| Literature DB >> 27430163 |
Toshihiko Ohnuki1, Yukitoshi Aiba2, Fuminori Sakamoto1, Naofumi Kozai1, Tadafumi Niizato3, Yoshito Sasaki3.
Abstract
This paper presents the accumulation process of radioactive Cs in edible mushrooms. We here first report the direct accumulation pathway of radioactive Cs from contaminated wood logs to the fruit-bodies of shiitake mushrooms through the basal portion of the stipe. In this pathway, radioactive Cs is not transported through the hyphae. This pathway results in a high accumulation of radioactive Cs in the fruit-body, more by the excess accumulation of radioactive Cs from the wood logs than that through the hyphae. We grew the fruit-bodies of Shiitake mushroom from radioactive-Cs-contaminated wood logs. The spatial distributions of radioactive Cs and Prussian blue as a tracer of interstitial water in the cross section of the wood log measured after the harvest of the fruit-body from the inoculated sawdust spawn area indicated that some fraction of the radioactive Cs and Prussian blue were transported directly to the basal portion of the stipe during the growth of the fruit-bodies.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27430163 PMCID: PMC4949424 DOI: 10.1038/srep29866
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Radioactivity in fruit-body of shiitake mushrooms (Lentinula edodes [Berk.] Pegler) and in wood logs of 12% D/W and transfer factors of radioactive Cs from the contaminated wood logs to the fruit-body.
| Sample | Radioactivity (Bq kg−1) | Transfer factor | Standard deviation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wood log | Fruit-body | |||
| Without mineral | 161 | 163 | 1.01 | 0.17 |
| Vermiculite 5% | 145 | 118 | 0.81 | 0.14 |
| Vermiculite 10% | 158 | 98 | 0.62 | 0.17 |
| Zeolite 5% | 140 | 108 | 0.78 | 0.10 |
| Zeolite 10% | 172 | 85 | 0.5 | 0.08 |
Figure 1A photograph (a) and AR image (b) of the cross section of the wood log after the harvest of the fruit-bodies of shiitake mushroom. Yellow and white circles show the areas, respectively, where a fruit-body arose and did not arise from the inoculated spawn medium containing 10% weight vermiculite.
Figure 2A photograph (upper image) and AR image (Lower image) of cross section of the wood log after the fruit-bodies of shiitake mushroom were harvested from the inoculated spawn medium without vermiculite.
Figure 3Three-dimensional distribution (a) and cross section of distribution of nano-sized Prussian blue after harvesting the fruit-bodies from the surface of the wood log. The three-dimensional distribution the Prussian blue in the wood log was determined by X-ray CT analysis, which detected dense materials in the materials. Prussian blue contains Fe in its structure. The determined distribution was identified as that of Prussian blue. The fruit body was illustrated as an image based on the photograph taken after the fruit body was harvested.
Figure 4Photographs of Marasmiaceae sp. hyphae grown on agar medium containing 0.1wt% Prussian blue; (a) hyphae on the membrane filter set on the agar medium, (b) the agar medium after separation of the hyphae with the membrane filter, (c) the hyphae with the membrane filter, and (d) an AR image of the hyphae with the membrane filter showed that the radioactive Cs accumulated in the hyphae was below the detection limit.