31 results on '"Yoshie Terashima"'
Search Results
2. New findings on the fungal species Tricholoma matsutake from Ukraine, and revision of its taxonomy and biogeography based on multilocus phylogenetic analyses.
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Wataru Aoki, Bergius, Niclas, Kozlan, Serhii, Fuminori Fukuzawa, Hitomi Okuda, Hitoshi Murata, Ishida, Takahide A., Vaario, Lu-Min, Hisayasu Kobayashi, Kalmiş, Erbil, Toshimitsu Fukiharu, Seiki Gisusi, Ken-ichi Matsushima, Yoshie Terashima, Maki Narimatsu, Norihisa Matsushita, Kang-Hyeon Ka, Fuqiang Yu, Takashi Yamanaka, and Masaki Fukuda
- Subjects
SPECIES ,EDIBLE mushrooms ,BIOGEOGRAPHY ,LOCUS (Genetics) ,MITOCHONDRIA - Abstract
Matsutake mushrooms are among the best-known edible wild mushroom taxa worldwide. The representative Tricholoma matsutake is from East Asia and the northern and central regions of Europe. Here, we report the existence of T. matsutake under fir trees in Eastern Europe (i.e., Ukraine), as confirmed by phylogenetic analysis of nine loci on the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes. All specimens from Japan, Bhutan, China, North Korea, South Korea, Sweden, Finland, and Ukraine formed a T. matsutake clade according to the phylogeny of the internal transcribed spacer region. The European population of T. matsutake was clustered based on the ß2 tubulin gene, with a moderate bootstrap value. In contrast, based on analyses of three loci, i.e., rpb2, tef1, and the ß2 tubulin gene, T. matsutake specimens sampled from Bhutan and China belonged to a clade independent of the other specimens of this species, implying a genetically isolated population. As biologically available type specimens of T. matsutake have not been designated since its description as a new species from Japan in 1925, we established an epitype of this fungus, sampled in a Pinus densiflora forest in Nagano, Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Overexpression of α-synuclein in an astrocyte cell line promotes autophagy inhibition and apoptosis
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Rodrigo Portes Ureshino, Andrana K. Calgarotto, Soraya S. Smaili, Priscila Totarelli Monteforte, Claudia Bincoletto, Sang Won Han, Fernanda Yakel Stefani, Juliana Yoshie Terashima, Gustavo J.S. Pereira, Roberta Sessa Stilhano, Adolfo Garcia Erustes, and Yi-Te Hsu
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Gene Expression ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Neuroprotection ,Parkin ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Autophagy ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Line, Transformed ,Alpha-synuclein ,Rotenone ,Rats ,nervous system diseases ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Astrocytes ,alpha-Synuclein ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Astrocyte - Abstract
α-Synuclein is the major component of neuronal cytoplasmic aggregates called Lewy bodies, the main pathological hallmark of Parkinson disease. Although neurons are the predominant cells expressing α-synuclein in the brain, recent studies have demonstrated that primary astrocytes in culture also express α-synuclein and regulate α-synuclein trafficking. Astrocytes have a neuroprotective role in several detrimental brain conditions; we therefore analyzed the effects of the overexpression of wild-type α-synuclein and its A30P and A53T mutants on autophagy and apoptosis. We observed that in immortalized astrocyte cell lines, overexpression of α-synuclein proteins promotes the decrease of LC3-II and the increase of p62 protein levels, suggesting the inhibition of autophagy. When these cells were treated with rotenone, there was a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, especially in cells expressing mutant α-synuclein. The level of this decrease was related to the toxicity of the mutants because they show a more intense and sustained effect. The decrease in autophagy and the mitochondrial changes in conjunction with parkin expression levels may sensitize astrocytes to apoptosis.
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- 2017
4. Taxonomic revision of Termitomyces species found in Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan, based on phylogenetic analyses with three loci.
