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1.
We incubated 196 large-diameter aspen (Populus tremuloides), birch (Betula papyrifera), and pine (Pinus taeda) logs on the FACE Wood Decomposition Experiment encompassing eight climatically-distinct forest sites in the United States. We sampled dead wood from these large-diameter logs after 2 to 6 y of decomposition and determined wood rot type as a continuous variable using the lignin loss/density loss ratio (L/D) and assessed wood-rotting fungal guilds using high-throughput amplicon sequencing (HTAS) of the ITS-2 marker. We found L/D values in line with a white rot dominance in all three tree species, with pine having lower L/D values than aspen and birch. Based on HTAS data, white rot fungi were the most abundant and diverse wood-rotting fungal guild, and soft rot fungi were more abundant and diverse than brown rot fungi in logs with low L/D values. For aspen and birch logs, decay type was related to the wood density at sampling. For the pine logs, decay type was associated with the balance between white and brown/soft rot fungi abundance and OTU richness. Our results demonstrate that decay type is governed by biotic and abiotic factors, which vary by tree species.  相似文献   

2.
Beech wood (Fagus sylvatica L.) veneers were cultivated with white and brown rot fungi for up to 10 weeks. Fungal wood modification was traced with Fourier transform near infrared (FT-NIR) and Fourier transform mid infrared (FT-MIR) methods. Partial least square regression (PLSR) models to predict the total lignin content before and after fungal decay in the range between 17.0% and 26.6% were developed for FT-MIR transmission spectra as well as for FT-NIR reflectance spectra. Weight loss of the decayed samples between 0% and 38.2% could be estimated from the wood surface using individual PLSR models for white rot and brown rot fungi, and from a model including samples subjected to both degradation types.  相似文献   

3.
The penetration of enzymes into wood cell walls during white rot decay is an open question. A postembedding immunoelectron microscopic technique was the method of choice to answer that question. Infiltration of pine wood specimens with a concentrated culture filtrate greatly improved the labeling density and, thereby, reproducibility. Characterization of the concentrated culture filtrate by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting (immunoblotting) revealed three closely spaced proteins of molecular weights about 42,000 showing immunoreactivity against anti-lignin peroxidase serum. It was shown by immunogold labeling that lignin peroxidase of Phanerochaete chrysosporium is located on the surface of the wood cell wall or within areas of heavy attack. It did not diffuse into undecayed parts of the cell wall. The reasons for preventing lignin peroxidase from penetrating wood cell walls during white rot decay are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The white rot fungi used in this study caused two different forms of degradation. Phanerochaete chrysosporium, strain BKM-F-1767, and Phellinus pini caused a preferential removal of lignin from birch wood, whereas Trametes (Coriolus) versicolor caused a nonselective attack of all cell wall components. Use of polyclonal antisera to H8 lignin peroxidase and monoclonal antisera to H2 lignin peroxidase followed by immunogold labeling with protein A-gold or protein G-gold, respectively, showed lignin peroxidase extra-and intracellularly to fungal hyphae and within the delignified cell walls after 12 weeks of laboratory decay. Lignin peroxidase was localized at sites within the cell wall where electron-dense areas of the lignified cell wall layers remained. In wood decayed by Trametes versicolor, lignin peroxidase was located primarily along the surface of eroded cell walls. No lignin peroxidase was evident in brown-rotted wood, but slight labeling occurred within hyphal cells. Use of polyclonal antisera to xylanase followed by immunogold labeling showed intense labeling on fungal hyphae and surrounding slime layers and within the woody cell wall, where evidence of degradation was apparent. Colloidal-gold-labeled xylanase was prevalent in wood decayed by all fungi used in this study. Areas of the wood with early stages of cell wall decay had the greatest concentration of gold particles, while little labeling occurred in cells in advanced stages of decay by brown or white rot fungi.  相似文献   

