| Literature DB >> 35209958 |
Jeroen G van den Brandhof1, Han A B Wösten2.
Abstract
Sustainable fungal materials have a high potential to replace non-sustainable materials such as those used for packaging or as an alternative for leather and textile. The properties of fungal materials depend on the type of fungus and substrate, the growth conditions and post-treatment of the material. So far, fungal materials are mainly made with species from the phylum Basidiomycota, selected for the mechanical and physical properties they provide. However, for mycelium materials to be implemented in society on a large scale, selection of fungal species should also be based on a risk assessment of the potential to be pathogenic, form mycotoxins, attract insects, or become an invasive species. Moreover, production processes should be standardized to ensure reproducibility and safety of the product.Entities:
Keywords: Biobased material; Fungal material; Fungus; Mushroom forming fungus; Mycelium material; Pathogenic fungus
Year: 2022 PMID: 35209958 PMCID: PMC8876125 DOI: 10.1186/s40694-022-00134-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fungal Biol Biotechnol ISSN: 2054-3085
Fungi described for use in materials in scientific publications. Publications were excluded in the case species were not defined or classified at genus level
| Species (Phylum) | Edible (E)/medicinal (M) | Application (Reference) | Distribution | Habitat | Biome | Samples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe (33.3%) North America (30.4%) Asia (15.9%) | Forest (43.5%) Grassland (29%) Wetland (11.6%) | Soil (66.7%) Shoot (13%) Rhizosphere soil (10.1%) | 69 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Europe (39.1%) Asia (31.5%) Africa (9.8%) | Grassland (30.4%) Cropland (23.9%) Forest (22.8%) | Soil (66.3%) Air (9.8%) Root (7.6%) | 92 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Europe (68.4%) South America (31.6%) | Cropland (68.4%) Forest (31.6%) | Soil (57.9%) Rhizosphere soil (31.6%) Root (10.5%) | 19 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | North America (44.4%) Europe (30.6%) Asia (22.3%) | Forest (78.1%) Anthropogenic (12.6%) Grassland (4.3%) | Root (45.6%) Air (19.4%) Deadwood (15.5%) | 741 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (59%) Asia (18.8%) North America (13.6%) | Forest (50.3%) Grassland (23.5%) Cropland (14.2%) | Soil (51.5%) Shoot (18.2%) Air (7.1%) | 2994 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Asia (46.2%) North America (27.1%) South America (12.5%) | Forest (52.8%) Anthropogenic (15.8%) Aquatic (11.6%) | Soil (25.1%) Air (24.8%) Shoot (20.8%) | 303 | |
| E | Composite [ | Europe (72.3%) North America (13%) Asia (6.7%) | Forest (54.9%) Grassland (22.4%) Tundra (7.1%) | Soil (65.5%) Shoot (6.5%) Deadwood (6.3%) | 1236 | |
| E | Composite [ | Europe (39.2%) Asia (37.5%) North America (22%) | Forest (36.1%) Cropland (30.3%) Grassland (22.8%) | Soil (55.3%) Air (15.9%) Shoot (14.1%) | 347 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (35.6%) Asia (31.8%) North America (28.8%) | Forest (38.6%) Grassland (24.2%) Anthropogenic (23.5%) | Air (30.3%) Soil (19%) Shoot (17.4%) | 132 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| E* | Composite [ | Asia (84%) Europe (12.5%) Australia (2.8%) | Aquatic (48.6%) Forest (22.9%) Anthropogenic (22.2%) | Forest (47.9%) Air (22.2%) Soil (18.1%) | 144 | |