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Yuuki Kobayashi, Miyuki Katsuren, Masaru Hojo, Shohei Wada, Yoshie Terashima, Masayoshi Kawaguchi, Gaku Tokuda, Kazuhiko Kinjo, and Shuji Shigenobu
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ARCHIPELAGOES ,SPECIES ,TERMITES ,MOLECULAR phylogeny ,FUNGI - Abstract
Fungi in the genus Termitomyces are external symbionts of fungus-growing termites. The three rhizogenic Termitomyces species T. eurrhizus, T. clypeatus, and T. intermedius, and one species similar to T. microcarpus that lacks pseudorrhiza, have been reported from Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan. In contrast, only two genetic groups (types A and B) of Termitomyces vegetative mycelia have been detected in nests of the fungus-growing termite Odontotermes formosanus. In this study, we investigated the relationships between the mycelial genetic groups and the basidiomata of Termitomyces samples from the Ryukyu Archipelago. We found that all the basidioma specimens and the type B mycelia formed one clade that we identified as T. intermedius. Another clade consisted of the type A mycelia, which showed similarity to T. microcarpus, was identified as T. fragilis. Our results indicate that the Japanese T. eurrhizus and T. clypeatus specimens should re-named as T. intermedius. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 20th Annual meeting of Japanese Society of Mushroom Science and Biotechnology
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Yoshie Terashima
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Mushroom ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2016
6. Comparison of distribution of oil-degrading filamentous fungi on subtropical Iriomote Island, Japan, and tropical Con Dao Island, Vietnam
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Cong Dang Phi Doan, Ayako Sano, Yoshie Terashima, Hisanori Tamaki, and Hoang Nguyen Duc Pham
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0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Bioremediation ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Environmental science ,Distribution (economics) ,Subtropics ,business - Published
- 2016
7. Identification and biodegradation characteristics of oil-degrading bacteria from subtropical Iriomote Island, Japan, and tropical Con Dao Island, Vietnam
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Yoshie Terashima, Xo Hoa Duong, Hisanori Tamaki, Ayako Sano, Hoang Nguyen Duc Pham, and Cong Dang Phi Doan
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0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Ecology ,Subtropics ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biodegradation ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Bioremediation ,Environmental science ,Identification (biology) ,Bacteria ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Published
- 2016
8. Immunohistochemical Cross-Reactivity Between Paracoccidioides sp. from Dolphins and Histoplasma capsulatum
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Toshihiro Konno, Luciene Airy Nagashima, Sayaka Yamaguchi, Ayako Sano, Takashi Kaneshima, Atsushi Yamamoto, Yoshie Terashima, Eiko Nakagawa Itano, Godai Shumoto, and Keiichi Ueda
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0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Dolphins ,030106 microbiology ,Histoplasma ,Cross Reactions ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Paracoccidioides ,Histoplasmosis ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Blood serum ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Coccidioides ,Antibodies, Fungal ,Paracoccidioides brasiliensis ,biology ,Paracoccidioidomycosis ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Coccidioides posadasii ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Paracoccidioidomycosis ceti is a cutaneous disease of cetaceans caused by uncultivated Paracoccidioides brasiliensis or Paracoccidioides spp. Serological cross-reactions between paracoccidioidomycosis ceti and paracoccidioidomycosis, paracoccidioidomycosis and histoplasmosis, and paracoccidioidomycosis and coccidioidomycosis have been reported before. The present study aimed to detect immunohistochemical cross-reaction between antibodies to Paracoccidioides sp. and Histoplasma capsulatum, and vice versa. Thirty murine sera, obtained from experimental infections of 6 isolates of H. capsulatum, were reacted with paraffin-embedded yeast-form cells of Paracoccidioides sp. derived from a case of paracoccidioidomycosis ceti in Japan. The murine sera were also reacted with human isolates of H. capsulatum yeast cells, with P. brasiliensis yeast cells, and with fungal cells of Coccidioides posadasii. Three dolphins’ sera from cases of paracoccidioidomycosis ceti, two human sera from patients with paracoccidioidomycosis, and a serum from a healthy person with a history of coccidioidomycosis were used in order to determine that the tested fungal cells reacted properly. Sera derived from mice infected with an isolate of H. capsulatum reacted positively against yeast cells of Paracoccidioides sp., yeast cells of P. brasiliensis, and fungal cells of C. posadasii, while those derived from other strains were negative. The present study recorded for the first time the cross-reaction between the yeast cells of H. capsulatum and antibodies against Paracoccidioides spp., the yeast cells of Paracoccidioides sp. and antibodies against H. capsulatum, the yeast cells of Paracoccidioides sp. and antibodies against Coccidioides sp., and fungal cells of C. posadasii and antibodies against Paracoccidioides spp.
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- 2018
9. Physiological characteristics of the trunk sap rot pathogen Fomitiporia sp. on the 'Sanbu-sugi' cultivar of Cryptomeria japonica
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Yoshie Terashima
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Fomitiporia ,food.ingredient ,biology ,Pectin ,food and beverages ,Cryptomeria ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,Japonica ,food ,Botany ,Yeast extract ,Cultivar ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium - Abstract
An unidentified Fomitiporia sp. initially identified as Fomitiporia punctata , causes severe trunk sap rot on Cryptomeria japonica cultivar “Sanbu-sugi”. We investigated the physiological characteristics of the mycelia of the causal fungus (F2, F6, and F43), in comparison with F. punctata (Fp) as a reference, in eight different experiments. The three unidentified isolates showed similar tendencies in change in mycelial growth during incubation, optimal growth temperatures (25 °C), optimal pH range (pH 5–6), glucose to yeast extract ratio (45), utilizable carbon sources (amylose, CM-cellulose, and pectin), utilizable nitrogen sources (yeast extract and polypepton), and water potential (−1.7 Mpa).