5.
We examined whether sporocarp carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N values) reflected different functional strategies in 15 species of wood decay fungi. In Finnish Picea abies forests, we compared sporocarp δ13C and δ15N against log diameter, proximity to ground, and three wood decay types, specifically brown rot, nonselective white rot, and selective white rot (targeting hemicellulose and lignin preferentially). In regression analysis (adjusted r2 = 0.576), species accounted for 31% of variability in δ13C, with factors influencing wood δ13C accounting for the remainder. Brown rot fungi and three white rot fungi that selectively attacked hemicellulose (Heterobasidion parviporum, Phellopilus nigrolimitatus, and Trichaptum abietinum) were higher in δ13C than nonselective white rot fungi. This was attributed to greater assimilation of 13C-enriched pentoses from hemicellulose by these fungi. The pathogenic white rot fungus Heterobasidion parviporum had higher δ15N with proximity to ground and increasing log diameter. This suggested that 15N-enriched soil N contributed to decomposing logs and that Heterobasidion growing from a bigger resource base had increased access to soil N. These isotopic patterns accordingly reflected both functional diversity of wood decay fungi and site-specific factors.  相似文献   

6.
Due to their outstanding capability of degrading the recalcitrant biomacromolecule lignin, white rot fungi have been attracting interest for several technological applications in mechanical pulping and wood surface modification. However, little is known about the time course of delignification in early stages of colonisation of wood by these fungi. Using a Fourier transform near infrared (FT-NIR) spectroscopic technique, lignin loss of sterilised spruce wood shavings (0.4–2.0 mm particle size) that had been degraded by various species of white rot fungi could be monitored already during the first 2 weeks. The delignification kinetics of Dichomitus squalens, three Phlebia species (Phlebia brevispora, Phlebia radiata and Phlebia tremellosa), three strains of Ceriporiopsis subvermispora as well as the white rot ascomycete Hypoxylon fragiforme and the basidiomycete Oxyporus latemarginatus were determined. Each of the fungi tested was able to reduce the lignin content of spruce wood significantly during the first week. The amount of delignification achieved by the selected white rot fungi after 2 weeks ranged from 7.2% for C. subvermispora (FPL 105.752) to 2.5% for P. radiata. Delignification was significant (P = 95%) already after 3 days treatment with C. subvermispora and P. tremellosa. Activities of extracellular ligninolytic enzymes (laccase, manganese peroxidase and/or lignin peroxidase), expressed by each of the tested fungi, were determined. Lignin was degraded when peroxidase activity was detected in the fungal cultures, but only a low level of correlation between enzyme activities and the extent of delignification was found.  相似文献   

7.
This study evaluated the decay resistance of ash (Fraxinus excelsior L.), beech (Fagus sylvatica L.), and maple (Acer platanoides L.) wood impregnated by a full cell process with N-methylol melamine (NMM) and combined NMM-metal complex dye (NMM-BS) in aqueous solutions. Basidiomycete decay testing involved incubation with Coniophora puteana (brown rot) and Trametes versicolor (white rot) according to a modified EN 113 (1996) standard, while for the soft rot fungal resistance was evaluated following the standard ENv 807 (2001). NMM and NMM-BS modifications at a WPG range of 7–11% provided decay protection against brown rot resulting in a mass loss less than the required limit (3%). The NMM and NMM-BS modified wood showed increased resistance to white rot decay; however, a higher WPG is needed to prohibit attack from this hardwood specific fungus. The metal-complex dye alone revealed biocidal effects against basidiomycetes. An increased WPG in NMM or NMM-BS had a positive impact against soft rot decay and the lowest mass losses after 32 weeks of exposure were obtained with NMM modification at about 18–21% WPG. NMM modification at this WPG range, however, was not sufficient to protect the wood from soft rot decay. The wood of beech and maple showed slightly higher resistance to all decay types than ash, probably due to the poorer degree of modification of the latter.  相似文献   

8.
Seventeen isolates from white rotted beech wood and six strains from a local culture collection were evaluated for their capability to delignify beech and spruce wood selectively. Six peroxidase-positive isolates were found using a colorimetric agar plate test (Poly R-478), and genetically identified by their internal transcribed spacer (ITS1) or 28S rDNA sequences. Colonised on beech and spruce wood veneers, some of the peroxidase-positive isolates caused selective white rot on both wood species. Weight loss and lignin content of the degraded veneers were estimated from FT-NIR spectra with established linear regression models and multivariate models based on partial least squares regression (PLSR). Weight loss of the samples was also determined gravimetrically. A measure for the relative selectivity of the strains for lignin degradation was formulated and the values were calculated. Two strains that were identified as Oxyporus latemarginatus and Trametes cervina exhibited high selectivity on spruce wood, but the lignin content of the decayed wood was higher than that degraded by the reference strain Ceriporiopsis subvermispora. One strain – identified as Phlebia tremellosa – led to a lower lignin content of beech wood but caused also comparably high weight loss and thus exhibited an overall lower selectivity. The NIR spectroscopic method proved to be convenient for the quick screening of selective white rot fungi. Furthermore, the results revealed that high selectivity for lignin degradation is much more pronounced in early degradation stages.  相似文献   

