| Literature DB >> 30020945 |
A L Loyd1,2, C W Barnes3, B W Held4, M J Schink5, M E Smith6, J A Smith1, R A Blanchette4.
Abstract
Ganoderma is a large, diverse and globally-distributed genus in the Basidiomycota that includes species causing a white rot form of wood decay on a variety of tree species. For the past century, many studies of Ganoderma in North America and other regions of the world have used the name G. lucidum sensu lato for any laccate (shiny or varnished) Ganoderma species growing on hardwood trees or substrates. Molecular studies have established that G. lucidum sensu stricto (Curtis) Karst is native to Europe and some parts of China. To determine the species of the laccate Ganoderma that are present in the United States, we studied over 500 collections from recently collected samples and herbarium specimens from hardwoods, conifers, and monocots. A multilocus phylogeny using ITS, tef1α, rpb1 and rpb2 revealed three well-supported clades, similar to previously reported findings. From the U.S. collections, thirteen taxa representing twelve species were identified, including: G. curtisii, G. lucidum sensu stricto, G. martinicense, G. oregonense, G. polychromum, G. ravenelii, G. sessile, G. tsugae, G. tuberculosum, G. cf. weberianum, G. zonatum, and Tomophagus colossus (syn. G. colossus). The species G. meredithiae is synonymized with G. curtisii, and considered a physiological variant that specializes in decay of pines. The designation G. curtisii f.sp. meredithiae forma specialis nov. is proposed. Species such as G. curtisii and G. sessile, once considered as G. lucidum sensu lato, were found to be divergent from one another, and highly divergent from G. lucidum sensu stricto. Morphological characteristics such as context tissue color and features (e.g. melanoid bands), basidiospore shape and size, geographic location, and host preference were found to aid in species identification. Surprisingly, G. lucidum sensu stricto was found in the U.S., but only in geographically restricted areas of northern Utah and California. These collections appear to have resulted from the introduction of this species into the United States possibly from mushroom growers producing G. lucidum outdoors. Overall, this study clarifies the chaotic taxonomy of the laccate Ganoderma in the United States, and will help to remove ambiguities from future studies focusing on the North American species of laccate Ganoderma.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30020945 PMCID: PMC6051579 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Frequency of taxa representing the laccate Ganoderma species collected in the United States.
Percentages are representative of the total collections (n = 507). Species in the legend are represented in a clockwise order on the pie chart.
Fig 2Distribution of collections of the laccate Ganoderma species studied.
Species are shaded in different colors in each state where a collection of that species was made.
Fig 3In situ photos of the laccate Ganoderma species in the United States.
A) G. curtisii fruiting at the base of a dead oak tree (Quercus sp.) in Georgia (290GA), B) G. lucidum fruiting from near an oak (Quercus sp.) in California (not in collection) (photo credit: Shane Hanofee), C) G. martinicense fruiting from a southern red oak (Quercus falcata) in Georgia (230GA) (photo credit: Bill Sheehan), D) G. curtisii f. sp. meredithiae fruiting from slash pine roots in Florida (140FL), E) G. oregonense fruiting on white fir (Abies concolor) in California (no collection data) (photo credit: Arthur Grupe), F) G. polychromum fruiting on a pruning wound on a coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) in California (331CA) (photo credit: Drew Zwart), G) G. ravenelii fruiting from the roots of an oak tree (Quercus sp.) in Florida (no collection data), H) G. sessile fruiting on the lower bole and root flare of honeylocust (Gleditsia tricanthos) in New York (276NY) (photo credit: Margery Daughtrey), I) G. tsugae fruiting on the trunk of eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) in Wisconsin (342WI), J) G. tuberculosum fruiting on the root flare of pongam tree (Pongamia pinnata) in Florida (335FL), K) G. cf. weberianum near a recently removed live oak tree (Quercus virginiana) in Florida (261FL), L) G. zonatum fruiting on the trunk of an American oil palm (Elaeis oleifera) in Florida (283FL), and M) Tomophagus colossus fruiting on the cycad Macrozamia moorei in Florida (255FL) (photo credit: Michael Calonje).