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- 2013
10. Screening of Fungi Highly Degrading Conifer Wood Based on Degradability of Lignin
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Yoshie Terashima
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Botany ,Lignin - Published
- 2010
11. Effect of Trehalose Added into Substrate of Lentinula edodes on Emerged Fruit Bodies I
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Takao Terashita, Yoshie Terashima, Tomoko Watanabe, Ayuho Suzuki, and Norifumi Shirasaka
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Lentinula ,chemistry ,biology ,General Chemical Engineering ,Substrate (chemistry) ,biology.organism_classification ,Trehalose ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
シイタケ培地へトレハロースを0.5,1,2,3,4%添加して栽培し,子実体の収量,トレハロース含有量,鮮度保持,食味への影響を試験した。その結果,収量には有意差のある変化を生じなかったが,0.5,1,2,3%添加培地から1回目に発生したMサイズ以上の子実体の個数割合が多くなった。無添加に比べて,2,3,4%添加培地からの子実体のトレハロース含有量は3回目までのいずれの発生回でも多くなった。鮮度については,2%添加ではいずれの発生回でも高い保持効果が認められ,特に4%添加では1回目に有意に高かった。官能検査では,2%と3%添加の場合に摂取時の「香り」,「食感」,「味」と「総合評価」が比較的高かった。
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- 2009
12. Comparison of conditions for mycelial growth of Lepista sordida causing fairy rings on Zoysia matrella turf to those on Agrostis palustris turf
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Yoshie Terashima and Azusa Fujiie
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Zoysia matrella ,biology.organism_classification ,Agrostis ,Nutrient ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Soil pH ,Organic matter ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium ,Lepista sordida ,Zoysia - Abstract
Symptoms of fairy rings caused by Lepista sordida have been reported on Zoysiagrass (Zoysia spp.) turf maintained at fairway height (2 cm), but not on bentgrass (Agrostis spp.) maintained at putting green height (0.5 cm). The mycelia of this fungus inhabit primarily the upper 0–2 cm layer of the soil extending into the thatch. To compare conditions for the mycelial growth in Z. matrella turf to those in A. palustris turf, we examined the effects of nutrients, temperature, water potential, and pH in the field as well as in the laboratory. Greater growth of the mycelia was observed in medium that included hot water extracts from soil of the 0–1 cm zone in Z. matrella turf compared to that from A. palustris. The upper soil layer in Z. matrella turf contained more organic matter from clippings than that in A. palustris. The temperature and water potential of the 0–2 cm soil zone in Z. matrella turf were also more favorable for the mycelial growth. The soil pH values of this zone in Z. matrella turf were less favorable compared to A. palustris but within the range for accelerating mycelial growth.
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- 2007
13. Lignin-degrading activity of edible mushroom Strobilurus ohshimae that forms fruiting bodies on buried sugi (Cryptomeria japonica) twigs
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Hiroto Homma, Hirofumi Shinoyama, Takaaki Fujii, Seigo Amachi, Yoshie Terashima, and Yukihiro Nobuta
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Laccase ,Materials science ,biology ,Fagus crenata ,fungi ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages ,Cryptomeria ,macromolecular substances ,Lignin peroxidase ,biology.organism_classification ,complex mixtures ,Biomaterials ,Edible mushroom ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Manganese peroxidase ,Botany ,Lignin ,Trametes versicolor - Abstract
Strobilurus ohshimae is an edible mushroom, and it specifically forms its fruiting bodies on buried sugi (Cryptomeria japonica) twigs. In this research, we studied lignindegrading activity of S. ohshimae. We isolated 18 strains of S. ohshimae from various regions of Japan, and determined their lignin degradation rates on sugi wood meal medium. All the strains of S. ohshimae degraded approximately 6%–12% of sugi lignin in 30 days, and these lignin degradation rates were 1.5–3 times higher than those of Trametes versicolor, which is a typical lignin-degrading fungus. Among the three main lignin-degrading enzymes, activity of lignin peroxidase and manganese peroxidase was not observed, while 4340U/g of laccase was produced in 30 days. To investigate the effect of wood species on lignin degradation by S. ohshimae, the lignin degradation rate and laccase productivity on sugi wood meal medium were compared with those on beech (Fagus crenata). In T. versicolor, both lignin degradation rate and laccase productivity were higher on beech than on sugi. Conversely, in S. ohshimae, lignin degradation rate and laccase productivity were higher on sugi than on beech. Therefore, it was suggested that coniferous lignin is not always difficult to degrade for the fungi that inhabit softwood.
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- 2007
14. Morphology and comparative ecology of the fairy ring fungi, Vascellum curtisii and Bovista dermoxantha, on turf of bentgrass, bluegrass, and Zoysiagrass
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Toshimitsu Fukiharu, Azusa Fujiie, and Yoshie Terashima
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Agrostis ,biology ,Ecology ,Botany ,Fairy ring ,Vascellum curtisii ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium ,Zoysia ,Bovista dermoxantha - Abstract
We identified the causal fungi of fairy rings as Vascellum curtisii and Bovista dermoxantha on the turf of bentgrass, bluegrass, and Zoysiagrass. Observing the fairy rings developed in the turfgrass study site in Chiba City for 5 years from 1998, V. curtisii, producing sporophores during June and November except midsummer, formed darker-green rings than the adjacent turf and withered the three kinds of turf. B. dermoxantha produced sporophores exclusively in midsummer. The fungus formed dark green rings on the three kinds of turf but withered only bentgrass and bluegrass. The optimum mycelial growth temperature of V. curtisii was 30°C. Whereas that of B. dermoxantha ranged between 35° and 40°C. The infection test of the fungi to the seedlings revealed that V. curtisii damaged Zoysiagrass more severely than bentgrass and that B. dermoxantha was more injurious to bentgrass than Zoysiagrass.
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- 2004
15. Influence of contamination by Penicillium brevicompactum and Trichoderma harzianum during Lentinula edodes spawn run on fruiting in sawdust-based substrates
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Shoji Ohga, Yoshie Terashima, and Hisao Igusa
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biology ,Bran ,Inoculation ,food and beverages ,Trichoderma harzianum ,Penicillium brevicompactum ,Contamination ,biology.organism_classification ,Conidium ,Horticulture ,Lentinula ,visual_art ,Botany ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Sawdust ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Substrates with two kinds of supplements, raw and deoiled rice bran, were artificially infected with Penicillium brevicompactum or Trichoderma harzianum on days 0, 26, 61, and 90 after inoculation with Lentinula edodes. With P. brevicompactum infection, there was no significant difference in the yield and size of the fruit-bodies among either infected and uninfected substrates, raw and deoiled rice bran substrates, or days when the substrates were infected. However, the irregularly shaped fruit-bodies, which were commercially of low value, yielded greatly on raw rice bran substrates infected on days 0 and 26, whereas the substrates infected with T. harzianum on any day were covered with conidia and fatally damaged.