9.
Dead wood is an important habitat for forest organisms, and wood decay fungi are the principal agents determining the dead wood properties that influence the communities of organisms inhabiting dead wood. In this study, we investigated the effects of wood decomposer fungi on the communities of myxomycetes and bryophytes inhabiting decayed logs. On 196 pine logs, 72 species of fungi, 34 species and seven varieties of myxomycetes, and 16 species of bryophytes were identified. Although white rot was the dominant decay type in sapwood and heartwood, brown and soft rots were also prevalent, particularly in sapwood. Moreover, white rot and soft rot were positively and brown rot negatively correlated with wood pH. Ordination analyses clearly showed a succession of cryptogam species during log decomposition and showed significant correlations of communities with the pH, water content, and decay type of wood. These analyses indicate that fungal wood decomposer activities strongly influence the cryptogam communities on dead wood.  相似文献   

10.
Deadwood is an important habitat for bryophytes in boreal and subalpine forests. The type of decay in wood (white, brown, and soft rot) caused by fungal colonizers has been revealed to affect bryophyte communities. However, little is known about the effects of decay type on the growth of bryophytes. We tested the effect of wood decay type on gametophyte growth for two common bryophyte species, Scapania bolanderi Austin and Pleurozium schreberi (Brid.) Mitt., which dominate the logs in subalpine coniferous forest on Mt. Ontake, in central Honshu, Japan. We used pot culture experiments in an open-sky nursery field. After eight months of cultivation, the growth of S. bolanderi was larger on brown rot wood than white rot wood, but the growth of P. schreberi was not. Mixed cultures of the two species also showed greater growth on brown rot wood. However, growth of S. bolanderi was significantly smaller than P. schreberi in mixed culture. These results suggest that brown rot wood enhances growth of S. bolanderi, but growth may be reduced under competition from P. schreberi. The results are in agreement with the field observation that brown rot wood has a positive association with S. bolanderi coverage on deadwood.  相似文献   

11.
Wood decay under the microscope   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Many aspects of the interactions between host wood structure and fungal activity can be revealed by high resolution light microscopy, and this technique has provided much of the information discussed here. A wide range of different types of decay can result from permutations of host species, fungal species and conditions within wood. Within this spectrum, three main types are commonly recognised: brown rot, white rot and soft rot. The present review explores parts of the range of variation that each of these encompasses and emphasizes that degradation modes appear to reflect a co-evolutionary adaptation of decay fungi to different wood species or the lignin composition within more primitive and advanced wood cell types. One objective of this review is to provide evidence that the terms brown rot, white rot and soft rot may not be obsolete, but rigid definitions for fungi that are placed into these categories may be less appropriate than thought previously. Detailed knowledge of decomposition processes does not only aid prognosis of decay development in living trees for hazard assessment but also allows the identification of wood decay fungi that can be used for biotechnology processes in the wood industry. In contrast to bacteria or commercial enzymes, hyphae can completely ramify through solid wood. In this review evidence is provided that wood decay fungi can effectively induce permeability changes in gymnospermous heartwood or can be applied to facilitate the identification of tree rings in diffuse porous wood of angiosperms. The specificity of their enzymes and the mild conditions under which degradation proceeds is partly detrimental for trees, but also make wood decay fungi potentially efficient biotechnological tools.  相似文献   

12.
Lignocellulose biodegradation, an essential step in terrestrial carbon cycling, generally involves removal of the recalcitrant lignin barrier that otherwise prevents infiltration by microbial polysaccharide hydrolases. However, fungi that cause brown rot of wood, a major route for biomass recycling in coniferous forests, utilize wood polysaccharides efficiently while removing little of the lignin. The mechanism by which these basidiomycetes breach the lignin remains unclear. We used recently developed methods for solubilization and multidimensional (1) H-(13) C solution-state NMR spectroscopy of ball-milled lignocellulose to analyse aspen wood degraded by Postia placenta. The results showed that decay decreased the content of the principal arylglycerol-β-aryl ether interunit linkage in the lignin by more than half, while increasing the frequency of several truncated lignin structures roughly fourfold over the level found in sound aspen. These new end-groups, consisting of benzaldehydes, benzoic acids and phenylglycerols, accounted for 6-7% of all original lignin subunits. Our results provide evidence that brown rot by P. placenta results in significant ligninolysis, which might enable infiltration of the wood by polysaccharide hydrolases even though the partially degraded lignin remains in situ. Recent work has revealed that the P. placenta genome encodes no ligninolytic peroxidases, but has also shown that this fungus produces an extracellular Fenton system. It is accordingly likely that P. placenta employs electrophilic reactive oxygen species such as hydroxyl radicals to disrupt lignin in wood.  相似文献   