| M | Amadou [ | Europe (93.1%) Asia (6.5%) Australia (0.4%) | Forest (84.9%) Grassland (8.6%) Anthropogenic (3.5%) | Air (26.7%) Soil (26.3%) Deadwood (19%) | 232 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Asia, Europe | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| M | Composite [ | Europe (95.7%) Asia (2.6%) North America (1.1%) | Forest (85.9%) Grassland (6.5%) Anthropogenic (4.8%) | Deadwood (31%) Air (22.9%) Soil (19.7%) | 538 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Cosmopolitan* | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (32.5%) Asia (25.1%) Australia (20.2%) | Forest (32.4%) Grassland (28.5%) Cropland (17%) | Soil (72.2%) Root (8.7%) Rhizosphere soil (6.9%) | 6650 | |
| M | Composite [ | Widespread, records from tropics are likely | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | North America (63.3%) Europe (30%) Asia (6.7%) | Forest (58.3%) Wetland (25%) Grassland (10%) | Soil (78.3%) Rhizosphere soil (6.7%) Root (6.7%) | 60 | |
| M | Pure mycelium [ | North America | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| M | 3D-printing [ | Asia (72.7%) North America (16.2%) Australia (8.4%) | Forest (89.5%) Woodland (3.6%) Cropland (1.8%) | Soil (82.9%) Rhizosphere soil (12.9%) Shoot (3%) | 333 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (100%); North Africa, Asia and North America | Cropland (91.7%) Grassland (8.3%) | Soil (50%) Rhizosphere soil (41.7%) Root (8.3%) | 12 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (100%); Circumpolar, North America rarely | Forest (61.1%) Anthropogenic (27.8%) Grassland (11.1%) | Air (61.1%) Deadwood (22.2%) Shoot (11.1%) | 18 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (70.3%) North America (15.6%) Asia (10.9%) | Forest (56.3%) Grassland (15.6%) Anthropogenic (15.6%) | Air (40.6%) Soil (20.3%) Deadwood (12.5%) | 64 | |
| E* | Nanopaper [ | Europe (60%) Asia (20%) North America (20%) | Forest (80%) Anthropogenic (20%) | Soil (60%) Root (20%) Air (20%) | 5 | |
| E* | Nanopaper [ | Asia (45.4%) North America (27.3%) Europe (27.3%) | Forest (77.3%) Grassland (4.6%) Wetland (4.6%) | Soil (63.6%) Rhizosphere soil (22.7%) Air (13.6%) | 22 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Asia (100%) | Forest (100%) | Rhizosphere soil (50%) Soil (50%) | 6 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | North America (61.8%) Europe (27.3%) Pacific Ocean (7.3%) | Forest (72.7%) Anthropogenic (18.2%) Aquatic (7.3%) | Shoot (60%) Air (27.3%) Rhizosphere soil (7.3%) | 55 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Temperate northern hemisphere | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| E* | Composite [ | Boreal and temperate North America | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| E | Composite [ | Europe (73.1%) Asia (17.1%) North America (9.8%) | Forest (41.5%) Anthropogenic (24.4%) Grassland (19.5%) | Air (51.2%) Soil (12.2%) Deadwood (9.8%) | 41 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Asia (100%) Australia | Forest (100%) | Soil (100%) | 16 | |
| E | Pure mycelium [ | North America (60%) South America (40%); Subtropical and tropical western hemisphere | Forest (100%) | Soil (80%) Root (20%) | 5 | |
| E | Composite [ | Subtropical and tropical regions | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Asia (100%) | Forest (40%) Grassland (40%) Cropland (20%) | Soil (100%) | 5 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Asia (44.4%) North America (22.2%) Europe (11.1%) | Forest (33.3%) Cropland (22.2%) Aquatic (22.2%) | Soil (44.4%) Shoot (33.3%) Rhizosphere soil (11.1%) | 9 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (100%) | Forest (95.2%) Anthropogenic (4.8%) | Soil (45.2%) Litter (45.2%) Deadwood (9.7%) | 62 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe (51.5%) North America (36.4%) Asia (12.1%) | Forest (78.8%) Shrubland (9.1%) Anthropogenic (6.1%) | Soil (36.4%) Rhizosphere soil (33.3%) Litter (18.2%) | 33 | |