- Published
- 2002
16. Primers based on specific ITS sequences of rDNAs for PCR detection of two fairy ring fungi of turfgrass, Vascellum pratense and Lycoperdon pusillum
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Akihiro Seki, Masatoshi Kojima, Yoshie Terashima, Azusa Fujiie, Katsutoshi Ogiwara, and Chikako Kubo
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biology ,fungi ,Fairy ring ,Nucleic acid sequence ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Lycoperdon ,chemistry ,law ,Botany ,Internal transcribed spacer ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,DNA ,Mycelium ,Polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Vascellum pratense and Lycoperdon pusillum cause fairy ring disease on turfgrass in golf courses. For effective disease control, detection of the mycelia of the two fungi in the soil is important. Comparing the sequence data of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of these fungi with each other and with those from the database, we designed four pairs of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers for each fungus. The primers allowed amplification of the DNA of the objective fungi singly, but of no other DNA from field-collected mushroom-forming fungi or soil-borne turfgrass pathogenic fungi.
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- 2002
17. The host ranges of conifer-associated Tricholoma matsutake, Fagaceae-associated T. bakamatsutake and T. fulvocastaneum are wider in vitro than in nature
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Akiyoshi Yamada, Akira Ohta, Yuko Ota, Yoshie Terashima, Miki Konno, Masataka Kawai, Hitoshi Neda, and Takashi Yamanaka
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Physiology ,Biology ,Quercus serrata ,Fagaceae ,01 natural sciences ,Host Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pinus densiflora ,Tricholoma bakamatsutake ,Botany ,Genetics ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium ,Tricholoma ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Matsutake ,Biodiversity ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,Edible mushroom ,Tracheophyta ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Tricholoma matsutake is the most commercially important edible mushroom in pine forests in Japan. Tricholoma bakamatsutake and T. fulvocastaneum, species closely related to T. matsutake, occur in Fagaceae forests. We examined ectomycorrhizal (EM) formation by these Tricholoma species by in vitro synthesis among seven strains (two of T. matsutake, four of T. bakamatsutake, one of T. fulvocastaneum) and axenic plants of pine (Pinus densiflora) and oak (Quercus serrata, Q. phillyraeoides). All strains, except for one of T. matsutake, formed EM associations with both pine and oak. Plant growth and mycelial development were differently affected by EM formation depending on the plant-fungus combination.
- Published
- 2014
18. Isolation of dermatophytes and related species from domestic fowl (Gallus gallus domesticus)
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Keji Takahashi, Yasutomo Nakazato, Masataro Hiruma, Nguyen Thi Thanh Ha, Hiroji Chibana, Yoshie Terashima, Yoshiteru Murata, Ayako Sano, Sana Takahashi, You Uehara, Yoko Takahashi, Masaru Murakami, Michiko Murata, Yoshimi Imura, Takashi Kaneshima, Sayaka Yamaguchi, Atsushi Hosokawa, M. Hiruma, Hidemi Touyama, Yasuhiro Kawamoto, Morihiko Hirakawa, Hiroshi Uezato, Kazutoshi Sugiyama, and Hideo Takahashi
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Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Fowl ,Molecular Sequence Data ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Amauroascus kuehnii ,Tinea ,DNA, Ribosomal Spacer ,medicine ,Comb and Wattles ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Internal transcribed spacer ,DNA, Fungal ,Poultry Diseases ,Chrysosporium ,biology ,Arthrodermataceae ,Fungal genetics ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Microsporum gallinae ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,Arthroderma ,Dermatophyte ,Female ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Chickens - Abstract
We investigated 793 bird combs [645 chickens and 148 fighting cocks (Shamo)] to determine the prevalence of dermatophytes and their related fungal species. The targeted fungal species were recovered from 195 of the 793 examined birds (24.6 %). Prevalence ratios were compared in temperate (the mainland) and subtropical (Nansei Islands) areas, genders, strains, breeding scale (individual and farm), and housing system (in cage and free ranging). The frequency of the fungal species in the mainland, males, fighting cocks, breeding scale by individual nursing, and free-range housing system exhibited significantly higher positive ratios than that in the other groups. A total of 224 dermatophytes and related species were isolated, including 101 Arthroderma (Ar.) multifidum, 83 Aphanoascus (Ap.) terreus, five Uncinocarpus queenslandicus, two U. reesii, two Ap. pinarensis, one Amauroascus kuehnii, one Ar. simii, one Gymnoascus petalosporus, one Microsporum gallinae, and 28 Chrysosporium-like (Chrysosporium spp.) isolates, which were identified using internal transcribed spacer regions of ribosomal RNA gene sequences. The predominant fungal species in the mainland was Ap. terreus and that in the Nansei Islands was Ar. multifidum. Pathogenic fungal species to humans and animals were limited to M. gallinae and Ar. simii, which corresponded to 0.025 % of the isolates in this study.