13.
Basidiomycota brown rot fungus (Fomitopsis pinicola) and two white rot fungi (Phlebia radiata, Trichaptum abietinum) were cultivated on thin slices of spruce wood individually and in interspecies combinations. Within 12 months, F. pinicola substantially decomposed spruce wood observed as mass loss, also in three-species combinations. However, white rot fungi through hyphal interactions negatively affected the brown-rot indicative iron reduction capacity of F. pinicola. Decay-signature gene expression in mycelial interaction zones indicated suppression of brown rot mechanism but stimulation of enzymatic white-rot lignin attack by P. radiata. Wood ultrastructure imaging showed white-rot dominance in the fungal combinations, whereas destructive brown-rot was evident with F. pinicola alone. Our results confirm the dynamic pattern of enzyme production in fungal combinations, and transition from brown to white rot decomposition metabolism during the late stage of wood decay after one year of interspecific interactions.  相似文献   

14.
Several analytical methods were compared to evaluate characteristic wood decaying fungi for their potential to depolymerise lignin on spruce wood particles. Wood samples were treated with the white rot fungi Phlebia brevispora, Ceriporiopsis subvermispora, Merulius tremellosus, Pycnoporus sanguineus, Trametes pubescens and with the brown rot fungus Gloeophyllum trabeum. The UV absorbancies of crude ethanol extracts, total extractives content from sequential extraction, ligninolytic enzyme activities, lignin solubilisation and decrease of lignin content were compared. It was shown, that, in early decay stages, UV absorbancies of crude ethanol extracts and total extractives content correlate well with lignin degradation, increase of acid soluble lignin and increased production of ligninolytic enzymes (total peroxidase). Lignin content was determined using FT-NIR spectroscopy as well as by wet-chemical analysis, indicating a very good correlation between the two methods. According to the different analytical methods, the tested fungi can be classified into three categories based on their characteristic behaviour: brown rot, “slow” and “fast” white rot.  相似文献   

15.
Decay resistance of Rubber wood (Hevea brasiliensis) esterified with three fatty acid chlorides (hexanoyl chloride (C6), decanoyl chloride (C10) and tetra-decanoyl chloride (C14)) was evaluated. Unmodified and modified wood samples were exposed to a brown rot (Polyporus meliae) and a white rot (Coriolus versicolor) fungus for 12 weeks. Unmodified rubber wood was severely decayed by P. meliae and C. versicolor, which was indicated by significant weight loss. The rate of decay by brown rot was higher than white rot. Modified wood samples exhibited very good resistant to brown and white-rot fungi. The degree of protection increased with increase in degree of modification. P. meliae, a brown rot fungus, removed structural carbohydrate component in unmodified wood selectively whereas, C. vesicolor showed preference to lignin. The FTIR spectra of modified wood exposed to fungi show no significant changes in relative peak intensities of lignin/carbohydrates indicating effectiveness of chemically modified wood in restricting chemical degradation. Chemical modification occurred more efficiently at carbohydrate portion of the wood. Therefore, it is more effective in retarding decay due to P. meliae.  相似文献   

16.
A screening procedure in which scanning electron microscopy was used indicated that 26 white rot fungi selectively removed lignin from various coniferous and hardwood tree species. Delignified wood from field collections had distinct micromorphological characteristics that were easily differentiated from other types of decay. The middle lamella was degraded, and the cells were separated from one another. Secondary cell wall layers that remained had a fibrillar appearance. Chemical analyses of delignified wood indicated that the cells were composed primarily of cellulose. Only small percentages of lignin and hemicellulose were evident. Delignified wood was not uniformly distributed throughout the decayed wood samples. White-pocket and white-mottled areas of the various decayed wood examined contained delignified cells, but adjacent wood had a nonselective removal of lignin where all cell wall components had been degraded simultaneously. This investigation demonstrates that selective delignification among white rot fungi is more prevalent than previously realized and identifies a large number of fungi for use in studies of preferential lignin degradation.  相似文献   