Fig 4Contextual colors (A) and features (B) of the laccate A) broad categories of the context tissue colors, where arrows point to context tissue; i) white context tissue (324WI, G. tsugae), ii) light buff to cream context tissue (112CA, G. polychromum), and iii) dark brown context tissue (265FL, G. zonatum). B) contextual features such as melanoid bands (“Mb”), concentric growth zones (“Cz”), and contextual chlamydospores (“Ch”); i) melanoid bands embedded in context tissue of pileus and stipe (158FL, G. curtisii), ii) concentric growth zones in context tissue of the pileus (171FL, G. sessile), iii) close-up (10x) of melanoid bands in the context tissue of the pileus (NCSCLG 1804, G. curtisii f.sp. meredithiae), iv) close-up (10x) of melanoid bands and concentric growth zones in context tissue of the pileus (NCSCLG 19006, G. martinicense), v) double walled, globose contextual chlamydospore (255FL, T. colossus), and vi) double walled contextual, globose chlamydospore with striated margin (FLAS F59210, G. cf. weberianum).
Morphological assessment of the laccate Ganoderma species present in the United States.
| Taxon | Authority | Stipe | Context tissue | Hymenium | Chlamydospores | Basidiospores | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| presence | color | size | color/texture | concentric growth zones | resinous or melanoid deposits | present/absent | shape | size (length X width) | length | width | S.S.I. | Q-ratio | |||
| (Berk.) Murrill 1902 | almost always present | tawny to russett with occasional mauve pigments | typically, 1.5x the diameter of the cap | pink-buff to cinnamon buff/corky | absent | present | 5–8 | absent | - | - | 10.6 (8.3–12.1) efg | 6.4 (5.4–7.5) f | 60.4 c | 1.7 cd | |
| (Adask. & Gilb) (this paper) | almost always present | tawny to russett with occasional mauve pigments | typically, 1.5x the diameter of the cap | pink-buff to cinnamon buff/corky | absent | present | 5–8 | absent | - | - | 10.8 (9.5–11.5) cd | 6.8 (6.4–7.3 def) | 62.6 bc | 1.6 cd | |
| (Curtis) P. Karst 1881 | almost always present | tawny to russett | long and eccentric; typically twice the diameter of the cap | pink-buff to cinnamon buff/corky | present | absent | 4–5 | absent | - | - | 10.7 (8.2–12.1) f | 7.1 (4.8–8.9) cd | 66.2 ab | 1.5 ef | |
| Welti & Court 2010 | present | cinnamon brown to black | short and stubby; typically less than the diameter of the cap | cinnamon brown/felty to corky | present | present | 5–6 | present and abundant in culture | hyaline to pigmented ovate to spherical or irregularly shaped with hyphal appendages protruding out (culture) | 17.1 (13.5–21.1) x 12.2 (9.2–17.3) | 11.1 (9.0–13.6) def | 6.9 (5.3–8.3) cde | 62.6 abc | 1.6 de | |
| Murrill 1908 | occasionally present | tawny to cinnamon brown | short and stubby; typically less than the diameter of the cap | white/spongy to corky | absent | absent | 3–4 | absent | - | - | 12.9 (11.6–14.9) b | 8.0 (6.7–9.3) b | 62.2 c | 1.6 cd | |
