Aspergillus subgenus Polypaecilum from the built environment

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.simyco.2017.11.001

Langue de publication
Anglais
Date
2017-09-01
Type
Article
Auteur(s)
  • Tanney, J.B.
  • Visagie, C.M.
  • Yilmaz, N.
  • Seifert, K.A.
Éditeur
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute

Résumé

Xerophilic fungi, especially Aspergillus species, are prevalent in the built environment. In this study, we employed a combined culture-independent (454-pyrosequencing) and culture-dependent (dilution-to-extinction) approach to investigate the mycobiota of indoor dust collected from 93 buildings in 12 countries worldwide. High and low water activity (aw) media were used to capture mesophile and xerophile biodiversity, resulting in the isolation of approximately 9 000 strains. Among these, 340 strains representing seven putative species in Aspergillus subgenus Polypaecilum were isolated, mostly from lowered aw media, and tentatively identified based on colony morphology and internal transcribed spacer rDNA region (ITS) barcodes. Further morphological study and phylogenetic analyses using sequences of ITS, β-tubulin (BenA), calmodulin (CaM), RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2), DNA topoisomerase 1 (TOP1), and a pre-mRNA processing protein homolog (TSR1) confirmed the isolation of seven species of subgenus Polypaecilum, including five novel species: A. baarnensis, A. keratitidis, A. kalimae sp. nov., A. noonimiae sp. nov., A. thailandensis sp. nov., A. waynelawii sp. nov., and A. whitfieldii sp. nov. Pyrosequencing detected six of the seven species isolated from house dust, as well as one additional species absent from the cultures isolated, and three clades representing potentially undescribed species. Species were typically found in house dust from subtropical and tropical climates, often in close proximity to the ocean or sea. The presence of subgenus Polypaecilum, a recently described clade of xerophilic/xerotolerant, halotolerant/halophilic, and potentially zoopathogenic species, within the built environment is noteworthy.

Sujet

  • Champignon,
  • Santé

Droits

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Pagination

237-267

Évalué par les pairs

Yes

Identifiants

ISSN
1872-9797

Article

Titre de la revue
Studies in Mycology
Volume de la revue
88
Numéro de revue
1

Référence(s)

Tanney, J. B., Visagie, C. M., Yilmaz, N., & Seifert, K. A. (2017). Aspergillus subgenus Polypaecilum from the built environment. Studies in Mycology, 88(1), 237–267. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.simyco.2017.11.001

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Biology

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