17.
The roles of lignin peroxidase, manganese peroxidase, and laccase were investigated in the biodegradation of pentachlorophenol (PCP) by several white rot fungi. The disappearance of pentachlorophenol from cultures of wild type strains,P. chrysosporium, Trametes sp. andPleurotus sp., was observed. The activities of manganese peroxidase and laccase were detected inTiametes sp. andPleurotus sp. cultures. However, the activities of ligninolytic enzymes were not detected inP. chrysosporium cultures. Therefore, our results showed that PCP was degraded under ligninolytic as well as nonligninolytic conditions. Indicating that lignin peroxidase, manganese peroxidase, and laccase are not essential in the biodegradation of PCP by white rot fungi.  相似文献   

18.
The degradation of lignocellulose and the secretion of extracellular oxidoreductases were investigated in beech-wood (Fagus sylvatica) microcosms using 11 representative fungi of four different ecophysiological and taxonomic groups causing: (1) classic white rot of wood (e.g. Phlebia radiata), (2) 'nonspecific' wood rot (e.g. Agrocybe aegerita), (3) white rot of leaf litter (Stropharia rugosoannulata) or (4) soft rot of wood (e.g. Xylaria polymorpha). All strong white rotters produced manganese-oxidizing peroxidases as the key enzymes of ligninolysis (75-2200 mU g(-1)), whereas lignin peroxidase activity was not detectable in the wood extracts. Interestingly, activities of two recently discovered peroxidases - aromatic peroxygenase and a manganese-independent peroxidase of the DyP-type - were detected in the culture extracts of A. aegerita (up to 125 mU g(-1)) and Auricularia auricula-judae (up to 400 mU g(-1)), respectively. The activity of classic peroxidases correlated to some extent with the removal of wood components (e.g. Klason lignin) and the release of small water-soluble fragments (0.5-1.0 kDa) characterized by aromatic constituents. In contrast, laccase activity correlated with the formation of high-molecular mass fragments (30-200 kDa). The differences observed in the degradation patterns allow to distinguish the rot types caused by basidiomycetes and ascomycetes and may be suitable for following the effects of oxidative key enzymes (ligninolytic peroxidases vs. laccases, role of novel peroxidases) during wood decay.  相似文献   

19.
Wood-decaying basidiomycetes are some of the most effective bioconverters of lignocellulose in nature, however the way they alter wood crystalline cellulose on a molecular level is still not well understood. To address this, we examined and compared changes in wood undergoing decay by two species of brown rot fungi, Gloeophyllum trabeum and Meruliporia incrassata, and two species of white rot fungi, Irpex lacteus and Pycnoporus sanguineus, using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and 13C solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The overall percent crystallinity in wood undergoing decay by M. incrassata, G. trabeum, and I. lacteus appeared to decrease according to the stage of decay, while in wood decayed by P. sanguineus the crystallinity was found to increase during some stages of degradation. This result is suggested to be potentially due to the different decay strategies employed by these fungi. The average spacing between the 200 cellulose crystal planes was significantly decreased in wood degraded by brown rot, whereas changes observed in wood degraded by the two white rot fungi examined varied according to the selectivity for lignin. The conclusions were supported by a quantitative analysis of the structural components in the wood before and during decay confirming the distinct differences observed for brown and white rot fungi. The results from this study were consistent with differences in degradation methods previously reported among fungal species, specifically more non-enzymatic degradation in brown rot versus more enzymatic degradation in white rot.  相似文献   

20.
Biodegradation of Lignin by White Rot Fungi   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
A review is presented related to the biochemistry of lignocellulose transformation. The biodegradation of wood constituents is currently understood as a multienzymatic process with the mediation of small molecules; therefore, this review will focus on the roles of these small molecular compounds and radicals working in concert with enzymes. Wood rotting basidiomycetous fungi penetrate wood and lead to more easily metabolized, carbohydrate constituents of the complex. Having a versatile machinery of enzymes, the white rot fungi are able to attack directly the "lignin barrier." They also use a multienzyme system including so-called "feed back" type enzymes, allowing for simultaneous transformation of both lignin and cellulose. These enzymes may function separately or cooperatively.  相似文献   

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