| (Copel.) Murrill 1908 | rarely present | tawny to russett | short and thin; typically less than the diameter of the cap if present | pink-buff to cinnamon-buff/corky | present | absent | 4–5 | present; rare in context and abundant in culture | elliptical to obpyriform to ovate, hyaline, smooth (culture) | 14.8 (10.3–18.3) X 9.9 (11.9–7.0) | 12.2 (10.8–13.2) cd | 6.8 (6.0–7.4) cde | 55.5 abc | 1.8 cd | |
| Steyaert 1980 | almost always present | tawny to russett | typically, 1.5x the diameter of the cap | pink-buff to cinnamon-buff/corky | absent | absent | 6–7 | absent | - | - | 11.2 (9.1–13.6) cde | 5.2 (4.2–6.8) h | 46.5 d | 2.2 a | |
| Murrill 1902 | occasionally present | tawny to russett | short and thin; typically less than the diameter of the cap if present | pink-buff to cinnamon-buff/corky | present | rarely present | 5–7 | present; rare in context and abundant in culture | elliptical to obpyriform to ovate, hyaline, smooth (culture) | 16.0 (12.0–26.0) X 11.0 (9.5–12.0) | 11.4 (9.7–14.0) cd | 6.6 (5.2–8.4) ef | 58.1 c | 1.7 c | |
| Murrill 1902 | occasionally present | tawny to cinnamon brown | short and stubby; typically less than the diameter of the cap | white/spongy to corky | absent | absent | 5–7 | absent | - | - | 9.9 (8.9–11.5) g | 6.5 (5.2–7.7) ef | 65.2 abc | 1.5 def | |
| Murrill 1908 | absent | - | - | cinnamon brown/felty to corky | present | present | 4–7 | absent | - | - | 10.5 (9.2–12.0) fg | 7.3 (6.2–8.6) c | 69.3 a | 1.4 f | |
| (Bres. & Henn. ex Sacc.) Steyaert 1972 | absent | - | - | pink-buff to cinnamon-buff/corky | present | absent | 5–7 | present; context tissue and culture | ovate to globular and striate and pigmented (context tissue); elliptical to obpyriform to ovate, hyaline, smooth (culture) | 17.1 (14.1–20.1) X 12.0 (9.6–14.1) | 8.4 (7.7–9.5) h | 5.6 (4.7–7.3) gh | 67.0 abc | 1.5 ef | |
| Murrill 1902 | rarely present | yellow ocher to russett | short and stubby; typically less than the diameter of the cap | cinnamon brown/felty | present | absent | 4–6 | absent | - | - | 11.8 (10.3–13.7) c | 5.9 (5.0–6.6) g | 49.5 d | 2.0 b | |
| (Fr.) Murrill 1905 | absent | - | - | white to light buff/spongy | absent | absent | 3–4 | present; abundant in context and culture | globular with abundant ornamentations pigmented (context tissue and culture) | 16.1 (15.1–17.6) | 16.1 (14.6–17.3) a | 10.4 (9.5–11.3) a | 64.8 abc | 1.5 def | |
1. Sterile tissue inside fruiting body between the pileus crust and initiation of the tubes
2. Survival structures that could be produced in the fruiting body context tissue and/or in vitro culture
3. Basidiospore measurments ending in different letters are statistically different (P<0.05) with Tukey’s HSD means separation
4. The “S.S.I.” is the spore shape index, which is calculated by (width/length)*100, and is used to quantitatively describe the shape
5. The “Q-ratio” is a ratio of the length:width
Fig 5Examples of basidiospore morphology (bars = 10 μm).
A) “smooth” (finely echinulated) from G. sessile (287SC), B) “rough” (coarsely echinulated) basidiospores from G. curtisii (158FL), and C) elongated, elliptical basidiospores of G. zonatum (265FL).
Fig 6Host substrate affinities for the laccate (shiny) Ganoderma species collected in the U.S., where host substrate was known (n = 298).
Key to the laccate Ganoderma species in the United States.
