2012
New penicillin-producing Penicillium species and an overview of section Chrysogena
Publication
Publication
Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi , Volume 29 - Issue 1 p. 78- 100
Species classified in Penicillium sect. Chrysogena are primary soil-borne and the most well-known members are P. chrysogenum and P. nalgiovense. Penicillium chrysogenum has received much attention because of its role in the production on penicillin and as a contaminant of indoor environments and various food and feedstuffs. Another biotechnologically important species is P. nalgiovense, which is used as a fungal starter culture for the production of fermented meat products. Previous taxonomic studies often had conflicting species circumscriptions. Here, we present a multigene analysis, combined with phenotypic characters and extrolite data, demonstrating that sect. Chrysogena consists of 18 species. Six of these are newly described here (P. allii-sativi, P. desertorum, P. goetzii, P. halotolerans, P. tardochrysogenum, P. vanluykii) and P. lanoscoeruleum was found to be an older name for P. aethiopicum. Each species produces a unique extrolite profile. The species share phenotypic characters, such as good growth on CYA supplemented with 5 % NaCl, ter- or quarterverticillate branched conidiophores and short, ampulliform phialides (< 9 μm). Conidial colours, production of ascomata and ascospores, shape and ornamentation of conidia and growth rates on other agar media are valuable for species identification. Eight species (P. allii-sativi, P. chrysogenum, P. dipodomyis, P. flavigenum, P. nalgiovense, P. rubens, P. tardochrysogenum and P. vanluykii) produce penicillin in culture.
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Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi | |
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Organisation | Naturalis journals & series |
Houbraken, J., Frisvad, J., Seifert, K. A., Overy, D. P., Tuthill, D. M., Valdez, J. G., & Samson, R. A. (2012). New penicillin-producing Penicillium species and an overview of section Chrysogena. Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi, 29(1), 78–100. |