| M | Pure mycelium [ | Asia (45.8%) Europe (29.2%) North America (20.8%) | Anthropogenic (41.7%) Forest (41.7%) Tundra (8.3%) | Air (33.3%) Shoot (25%) Soil (20.8%) | 57 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Cosmopolitan | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe (52.4%) Asia (33.3%) North America (9.5%) | Forest (42.9%) Anthropogenic (33.3%) Aquatic (19.1%) | Air (52.4%) Shoot (28.6%) Soil (9.5%) | 21 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (58.3%) North America (41.7%); Temperate northern hemisphere; Asia | Forest (36.1%) Tundra (33.3%) Wetland (13.9%) | Soil (83.3%) Air (8.3%) Rhizosphere soil (5.6%) | 36 | |
| ‒ | Amadou [ | Asia (100%) | Forest (100%) | Soil (100%) | 3 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Primarily southern hemisphere | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Amadou [ | Europe (98.2%) North America (1.2%) South America (0.6%) | Forest (77.3%) Grassland (13.2%) Anthropogenic (4.8%) | Air (77.3%) Soil (14.4%) Shoot (4.2%) | 167 | |
| E | Composite [ | South America (100%) | Forest (100%) | (Soil 100%) | 4 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Asia (100%) | Anthropogenic (42.9%) Cropland (42.9%) Forest (14.2%) | Air (42.9%) Root (42.9%) Soil (14.2%) | 7 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Europe (66.7%) Asia (33.3%) | Grassland (33.3%) Cropland (33.3%) Forest (33.3%) | Soil (33.3%) Air (33.3%) Shoot (33.3%) | 3 | |
| E* | Composite [ | North America (80%) South America (13.3%) Africa (6.7%) | Forest (86.6%) Mangrove (6.7%) Cropland (6.7%) | Soil (80%) Root (20%) | 15 | |
| E* | Composite [ | Africa (50%) Europe (50%) | Forest (50%) Cropland (50%) | Deadwood (50%) Soil (50%) | 2 | |
| E* | 3D-printing [ | Asia (50.7%) Europe (33.8%) Australia (7.4%) | Forest (49.3%) Anthropogenic (33.1%) Cropland (11%) | Soil (34.6%) Air (36%) Shoot (17.7%) | 136 | |
| E* | Composite [ | North America (58.8%) Europe (23.5%) Australia (5.9%) | Forest (76.5%) Grassland (5.9%) Anthropogenic (5.9%) | Shoot (47.1%) Soil (17.6%) Air (17.6%) | 17 | |
| E* | Composite [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| E | Composite [ | Temperate northern hemisphere; Cosmopolitan | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| M | Composite [ | Temperate northern hemisphere; Circumpolar | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| M | Composite [ | Americas, Africa, India | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Asia (90%) Australia (10%); Widespread | Anthropogenic (50%) Cropland (40%) Forest (10%) | Air (50%) Soil (50%) | 10 | |
| E* | Pure mycelium [ | Cosmopolitan | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Africa (50%) North America (25%) Europe (25%) | Grassland (50%) Forest (25%) Shrubland (25%) | Soil (100%) | 4 | |
| E | Composite [ | Asia (54.4%) Europe (15%) North America (14.9%) | Forest (42.3%) Aquatic (16.5%) Anthropogenic (12%) | Soil (37.4%) Shoot (21.1%) Air (13.9%) | 754 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe (66.2%) North America (17.3%) Asia (13.5%) | Forest (70.7%) Anthropogenic (11.1%) Grassland (8.3%) | Deadwood (37.3%) Air (21.1%) Shoot (17.3%) | 577 | |