Members of the laccate Ganoderma are have shiny or varnished pilei, and can be sessile, stipitate or pseudostipitate. The context tissue of the laccate Ganoderma species is corky to felty in texture, and generally white, cream to light buff, or cinnamon brown. Context tissue can have melanoid/resinous bands and/or concentric growth zones present or absent. Some taxa produce contextual chlamydospores that are double-walled, hyaline to pigmented, and ornamented or smooth. The basidiospores are double-walled, golden-brown in 5% KOH, echinulated and generally broadly ovoid to elliptical with a truncated apex at maturity. Ecologically these species are associated with a white rot type decay typically on hardwood, coniferous, or palm substrates. Disclaimer: This key is solely based on morphology, host preference and known geographic distributions of the laccate Gaonderma present in the U.S. based on this study.
| 1 | Context tissue white when fresh | 2 |
| 1 | Context tissue not as above | 4 |
| 2 | Large basidiospores measuring on average 16.1 (14.6–17.3) x 10.4 (9.5–11.3) μm; fruiting body spongy, light-weight, shiny, and yellow | |
| 2 | Basidiospores smaller than above | 3 |
| 3 | Found on conifers in the Pacific Northwest, with basidiospores measuring on average 12.9 (11.6–14.9) x 8.0 (6.7–9.3) μm | |
| 3 | Found on conifers, predominately | |
| 4 | Context tissue cream to buff | 5 |
| 4 | Context tissue dark brown (cinnamon brown) | 11 |
| 5 | Shiny, melanoid deposits present in the context tissue | 6 |
| 5 | Melanoid bands absent, concentric growth zones sometimes present in the context tissue | 7 |
| 6 | Typically a laterally stipitate fruiting body, fruiting on hardwoods in the eastern U.S with basidiospores on average measuring 10.6 (8.3–12.1) x 6.4 (5.4–7.5), and growing somewhat rapidly (approximately 6 mm/day) on malt extract agar | |
| 6 | Typically a laterally stipitate fruiting body, fruiting on pines in the southeastern U.S with basidiospores on average measuring 10.8 (9.5–11.5) x 6.8 (6.4–7.3), and growing slowly (less than 3 mm/day) as a dikaryotic isolate on malt extract agar | |
| 7 | Typically sessile fruiting body morphology, or if stipe present, considered a pseudostipe, where the length of the stipe is less than the width of the pileus | 8 |
| 7 | Typically laterally stipitate fruiting body with no melanoid bands and concentric growth zones sometimes present in the context tissue | 10 |
| 8 | Found in association with hardwoods in the western United States, often with conspicuous concentric growth zones present in the context tissue | |
| 8 | Found in the eastern United States | 9 |
| 9 | Pigmented, double-walled globose to ovoid chlamydospores found in the context tissue, and restricted to tropical locations | |
| 9 | Widely distributed East of the Rocky Mountains predominately associating with hardwood trees/substrates, basidiospores measuring on average 11.4 (9.7–14.0) x 6.6 (5.2–8.4) μm | |
| 10 | Concentric growth zones absent from the context tissue, present in the southeastern U.S., and basidiospores measuring on average 11.2 (9.1–13.6) x 5.2 (4.2–6.8) μm | |
| 10 | Concentric growth zones present in the context tissue, and restricted to isolated populations in northern Utah and northern California | |
| 11 | Basidiospores elongated measuring on average 11.8 (10.3–13.7) x 5.9 (5.0–6.0) μm, and associated with monocot trees/substrates, typically palms | |
| 11 | Not as above | 12 |
| 12 | Typically producing a central pseudostipe that is often dark red to black, associated with hardwood trees/substrates, concentric growth zones and melanoid deposits present in context tissue, and hymenium on average having 5–6 pores/mm | |
| 12 | Sessile fruiting body that is orange to red when active, and dark red when mature, concentric growth zones and shiny, resinous deposits present in the context, hymenium on average having 4–7 pores/mm, restricted to tropical locations, and basidiospores measuring on average 10.5 (9.2–12.0) x 7.3 (6.2–8.6) μm |
Sample accessions, location, and GenBank Accession numbers for ITS, tef1α, rpb1, and rpb2 used in phylogenetic analysis.