- Published
- 2014
19. Taxonomy and phylogenetic position of Fomitiporia torreyae, a causal agent of trunk rot on Sanbu-sugi, a cultivar of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) in Japan
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Yuko Ota, Tsutomu Hattori, Hitoshi Nakamura, Yurika Miyuki, Su-See Lee, Kozue Sotome, and Yoshie Terashima
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0301 basic medicine ,China ,Phellinus ,Physiology ,Cryptomeria ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Sciadopitys ,03 medical and health sciences ,Chamaecyparis pisifera ,Monophyly ,food ,Japan ,Botany ,Genetics ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Plant Diseases ,Fomitiporia ,biology ,Basidiomycota ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Hymenochaetaceae ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,food.food ,030104 developmental biology ,Umbrella-pine - Abstract
Trunk rot poses a substantial threat to Sanbu-sugi, one of the most economically important cultivars of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica). The etiology of this disease, including its main agents, is incompletely known. This trunk rot was attributed to Fomitiporia (Phellinus) hartigii or F. (Phellinus) punctata. Here we phylogenetically analyzed DNA sequences of four markers from a set of strains isolated from trunk-rot symptoms and recovered a single, monophyletic clade, indicating that a single taxon is involved. This clade was identified as Fomitiporia torreyae, a species described from eastern China. This analysis also proved that trunk rot and/or dieback of other conifers and broadleaf trees, including Sawara cypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera), Japanese umbrella pine (Sciadopitys verticillata) and Japanese pear (Pyrus pyrifolia var. culta), were caused by the same species. The phylogenetic approach to Fomitiporia revealed that the F. torreyae clade was closely related to F. bannaensis but clearly distinct from F. punctata, which originally was thought to be the cause of trunk rot in Sanbu-sugi. Fomitiporia torreyae is redescribed on the basis of more than 40 specimens from multiple hosts from Japan and China. Fomitiporia juniperina comb. nov. is proposed.
- Published
- 2014
20. Carbon and nitrogen utilization and acid production by mycelia of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Tricholoma bakamatsutake in vitro
- Author
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Yoshie Terashima
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,food.ingredient ,Pectin ,Oxalic acid ,Disaccharide ,Biology ,Polysaccharide ,Trehalose ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Gluconic acid ,Yeast extract ,Food science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium - Abstract
Mycelial growth of an isolate ofT. bakamatsutake was tested in media with C/N ratio ranging from 0 to 50 and with 32 carbon and 12 nitrogen sources. The isolate grew best at the C/N ratio of 30. It utilized the monosaccharidesd-glucose,d-mannose, andd-fructose, the disaccharide trehalose, and polysaccharide pectin among the carbon sources; and yeast extract,l-glutamic acid, and ammonium compounds among the nitrogen sources. The growth of ten isolates and secretion of gluconic and oxalic acids were compared ind-glucose, trehalose, and pectin media. The utilization ofd-glucose, trehalose, and pectin differed among the ten isolates, but all the isolates secreted gluconic acid in thed-glucose media and oxalic acid in the pectin media.
- Published
- 1999
21. Reflection of inside mycorrhizal status in the coloration of mycelial blocks of Tricholoma bakamatsutake
- Author
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Yoshie Terashima
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Ectomycorrhiza ,biology ,Tricholoma bakamatsutake ,fungi ,Botany ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium - Abstract
The coloration of mycelial blocks ofTricholoma bakamatsutake was examined in conspicuous colonies of the fungus in the field. Grayish white and gray mycelial blocks contained higher percentages of sounder stages of mycorrhizas and of root tips with attached mycelia of this fungus than dark gray and black ones. The percentage of sounder stages was higher between July and December than in the other months in grayish white mycelial blocks. A survey over time of the grayish white mycelial blocks at 113 points revealed that one point maintained gray after 77 mo.
- Published
- 1997
22. Identification of the DNAs of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Tricholoma bakamatsutake using specific oligonucleotide probes and PCR primers
- Author
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Yoshie Terashima and Takao Nakai
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Oligonucleotide ,fungi ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,chemistry ,Tricholoma bakamatsutake ,Nucleotide ,Tree species ,Ribosomal DNA ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium - Abstract
Partial nucleotides of the 18S rDNAs ofTricholoma bakamatsutake were sequenced and compared with those of six ectomycorrhizal fungi and a tree. Two probes, Probes 1 and 2, and a pair of primers were designed based on the variable positions in this region. The DNAs ofT. bakamatsutake were isolated from the colonized mycelia in the soil, field-collected fruit-bodies and artifically cultured mycelia. Hybridization with Probe 1 and PCR-amplification with the primers differentiated these DNAs of this fungus from those of eight ectomycorrhizal fungi and two tree species.
- Published
- 1996
23. Relationship between cumulative heat units and fruit-body emergence of ectomycorrhizal fungus Tricholoma bakamatsutake in the fields
- Author
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Kenzo Tomiya, Yoshie Terashima, and Azusa Fujiie
- Subjects
Animal science ,Linear relationship ,Heating energy ,Tricholoma bakamatsutake ,Botany ,food and beverages ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The relationship between cumulative heat units and fruit-body emergence ofTricholoma bakamatsutake was examined by using the method used for estimating dates of adult emergence of insects. Fruit-body numbers at a study site at Tateyama, Chiba Prefecture and records at a weather station near the site from 1987 to 1993 were used. For the seven years, daily average temperatures above the developmental threshold were cumulated for the days following induction of fruit-body development. The developmental threshold was taken to be 0°C, and the day when the daily minimum temperature fell to near 20°C in each year was taken as the day of induction of fruit-body development. A linear relationship between fruit-body numbers and daily average temperatures was observed as follows: Y=0.00376X + 1.873 (r=0.810), where Y is the probit of percentage of cumulative fruit-bodies, and X is the heat units above 0°C cumulated for the days following induction of fruit-body development. X for Y=5, which represents the cumulative emergence of 50% of fruit-bodies, was estimated to be 832 day-degrees.
