, that might then elicit a certain type of behavior. We're still very much in the process of trying to figure that out.

We certainly think it's more than just this fungus gnawing away on some brain tissue because the behavior is so specific.

the_last_of_us.jpg A zombie is plastered to the wall by the Cordyceps fungus in Episode 1 of The Last of Us. Liane Hentscher/HBO

Would you call these infected hosts "zombies"? Is that scientifically accurate?

If you compare it one-to-one with zombies from pop culture, it's not completely accurate. These insects are very much alive, whereas in fictional movies zombies are often undead. These ants infected with Ophiocordyceps are not dead and walking around.

What makes real-life hosts similar to fictional zombies is that they are behaving in such a way as to benefit the parasite, not the host.

Is there any reason to believe that a fungus like this could infect a human body and turn us into zombies?

The very short answer is: No.

Everything in the human body is so different from the insects that these fungi normally infect, including our physiology, our nervous tissue, and our body temperature. Even if the fungi were able to cause a small infection, the machinery that is needed for the fungus to do such a precise manipulation is simply not there.

These fungi evolved strategies to manipulate specific insect hosts over millions and millions of years. They're not generalists. Each species only knows how to deal with one particular insect.

We don't see the fungi specialists just jumping from one ant species to another, let alone from an ant species to another insect. Spreading from ant to human is just such a big jump.

In the show, a fictional epidemiologist suggests that climate change could make harmful fungi more tolerant to warmer temperatures. As a result, they could more readily jump to warm-blooded humans. Is that a real concern?

That's actually a real concern that medical mycologists have [about harmful fungi like Candida auris, not Cordyceps], though that's not my expertise.

Most fungal infections are skin infections — or if, say, you're an immunocompromised patient, certain spores that normally are benign might settle in your lungs and cause a problem. But most fungi don't happily grow at our body temperature. Most of them actually prefer lower temperatures.

Some experimentation shows that fungi could, perhaps, adapt to higher temperatures, as they adapt to a warming world. You can imagine that if their optimal temperature comes closer to our body temperature, fungal infections could become more of a problem.

In the show, the fungus spreads through bites, not spores. That's not how it would actually work if these fungi-infected zombies were real, right?

If you play the game, you'll see that spores do play a role in spreading infection. But no, the fungus wouldn't spread through biting. Generally, across the fungal kingdom, going from one spot to another, or from one host to another, is done by spores.

I'm a big fan of fungi. They decompose plants, they can be psychedelic. They're also delicious. Is it unfair that Cordyceps are the villain in the show?

It's great that, finally, fungi are hip and happening. I hope the show sparks some interest in fungi in general, because they're incredibly fascinating organisms. They're more important than people might think.

GettyImages_1278471400.jpg A Cordyceps fungus grows out of a wingless insect on a leaf in Ecuador.Luis Espin/Getty Images

They are very much the villain in the show, and that's generally how we see parasites, because they make us sick. But in nature, they're actually super important and just as important as all the other organisms.

They keep everything in check. If ants, for instance, weren't pestered by certain parasites — not just Ophiocordyceps but anything else that makes them sick — then their numbers might get out of control. You might get an overpopulation of certain species. Taking out a parasite like this fungus might be like taking out a predator from the ecosystem, and that could cause biodiversity to decline.

I'm kind of afraid to ask, but how common are fungi, in general?

Not to scare you, but in every breath of air you take there will be fungal spores. Most of them are not harmful to us — most spores you're inhaling right now are benign, or fungi that don't know how to deal with our body, so you will never even notice them. But they are everywhere.

Correction, January 26: This story, originally published January 21, misstated when the Planet Earth documentary series aired; it began in 2006.


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Dig
Professor Participates
1  Dig    last year

This is a pretty good show. The mention in the first episode of a warming climate forcing fungi to adapt to higher temps, up to and including the body temp of humans, freaked me out a little.

The way the infected can communicate through fungal tendrils in the ground also freaked me out. And the speed of the infected? Sheesh. I see plenty of thriller jump scares in our viewing future.

They've deviated from the game story in some respects, but the end result is pretty darn good so far.

 

 
 
 
evilone
Professor Guide
1.1  evilone  replied to  Dig @1    last year

I've been hearing good things about it, but haven't watched it yet. Life is really busy right now trying to get all of mom's stuff moved and the house closing. I'll get to it soon though.

 
 
 
Thrawn 31
Professor Guide
1.2  Thrawn 31  replied to  Dig @1    last year
This is a pretty good show. The mention in the first episode of a warming climate forcing fungi to adapt to higher temps, up to and including the body temp of humans, freaked me out a little.

There actually is a real fear of that becoming the case among biologists. Right now very few fungi can live on/within humans, but as warming temps force mutation and evolution, there is a very real possibility that some fungi become more adapt to humans and that is a real problem because they are very hard to kill without killing the host as well. That whole eukaryotic cell thing. 

Now a fungi driven zombie hellscape is fantasy, but the threat of incurable fungal infections becoming a regular ocurrance is very real. 

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
1.2.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  Thrawn 31 @1.2    last year

I can think of at least 2 fungi that live on humans....athlete's foot and ringworm. I believe thrush is a fungus, also. I could be wrong

 
 
 
Thrawn 31
Professor Guide
1.2.2  Thrawn 31  replied to  Trout Giggles @1.2.1    last year

There are a few, but they are mostly benign, nothing like the fungi that infects ants and "mind controls" them. Most fungi, cannot live on/within humans very easily, at least for now. 

 
 
 
Thrawn 31
Professor Guide
1.2.3  Thrawn 31  replied to  Thrawn 31 @1.2.2    last year

Although the proposed method of spread is entirely plausible. 

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
1.2.4  Trout Giggles  replied to  Thrawn 31 @1.2.2    last year

You're absolutely right. Tho that time I had ringworm was not fun

 
 

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