Mycoscience
Online ISSN : 1618-2545
Print ISSN : 1340-3540
Volume 49, Issue 4
Displaying 1-9 of 9 articles from this issue
Review
  • Takao Ishikawa
    2008 Volume 49 Issue 4 Pages 221-228
    Published: 2008
    Released on J-STAGE: March 31, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    Prion diseases such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy or Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease have been extensively studied in recent years. Research in this field is being done in highly secured laboratories because of potential transmission of prions to humans. Emerging similarities between mammalian and yeast prions allow using yeast-based assays to examine the activity of anti-prion drugs. Besides the intensively studied clinical aspects of prion diseases, the evolutionary aspects of prion proteins present in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are also extensively investigated. One of the key feature of prions, the ability to be stable in two alternative conformations, seems to play an important role in the evolution of this fungi, although some authors point out the negative influence of these particles upon yeast physiology. In this review, the most intensively studied fields of the research carried out on [PSI+] prion in yeast are summarized.

    Download PDF (100K)
Full paper
  • Kunihiko Hata, Koichi Sone
    2008 Volume 49 Issue 4 Pages 229-232
    Published: 2008
    Released on J-STAGE: March 31, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    Endophytic fungi were isolated from leaves of Neolitsea sericea, a major lauraceous tree in the laurel forests of southern Kyushu, collected from the understory layer of broadleaf and conifer stands. Cytosphaera sp. and a species of Ascomycetes in leaf blade segments, plus a xylariaceous species and Phomopsis spp. in petiole segments, were isolated at relatively high frequency. In general, isolation frequencies of endophytes were higher in petiole than blade segments. In blade segments, patterns of endophyte isolation were quite different among stands, while relatively similar in petiole segments. Significant effects of sampling sites or canopy vegetation were rarely detected.

    Download PDF (55K)
  • Yuichi Yamaoka, Hayato Masuya, Wen-Hsin Chung, Hideaki Goto, Chaiwat T ...
    2008 Volume 49 Issue 4 Pages 233-240
    Published: 2008
    Released on J-STAGE: March 31, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    A teleomorph was discovered in crosses among isolates of Leptographium yunnanense isolated from Pinus spp. originating in Thailand, China, and Japan. The ascocarps are black, globose to subglobose, and lacking necks. Ascospores are hyaline, 1-celled, surrounded by hyaline sheaths, and appear cucullate in side view, quadrangular in face view, and triangular in end view. Three species were known to have teleomorphs morphologically similar to the present fungus. However, their anamorphs were distinguishable from L. yunnanense. Thus, this teleomorph is described as Grosmannia yunnanensis.

    Download PDF (152K)
  • Yuko Kurihara, Nampiah Sukarno, Muhammad Ilyas, Erny Yuniarti, Wibowo ...
    2008 Volume 49 Issue 4 Pages 241-249
    Published: 2008
    Released on J-STAGE: March 31, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    As a preliminary survey to develop suspended-soil arthropods as a new isolation source of entomopathogenic fungi, we investigated the entomopathogenic fungi of these arthropods. Fifty-five suspended-soil arthropods were collected from lowland tropical rainforests in East Kalimantan, and ten fungal isolates belonging to seven entomopathogenic species, including two undescribed species, were isolated from nine of the arthropods. Only two of the seven entomopathogenic species were commonly found from the arthropods inhabiting the ground soil in the same forests. The percentage of entomopathogenic fungi-positive arthropods from suspended soil was similar to that from ground soil of the same and another forest of the region, and lower than that from ground soil of Japan. However, the number of entomopathogenic species isolated from the suspended-soil arthropods was larger than that from ground-soil arthropods. This result suggests that suspended-soil arthropods can be a new isolation source of entomopathogenic fungi.

    Download PDF (453K)
  • Yuko Kurihara, Nampiah Sukarno, Muhammad Ilyas, Erny Yuniarti, Wibowo ...
    2008 Volume 49 Issue 4 Pages 250-257
    Published: 2008
    Released on J-STAGE: March 31, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    Four species belonging to Kickxellales (Kickxellomycotina) isolated from soil of Indonesia are described and illustrated. Two new species of Coemansia, C. asiatica and C. javaensis, were discovered in South Sulawesi and West Java, and two known species of Linderina, L. pennispora and L. macrospora, were discovered in East Kalimantan and South Sulawesi, respectively. These four species are newly added to the Indonesian mycobiota. A technique for inducing sporulation of C. javaensis and L. macrospora by adding substances derived from invertebrates such as aphids, nereids, or cladocerans to culture media is described.

    Download PDF (358K)
  • Doungporn Morakotkarn, Hiroko Kawasaki, Kazuaki Tanaka, Izumi Okane, T ...
    2008 Volume 49 Issue 4 Pages 258-265
    Published: 2008
    Released on J-STAGE: March 31, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    The molecular phylogeny of nuclear LSU rDNA sequences (D1/D2 domain), ITS regions, and beta-tubulin gene (tub2) showed that the seven strains of Shiraia-like fungi obtained from fresh bamboo tissues as endophytes were closely related to Shiraia bambusicola and had three distinctive lineages (groups A–C). The closest group (group A) to S. bambusicola produced distinctive prawn-shaped conidioma-like structures that differed from conidiomata in the anamorph of S. bambusicola. Currently, none of the morphological structures and molecular database records were compatible with our Shiraia-like fungi. These results reveal that Shiraia-like fungi group A is supposed to be a new species that should be assigned into a novel genus/ species related to S. bambusicola.

    Download PDF (435K)
Short communication
Note
feedback
Top