| Accession | Taxon | Location | GenBank Accession Numbers | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITS | ||||||
| WD2028 | Japan | KJ143905 | KJ143924 | KJ143944 | KJ143964 | |
| WD2085 | Japan | KJ143906 | KJ143925 | KJ143945 | KJ143965 | |
| 102NC | NC, USA | |||||
| 223FL | FL, USA | |||||
| 238FL | FL, USA | |||||
| CBS100131 | NC, USA | JQ781848 | KJ143926 | KJ143946 | KJ143966 | |
| CBS100132 | NC, USA | JQ781849 | KJ143927 | KJ143947 | KJ143967 | |
| UMNFL28 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL6 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL60 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNGA1 | GA, USA | |||||
| UMNNC3 | NC, USA | |||||
| 124FL | Ganoderma curtisii f.sp. meredithiae | FL, USA | ||||
| UMNFL50 | Ganoderma curtisii f.sp. meredithiae | FL, USA | ||||
| UMNFL64 | Ganoderma curtisii f.sp. meredithiae | FL, USA | ||||
| Wei5491 | Hainan, China | JQ781850 | – | – | KJ143968 | |
| Wei5494 | Hainan, China | JN383979 | — | — | — | |
| Cui9166 | Shandong, China | KJ143907 | JX029974 | JX029982 | JX029978 | |
| Dai12479 | Anhui, China | JQ781864 | JX029975 | JX029983 | JX029979 | |
| Cui9207 | Yunan, China | KJ143910 | KJ143928 | KJ143949 | KJ143970 | |
| K175217 | United Kingdom | KJ143911 | KJ143929 | KJ143950 | KJ143971 | |
| MS183CA | CA, USA | |||||
| MT26/10 | Czech Republic | KJ143912 | KJ143930 | KJ143951 | — | |
| Rivoire4195 | France | KJ143909 | — | KJ143948 | KJ143969 | |
| UMNUT1 | UT, USA | |||||
| UMNUT7 | UT, USA | |||||
| UMNUT8 | UT, US | |||||
| UMNUT9 | UT, US | |||||
| 231NC | NC, USA | |||||
| 246TX | TX, USA | |||||
| LIPSW-Mart08-44 | Martinique | KF963257 | — | — | — | |
| LIPSW-Mart08-55 | Martinique | KF963256 | — | — | — | |
| UMNAL2 | AL, USA | |||||
| UMNSC7 | SC, USA | |||||
| UMNTN1 | TN, USA | |||||
| UMNTX3 | TX, USA | |||||
| CWN04670 | Tawian, China | KJ143913 | KJ143931 | KJ143952 | KJ143972 | |
| Dai9447 | Hainan, China | KJ143914 | KJ143932 | KJ143953 | KJ143973 | |
| CBS265.88 | OR, USA | JQ781875 | KJ143933 | KJ143954 | KJ143974 | |
| CBS266.88 | WA, USA | JQ781876 | — | KJ143955 | KJ143975 | |
| UMNAK1 | AK, USA | |||||
| UMNOR1 | OR, USA | |||||
| 330OR | OR, USA | |||||
| BJ280CA | CA, USA | |||||
| BJ316CA | CA, USA | |||||
| MS343OR | OR, USA | |||||
| UMNOR3 | OR, USA | |||||
| MS187FL | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL187 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL188 | FL, USA | |||||
| CBS194.76 | Netherlands | KJ143916 | KJ143934 | KJ143956 | ||
| Rivoire4150 | France | KJ143915 | — | KJ143957 | — | |
| 103SC | SC, USA | |||||
| 111TX | TX, USA | |||||
| 113FL | FL, USA | |||||
| 117TX | TX, USA | |||||
| 165MO | MO, USA | |||||
| 171FL | FL, USA | |||||
| 228DC | DC, USA | |||||
| JV1209/27 | AZ, USA | KF605630 | KJ143937 | KJ143959 | KJ143976 | |
| NY00985711 | NY, US | KJ143918 | — | — | — | |
| UMNCA5 | CA, USA | |||||
| UMNFL10 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL125 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL19 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNKY1 | KY, USA | |||||
| UMNMI22 | MI, USA | |||||
| UMNMI24 | MI, USA | |||||
| UMNNY14 | NY, US | |||||
