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Protective roles of trehalose in Pleurotus pulmonarius during heat stress response
LIU Xiu-ming, WU Xiang-li, GAO Wei, QU Ji-bin, CHEN Qiang, HUANG Chen-yang, ZHANG Jin-xia
2019, 18 (2): 428-437.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62010-6
Abstract620)      PDF (948KB)(311)      
High temperature is one of the major abiotic stresses that limit edible mushroom growth and development.  The understanding of physiological alterations in response to heat stress and the corresponding mechanisms involved is vital for the breeding of heat-resistant edible mushroom strains.  Although trehalose functions as a protectant against abiotic stresses in fungi, the putative role of trehalose in thermotolerance remains to be elucidated.  In this study, we found heat stress inhibited the growth of two Pleurotus pulmonarius strains, heat-sensitive and less-sensitive, and the inhibition was more significant for the sensitive strain.  Heat stress leads to the increase of lipid peroxidation and intracellular trehalose accumulation, with a higher level in the heat-sensitive strain, and this effect is independent of exogenous trehalose application. In addition, a lower concentration of exogenous trehalose application in sensitive strain than in less-sensitive strain was found to alleviate the inhibition of mycelium growth and further increase the intracellular trehalose concentration by heat stress.  Thus, the protective effects of trehalose were more remarkable in the sensitive strain.  The activities of intracellular trehalose metabolic enzymes, i.e., trehalose-6-phosphate synthase, trehalose phosphorylase and neutral trehalase, were determined, and our data indicated that the changes of these enzymes activities in the sensitive strain were more beneficial to accumulate trehalose than that in the less-sensitive strain.
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Genetic variation and population structure of the mushroom Pleurotus ferulae in China inferred from nuclear DNA analysis
ZHAO Meng-ran, HUANG Chen-yang, WU Xiang-li, CHEN Qiang, QU Ji-bin, LI Yan-chun, GAO Wei, ZHANG Jin-xia
2016, 15 (10): 2237-2246.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(16)61383-7
Abstract1594)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
    To investigate the genetic diversity of an edible fungus Pleurotus ferulae, a total of 89 wild samples collected from six geographical locations in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China and two geographical locations in Italy, were analyzed using three DNA fragments including the translation elongation factor (EF1α), the second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II (RPB2) and the largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II (RPB1). The results indicated relatively abundant genetic variability in the wild resources of P. ferulae. The analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) showed that the vast majority of the genetic variation was found within geographical populations. Both the Chinese populations and the Italian populations of P. ferulae displayed a limited genetic differentiation. The degree of differentiation between the Chinese populations and the Italian populations was obviously higher than that between the populations from the same region, and moreover the genetic differentiation among all the tested populations was correlated to the geographical distance. The phylogeny analyses confirmed that samples from China and Italy belonged to another genetic group separated from Pleurotus eryngii. They were closely related to each other but were clustered according to their geographical origins, which implied the Chinese populations were highly differentiated from the Italian populations because of distance isolation, and the two populations from different regions might be still in the process of allopatric divergence.
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