| Literature DB >> 29688353 |
Erzsébet Orosz1,2, Nathalie van de Wiele3, Tamás Emri1, Miaomiao Zhou2, Vincent Robert3, Ronald P de Vries2, István Pócsi1.
Abstract
Abstract: The construction of the Fungal Stress Database (FSD) was initiated and fueled by two major goals. At first, some outstandingly important groups of filamentous fungi including the aspergilli possess remarkable capabilities to adapt to a wide spectrum of environmental stress conditions but the underlying mechanisms of this stress tolerance have remained yet to be elucidated. Furthermore, the lack of any satisfactory interlaboratory standardization of stress assays, e.g. the widely used stress agar plate experiments, often hinders the direct comparison and discussion of stress physiological data gained for various fungal species by different research groups. In order to overcome these difficulties and to promote multilevel, e.g. combined comparative physiology-based and comparative genomics-based, stress research in filamentous fungi, we constructed FSD, which currently stores 1412 photos taken on Aspergillus colonies grown under precisely defined stress conditions. This study involved altogether 18 Aspergillus strains representing 17 species with two different strains for Aspergillus niger and covered six different stress conditions. Stress treatments were selected considering the frequency of various stress tolerance studies published in the last decade in the aspergilli and included oxidative (H2O2, menadione sodium bisulphite), high-osmolarity (NaCl, sorbitol), cell wall integrity (Congo Red) and heavy metal (CdCl2) stress exposures. In the future, we would like to expand this database to accommodate further fungal species and stress treatments. URL: http://www.fung-stress.org/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29688353 PMCID: PMC5810435 DOI: 10.1093/database/bay009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Database (Oxford) ISSN: 1758-0463 Impact factor: 3.451
Figure 1.Scientific publications reporting on stress experiments performed in the aspergilli between 2005 and 2015. Columns represent the annual number of papers relying on stress tolerance data gained in any kind of stress assays (A) or stress tolerance data gained in stress agar experiments only (B). Closed symbols connected by lines show the annual number of papers presenting tolerance data to specific stress types in general (A) or data to specific stress types only gained on stress agar plates (B). More information on the annual numbers of stress-related papers published in fungi between 2000 and 2011 is available in the previous publication by Karányi et al. (3).
Figure 2.Workflow of the construction of the FSD.
Figure 3.Search in the FSD.