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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2005, p. 6388-6389, Vol. 71, No. 10
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.10.6388-6389.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Department of Applied Microbiology, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8687, Japan,1 Nagano Vegetable and Ornamental Experiment Station, Matsushiro 2206, Nagano 381-1211, Japan2
Received 16 December 2004/ Accepted 28 April 2005
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Commercial cultivation of Enokitake began in Japan in the 1930s with sawdust and rice bran as the substrate. In 2003, the total yield of Enokitake was 110,185 tons, which is much greater than the 65,363 tons of Lentinula edodes (Shiitake) or the 5,210 tons of Pleurotus ostreatus produced in Japan (annual statistics for mushroom production in Japan from the Forestry Agency [http://www.rinya.maff.go.jp/puresu/h16-8gatu /0805tokusan.htm]). The degenerate symptoms of Enokitake reported in the 1980s were malformed fruiting bodies, reduced numbers of primordia, and in some cases complete loss of fruiting body development. However, degenerate mycelia are morphologically indistinguishable from normal mycelia, and the symptoms of degeneration are not apparent until the final stage of mushroom cultivation, which may result in major financial losses.
Four cultivars (TK,YO, JB, and G5) developed at Nagano Vegetable and Ornamental Experiment Station were used in the present study. The first symptom of degeneration usually is the development of undifferentiated, callus-like tissue in normal fruiting bodies. TKd, YOd, and JBd were isolated from malformed portions of fruiting bodies. TKd mycelia can produce malformed abnormal fruiting bodies, but TKm and JBm are even more severely degenerate and can develop very few primordia. Field strains in our culture collection that produced normal fruiting bodies on potato dextrose agar (Nissui, Tokyo, Japan) (FV wild a, FV wild b, and FV wild c) or that formed no fruiting bodies (FV wild d and FV wild e) also were examined. None of the strains used in this study contained detectable double-stranded RNAs (3).
Each strain was inoculated onto malt extract agar (10 g/liter malt extract, 18 g/liter agar) in 9-cm petri dishes. Cultures were incubated for
1 week at 24°C in the dark, and plugs were taken
5 mm inside the edge of each colony with a cork borer and used for the assay. To compare the effects of sugars, six portions of colonies of TK and TKm were grown in 2 ml of basal medium (4.5 g/liter yeast extract, 7.5 g/liter Bacto peptone [Difco, Detroit, MI], and 0.025 g/liter BTB [Nacalai tesque, Kyoto, Japan]) supplemented with 5 g/liter of xylose, trehalose, glucose, sucrose, fructose, cellobiose, galactose, or lactose in a 24-well culture plate (Asahi Techno Glass, Tokyo, Japan). Each culture plate was incubated on a reciprocal shaker at 60 rpm at room temperature for 4 days, and then the A615, the visible absorbance maximum of BTB, was measured. The decolorization ratio (D ratio) (expressed as a percentage) was calculated as follows: [1 (A615 of strain/A615 of blank)] x 100. TK decolorized BTB regardless of the sugar in the medium (D ratio, 91% ± 1%), while TKm did not decolorize BTB when it was cultured with fructose (D ratio, 4% ± 14%), cellobiose (D ratio, 10% ± 7%), galactose (D ratio, 93% ± 15%), or lactose (D ratio, 113% ± 6%). Specifically, the blue color of the lactose-containing medium of TKm was significantly more intense (P < 0.001, as determined by Student's t test) than the blue color of the medium containing any of the other sugars. Thus, lactose was selected as the most suitable sugar for this assay, and the assay medium was designated YBLB.
When Enokitake was grown in YBLB, it decolorized the medium in proportion to the ability to produce normal fruiting bodies (Table 1). Mycelial transfers from a single colony of strain G5 produced various colors in 24-well YBLB microplates, showing that the original colony was heterogeneous (data not shown). Mycelia were isolated from degenerate fruiting bodies and from the culture bed that produced the degenerate fruiting bodies for a culture of strain G5 with degenerate symptoms on two separate occasions. Mycelia also were isolated from fruiting bodies and a culture bottle from the same spawn lot that had no symptoms of degeneration. Ten samples of each colony were assayed in microplates containing YBLB. None of the transfers from the degenerate subcultures turned YBLB yellow, but if a subculture had at least one mycelial transfer that decolorized BTB, the strain could produce normal fruiting bodies.
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TABLE 1. Results of YBLB assay
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TABLE 2. Characterization of fruiting bodies produced by TKd subcultures after the YBLB assay
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This assay may be applicable to other edible mushroom species for the identification of degenerate strains and could be useful in Enokitake breeding programs to select stable, high-yielding strains.
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