- Published
- 1995
24. Nutritional environment of soil and roots in and around mycelial blocks of an ectomycorrhizal fungus Tricholoma bakamatsutake in an evergreen Fagaceae forest
- Author
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Yoshie Terashima and Takeo Mizoguchi
- Subjects
biology ,Soil acidification ,Phosphorus ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Fungus ,Evergreen ,biology.organism_classification ,Fagaceae ,Nutrient ,chemistry ,Tricholoma bakamatsutake ,Botany ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Mycelium - Abstract
In the evergreen Fagaceae forests of Japan, an ectomycorrhizal fungusTricholoma bakamatsutake forms “shiros” or developing mycelial blocks. To determine the physiological characteristics of the mycelial blocks, organic acids of the soil and major nutrient elements of the soil and roots were compared at three types of sites: presently colonized mycelial blocks, previously colonized sites behind the blocks, and uncolonized sites in front of the blocks. The upper part of the mycelial blocks showed the following features compared with the uncolonized site: lower pH (5.1), higher concentrations of oxalic and gluconic acids, lower content of total nitrogen, a similar amount of total carbon, reduced total and available phosphorus, higher content of total calcium and lower content of exchangeable calcium. These findings suggested that the activity of the fungus led to soil acidification by the organic acids, an increase in C/N ratio, depletion of phosphorus and accumulation of calcium.
- Published
- 1995
25. Influence of stem rot pathogen Fomitiporia sp. on 'Sanbu-sugi' cultivar of the Japanese cedar Cryptomeria japonica
- Author
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Yoshie Terashima
- Subjects
Fomitiporia ,biology ,food and beverages ,Cryptomeria ,Xylem ,biology.organism_classification ,Japonica ,Biomaterials ,visual_art ,Botany ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Bark ,Cultivar ,Stem rot ,Trametes versicolor - Abstract
An unidentified Fomitiporia sp. causes severe white-rot on stems of a cultivar “Sanbu-sugi” of the Japanese cedar, Cryptomeria japonica. The influence of the fungus on tree health and wood properties was determined. Bark from dead branches and xylem from living branches contained more glucose than bark from living branches and xylem from dead branches. Tree heights at which annual rings were disconnected were 2, 4 and 6 m at ages 37, 15 and 24 years old, respectively. The pH values of damaged parts were lower than those of non-damaged parts, and the damaged parts were clearly identified using bromocresol green solution. Weight loss of sapwood during 60 days of fungal degradation was 1.4 %, which was less than that by a saprophyte, Trametes versicolor. The amount of polyphenols in the heartwood from damaged tree stems was less than that from non-damaged stems. Degraded parts were less stiff than the non-degraded sapwood as measured with a wood-decay tester, Pilodyn. Our observations indicate that damaged stems are chemically and physically inferior to non-damaged stems.
- Published
- 2012
26. Propionates and acetates of chiral secondary alcohols: novel sex pheromone components produced by a lichen moth Barsine expressa (Arctiidae: Lithosiinae)
- Author
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Masakatsu Kinjo, Shinya Imura, Yoshie Terashima, Keiichi Ishigaki, Tetsu Ando, Toru Fujii, and Rei Yamakawa
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Male ,Stereochemistry ,General Medicine ,Acetates ,Complex Mixtures ,Moths ,Mass spectrometry ,Biochemistry ,Kinetic resolution ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,chemistry ,Sex pheromone ,Alcohols ,Propionate ,Moiety ,Pheromone ,Organic chemistry ,Animals ,Female ,Gas chromatography ,Propionates ,Sex Attractants ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Females of a lichen moth, Barsine expressa (Arctiidae, Lithosiinae), which inhabit Iriomote Island in Japan, were captured by a black-light trap, and the pheromone gland extract was analyzed by gas chromatography (GC) with an electroantennographic (EAG) detector, and by GC coupled with mass spectrometry. The females produced several EAG-active esters, and the mass spectrum of a major component indicated the mixture consists of propionates derived from C(17)-saturated secondary alcohols, which were inseparable on the capillary GC column. In addition to these main components, the pheromone glands included two acetate derivatives of C(17) alcohols, and other propionates of C(16) and C(15) alcohols. The crude extract was treated with K(2)CO(3), and a 1:1 mixture of C(17) alcohols with a C(6)- or C(7)-chain moiety was obtained. The two alcohols were uniformly converted into monodeuterated n-heptadecane by mesylation and succeeding LiAlD(4) reduction. This result revealed a straight-chain structure of the C(17) alcohols with the acyl groups located at the 7- or 8-position. Field tests on Iriomote Island showed that the synthetic esters were behaviorally active. A 1:1 mixture of racemic 7-propioxyheptadecane and 8-propioxyheptadecane, which were prepared from the secondary alcohols synthesized by a Grignard coupling reaction, attracted male moths. Furthermore, propionates of the alcohols synthesized enantioselectively by using a hydrolytic kinetic resolution with Jacobsen's catalyst were evaluated. Only the traps baited with a mixture of the two esters with the same S-configuration significantly attracted B. expressa males. In the Tokyo area, the propionate mixture attracted a closely related species, Barsine aberrans aberrans.