| UMNOH4 | OH, USA | |||||
| UMNWV1 | WV, US | |||||
| Cui7691 | Guangdong, China | JQ781878 | — | — | — | |
| HMAS42798 (Holytype) | Sichuan, China | JQ781877 | — | — | — | |
| Dai9724 | Hainan, China | JQ781879 | — | — | — | |
| Yuan3490 | Yunnan, China | JQ781880 | KJ143938 | — | — | |
| Dai1275b | CT, USA | KJ143919 | KJ143939 | KJ143960 | KJ143977 | |
| Dai12760 | CT, USA | KJ143920 | KJ143940 | KJ143961 | KJ143978 | |
| MS182AZ | AZ, USA | |||||
| UMNMI20 | MI, USA | |||||
| UMNMI30 | MI, USA | |||||
| UMNNC4 | NC, USA | |||||
| LIPSW-Mart08-45 | Martinique | KF96325 | — | — | — | |
| PLM684 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL160 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL82 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL100 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL32 | FL, USA | |||||
| 123FL | FL, USA | |||||
| 179NC | NC, USA | |||||
| FL-02 | FL, USA | KJ143921 | KJ143941 | KJ143962 | KJ143979 | |
| GAN11 | FL, USA | MG754876 | ||||
| UMNFL105 | FL, USA | — | ||||
| UMNFL137 | FL, USA | — | ||||
| UMNFL16 | FL, USA | — | ||||
| UMNFL85 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNFL89 | FL, USA | |||||
| UMNSC4 | SC, USA | |||||
| TC-02 | Vietnam | |||||
| UMNFL110 | FL, USA | — | ||||
1. Accession numbers in boldface were generated from this study
Fig 7Tree topology derived from RAxML analysis of a multilocus alignment (ITS + tef1α + rpb1 + rpb2) with 2470 characters under a GTR model with 1000 bootstrap replicates.
Statistical values shown are ML-bootstrap values above 75%, and the second value is the posterior probability (PP) where values above 95% are shown. Species native to Asia are in blue font, species native to Europe are in green font, and species native to North American are in black font. Red asterisks indicate G. curtisii f.sp. meredithiae. There are three major clades (A, B, and C), and subclades with names derived from the taxon that was described first.
Comparisons of terminal clades and associated bootstrap scores for the laccate Ganoderma taxa present in the United States using RAxML analysis with 1,000 bootstrap replications for ITS, tef1α, rpb1, rpb2, and ITS+tef1α+ rpb1+rpb2.
| Phylogenetic Analyses Terminal Clade RAxML Bootstrap Scores | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taxon | ITS | ITS + | |||
| 89 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 85 | |
| NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| NR | 98 | 91 | 86 | 89 | |
| 93 | R* | 100 | 100 | 99 | |
| NR | 98 | 78 | NR | 83 | |
| 97 | 90 | R* | NT | 99 | |
| 85 | 100 | 100 | NR* | 100 | |
| 48 | 100 | 57 | 100 | 87 | |
| NR | 93 | 100 | 81 | 99 | |
| 100 | R* | 87 | NR* | 100 | |
| 97 | 100 | 100 | NT | 100 | |
| 100 | 91 | 99 | 97 | 100 | |
| 100 | 100 | 100 | NT | 100 | |
1. Numbers represent maximum likelihood bootstrap scores of terminal clades for each taxon from a RAxML analysis using rapid bootstrapping, a GTR evolutionary model, and 1000 boostrap replications
2. “NR” represents non-resolved terminal clades
3. “R*” represents clades where statistical value could not be computed, but lineage resolved
4. Summation of bootstrap support values for well-supported terminal clades