Thursday 28 October 2010

mycology - How do fungi react to being grown in a tissue culture?

Generally, fungi are cultured on agar with a food source such as malt extract. One way to do this is to clone a mushroom from the fruitbody of a mushroom or from colonized substrate (e.g. rotting wood). Another approach is to germinate spores.



The fungus will grow as vegetative mycelia until it runs out of food. At that time, some species will grow tiny fruitbodies or sporulate before entering a more dormant phase, dying out. Unless refrigerated, standard agar plates dehydrate. Also, fungi may take on different textures: wispy, bumpy, root-like (rhizomorphic), leathery, powdery, and may darken or change color as they age.



Some cultures start to adapt their metabolism to the media after a large number of transfers (based on observation and discussed in Stamets' "The Mushroom Cultivator".) at this point, cultures may also start to grow more slowly.



The mycelia can be transferred from one plate to another or to another media (substrate) such as a log, 'fortified sawdust' (sawdust with ~30% w/w wheat bran), or pasteurized compost. With the appropriate nutrition and environmental stimuli (CO2 levels, temperature, moisture, light, etc), the mycelia will fruit, creating mushrooms - generally after fully colonizing the substrate.



Here is a figure of 35 agar plates with 16 different fungal cultures that I isolated from the wild (soil, wood, mushrooms, as described in Allison et. al, 2009; LeBauer, 2010), and have transferred from a mature culture (about a 2 months old) to a new plate, which are about two weeks old in this picture. Parent cultures are in the first and third row, with children below (they are genetic clones; instead of counting generations, I count number of transfers.



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You can also find cultures of fungi (Yeast) in unfiltered beer.



I have used many techniques to isolate and culture fungi (Isikhuemhen and LeBauer, 2004; LeBauer, 2010) but I would recommend the books "The Mushroom Cultivator" and "Growing Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms" by Paul Stamets for more information on sterile culture techniques used in mushroom cultivation.

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