- Published
- 2012
27. Novel components of the sex pheromones produced by emerald moths: identification, synthesis, and field evaluation
- Author
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Nguyen Duc Do, Tetsu Ando, Rei Yamakawa, Yoshie Terashima, and Masakatsu Kinjo
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,biology ,Double bond ,Stereochemistry ,General Medicine ,Maxates ,Moths ,biology.organism_classification ,Geometrinae ,Biochemistry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,chemistry ,Ylide ,Sex pheromone ,Wittig reaction ,Botany ,Pheromone ,Animals ,Sex Attractants ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
The subfamily Geometrinae (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) includes many species called emerald moths. Based on our recent finding of novel polyenyl compounds, including a double bond at the 12-position from two geometrine species, Hemithea tritonaria and Thalassodes immissaria intaminata, (6Z,9Z,12Z)-6,9,12-trienes and (3Z,6Z,9Z,12Z)-3,6,9,12-tetraenes with a C(17)-C(20) straight chain were synthesized and analyzed by GC-MS. The 6,9,12-trienes, which were prepared by a double Wittig reaction between two alkanals and an ylide derived from (Z)-1,6-diiodo-3-hexene, characteristically produced fragment ions at m/z 79, 150, and M-98. The 3,6,9,12-tetraenes, which were prepared by a coupling between (Z)-3-alkenal and an ylide derived from (3Z,6Z)-1-iodo-3,6-nonadiene, showed fragment ions at m/z 79, 148, and M-96. These diagnostic ions were useful to distinguish these compounds from other known polyenyl pheromones, such as 4,6,9- and 6,9,11-trienes and 1,3,6,9-tetraenes. With reference to the GC-MS data, pheromone extracts of other species in Geometrinae inhabiting the Iriomote Islands were analyzed, and the 6,9,12-trienes were identified in the pheromone gland extracts of Pamphlebia rubrolimbraria rubrolimbraria and Maxates versicauda microptera. Furthermore, a field evaluation of the synthetic polyenes in a mixed forest of Tokyo revealed the following new male attractants for emerald moths: Idiochlora ussuriaria by a C(17) 6,9,12-triene and Jodis lactearia by a C(20) 3,6,9,12-tetraene, indicating the characteristic chemical structures of Geometrinae pheromones. On the other hand, through reexamination of the pheromone extract of H. tritonaria, (3E,6E)-α-farnesene was identified as an electrophysiologically active component in addition to the C(17) 6,9,12-triene. The binary mixture attracted more males than the single component lure baited with the triene in the Iriomote Islands.
- Published
- 2010
28. Calcium and cell death signaling in neurodegeneration and aging
- Author
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Karen Tubono Oseki, Guiomar Silva Lopes, Ana P. Morales, Priscila Totarelli Monteforte, Mari Luminosa Muler, Claudia Bincoletto, Hanako Hirata, Rodrigo Portes Ureshino, Juliana Yoshie Terashima, Soraya S. Smaili, and Tatiana R. Rosenstock
- Subjects
Programmed cell death ,Aging ,Apoptosis ,Mitochondrion ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,neurodegeneração e envelhecimento ,medicine ,mitocôndrias ,cálcio ,Animals ,Humans ,Calcium Signaling ,lcsh:Science ,Caspase ,Calcium signaling ,bcl-2-Associated X Protein ,apoptose ,Multidisciplinary ,calcium ,biology ,Neurodegeneration ,apoptosis ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Mitochondria ,mitochondria ,Cytosol ,endoplasmic reticulum ,Bax ,Nerve Degeneration ,neurodegeneration and aging ,biology.protein ,retículo endoplasmático ,lcsh:Q ,Calcium ,Intracellular - Abstract
Transient increase in cytosolic (Cac2+) and mitochondrial Ca2+ (Ca m2+) are essential elements in the control of many physiological processes. However, sustained increases in Ca c2+ and Ca m2+ may contribute to oxidative stress and cell death. Several events are related to the increase in Ca m2+, including regulation and activation of a number of Ca2+ dependent enzymes, such as phospholipases, proteases and nucleases. Mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) play pivotal roles in the maintenance of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis and regulation of cell death. Several lines of evidence have shown that, in the presence of some apoptotic stimuli, the activation of mitochondrial processes maylead to the release of cytochrome c followed by the activation of caspases, nuclear fragmentation and apoptotic cell death. The aim of this review was to show how changes in calcium signaling can be related to the apoptotic cell death induction. Calcium homeostasis was also shown to be an important mechanism involved in neurodegenerative and aging processes.Aumentos transientes no cálcio citosólico (Ca c2+) e mitocondrial (Ca m2+) são elementos essenciais no controle de muitos processos fisiológicos. No entanto, aumentos sustentados do Ca c2+ e do Ca m2+ podem contribuir para o estresse oxidativo ea morte celular. Muitos eventos estão relacionados ao aumentono Ca c2+, incluindo a regulação e ativação de várias enzimas dependentes de Ca2+ como as fosfolipases, proteases e nucleases. A mitocôndria e o retículo endoplasmático têm um papel central na manutenção da homeostase intracellular de Ca c2+ e na regulação da morte celular. Várias evidências mostraram que, na presença de certos estímulos apoptóticos, a ativação dos processos mitocondriais pode promover a liberação de citocromo c, seguida da ativação de caspases, fragmentação nuclear e morte celular por apoptose. O objetivo desta revisão é mostrar como aumentos na sinalização de Ca2+ podem estar relacionados aos eventos de indução da morte celular apoptótica. Além disso, evidenciar como a homeostase de Ca2+ pode ser importante e está envolvida nos mecanismos presentes nos processos de neurodegeneração e envelhecimento.
- Published
- 2009
29. The host ranges of conifer-associated Tricholoma matsutake, Fagaceae-associated T. bakamatsutake and T. fulvocastaneum are wider in vitro than in nature.
- Author
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Takashi Yamanaka, Yuko Ota, Miki Konno, Masataka Kawai, Akira Ohta, Hitoshi Neda, Yoshie Terashima, and Akiyoshi Yamada
- Subjects
TRICHOLOMA matsutake ,EDIBLE mushrooms ,PLANT growth ,MYCELIUM ,PLANT-fungus relationships ,ECTOMYCORRHIZAL fungi - Abstract
Tricholoma matsutake is the most commercially important edible mushroom in pine forests in Japan. Tricholoma bakamatsutake and T. fulvocastaneum, species closely related to T. matsutake, occur in Fagaceae forests. We examined ectomycorrhizal (EM) formation by these Tricholoma species by in vitro synthesis among seven strains (two of T. matsutake, four of T. bakamatsutake, one of T. fulvocastaneum) and axenic plants of pine (Pinus densiflora) and oak (Quercus serrata, Q. phillyraeoides). All strains, except for one of T. matsutake, formed EM associations with both pine and oak. Plant growth and mycelial development were differently affected by EM formation depending on the plant-fungus combination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Novel Components of the Sex Pheromones Produced by Emerald Moths: Identification, Synthesis, and Field Evaluation.
- Author
-
Rei Yamakawa, Nguyen Duc Do, Masakatsu Kinjo, Yoshie Terashima, and Tetsu Ando
- Subjects
MOTHS ,PHEROMONES ,LEPIDOPTERA ,ELECTROLYSIS ,GAS chromatography/Mass spectrometry (GC-MS) ,ELECTRONS ,CHEMICAL reactions - Abstract
The subfamily Geometrinae (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) includes many species called emerald moths. Based on our recent finding of novel polyenyl compounds, including a double bond at the 12-position from two geometrine species, Hemithea tritonaria and Thalassodes immissaria intaminata, (6 Z,9 Z,12 Z)-6,9,12-trienes and (3 Z,6 Z,9 Z,12 Z)-3,6,9,12-tetraenes with a C-C straight chain were synthesized and analyzed by GC-MS. The 6,9,12-trienes, which were prepared by a double Wittig reaction between two alkanals and an ylide derived from ( Z)-1,6-diiodo-3-hexene, characteristically produced fragment ions at m/z 79, 150, and M-98. The 3,6,9,12-tetraenes, which were prepared by a coupling between ( Z)-3-alkenal and an ylide derived from (3 Z,6 Z)-1-iodo-3,6-nonadiene, showed fragment ions at m/z 79, 148, and M-96. These diagnostic ions were useful to distinguish these compounds from other known polyenyl pheromones, such as 4,6,9- and 6,9,11-trienes and 1,3,6,9-tetraenes. With reference to the GC-MS data, pheromone extracts of other species in Geometrinae inhabiting the Iriomote Islands were analyzed, and the 6,9,12-trienes were identified in the pheromone gland extracts of Pamphlebia rubrolimbraria rubrolimbraria and Maxates versicauda microptera. Furthermore, a field evaluation of the synthetic polyenes in a mixed forest of Tokyo revealed the following new male attractants for emerald moths: Idiochlora ussuriaria by a C 6,9,12-triene and Jodis lactearia by a C 3,6,9,12-tetraene, indicating the characteristic chemical structures of Geometrinae pheromones. On the other hand, through reexamination of the pheromone extract of H. tritonaria, (3 E,6 E)-α-farnesene was identified as an electrophysiologically active component in addition to the C 6,9,12-triene. The binary mixture attracted more males than the single component lure baited with the triene in the Iriomote Islands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Studies on the metabolic products of a strain of Aspergillus fumigatus (DH 413). II. Biosynthesis of metabolites
- Author
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Keiichi Nitta, Yuzuru Yamamoto, Jitsukazu Ishikawa, Yoshie Terashima, and Nobuo Watanabe
- Subjects
Strain (chemistry) ,biology ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Quinones ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Pigments, Biological ,In Vitro Techniques ,biology.organism_classification ,Orsellinic acid ,Aspergillus fumigatus ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pigment ,Spinulosin ,Aspergillus ,Biochemistry ,visual_art ,Drug Discovery ,visual_art.visual_art_medium - Abstract
The relationships among the metabolites from a strain of Asp.fumigatus (DH 413) were discussed. Spinulosin and compound, m.p.204°were not metabolites, but secondary compounds converted from epoxy compound (II) which existed in its reduced form. In the biosynthetic pathway of toluquinone the reduced form of II seems to be an intermediate placed between orsellinic acid and quinol of fumigatin (I).
- Published
- 1965
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