| E | Composite [ | Europe (91.7%) Pacific Ocean (8.3%) | Grassland (66.7%) Forest (25%) Aquatic (8.3%) | Soil (41.7%) Air (25%) Root + rhizosphere soil (16.7%) | 12 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe (53.3%) Asia (33.3%) Africa (6.7%) | Anthropogenic (53.3%) Grassland (26.7%) Forest (6.7%) | Air (46.7%) Dust (26.7%) Soil (13.3%) | 15 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (67.9%) North America (18.2%) Asia (13.2%) | Forest (73.6%) Anthropogenic (16.4%) Grassland (8.2%) | Deadwood (36.5%) Air (30.2%) Shoot (12.6%) | 159 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Europe (89.4%) Atlantic Ocean (5.3%) North America (5.3%) | Grassland (38.6%) Anthropogenic (31.6%) Forest (15.8%) | Air (70.2%) Soil (10.5%) Shoot (8.8%) | 57 | |
| M | Composite [ | Europe (68.3%) Asia (14.5%) North America (8.1%) | Forest (62.9%) Grassland (16.1%) Anthropogenic (11.3%) | Air (44.1%) Soil (23.7%) Shoot (9.7%) | 186 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Temperate northern hemisphere | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ | |
| M | Composite [ | Asia (100%); Circumboreal; Europe | Forest (61.5%) Anthropogenic (38.5%) | Soil (61.5%) Air (23.1%) Dust (15.4%) | 13 | |
| ‒ | Pure mycelium [ | Asia (76%) Europe (20.7%) Australia (1.7%) | Anthropogenic (62%) Cropland (11.6%) Forest (11.6%) | Air (63.6%) Soil (19%) Dust (9.9%) | 121 | |
| M | Composite [ | Europe (66.9%) North America (13.7%) Asia (12.2%) | Forest (70.6%) Anthropogenic (10.3%) Grassland (7.7%) | Deadwood (37.2%) Air (19.5%) Soil (19.5%) | 1029 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (85.5%) North America (9.5%) Asia (3.2%) | Forest (78.2%) Anthropogenic (7.9%) Grassland (7.6%) | Deadwood (28.4%) Air (27.6%) Soil (19.2%) | 380 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | Europe (30.5%) Asia (30.4%) North America (15.6%) | Forest (55.4%) Cropland (10.3%) Grassland (9.9%) | Soil (78%) Sediment (5.3%) Root (4.3%) | 1696 | |
| ‒ | Nanopaper [ | Europe (50.2%) Asia (28.3%) Australia (21.2%) | Forest (60.8%) Grassland (24.8%) Cropland (6.4%) | Soil (88.1%) Air (2.9%) Rhizopsphere soil (2.9%) | 311 | |
| ‒ | Composite [ | North America (86.1%) Europe (8.1%) South America (5.4%) | Forest (96.1%) Tundra (1.7%) Cropland (1%) | Shoot (76.3%) Soil (15.4%) Root (6.6%) | 410 |
(A) Ascomycota; (B) Basidiomycota; (BL) Blastocladiomycota; (M) Mycoromycota; (O) Opisthosporidia; (#) Polypore fungi based on [27, 30, 59, 60]; (syn.) Taxonomic synonyms based on [59, 60]. Use as edible or medicinal fungus is based on [100] and indicated with (*) when grown commercially, while distribution is based on [59, 68, 102, 103]. Habitat and biome are based on [102]. Samples refer to the number of samples per species listed in the database [102]. Biome is the ecosystem where samples have been collected. Shoot includes all plant parts aboveground either dead or alive. Percentages indicate the fraction of samples per species per distribution, habitat or biome
Pathogenic species used or proposed to make mycelium materials
| Species | Description (Reference) |
|---|---|
| Heart rot [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Pathogen on different species of trees and reported as a human pathogen [ | |
| Plant pathogen [ | |
| Trunk rot [ | |
| Causes white rot and may be harmful to host plants [ | |
| Found on living and dead hardwoods [ | |
| Associated with trunk diseases such as esca in grapevines [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Plant pathogen, including for corn, wheat, rice and various plant families [ | |
| Plant pathogen [ | |
| Causing heart and butt rot, pathogen in perennial crops and natural forests in India [ | |
| Pathogenicity on hardwoods [ | |
| Pathogen in perennial crops and natural forests in India [ | |
| Found on roots of living trees, hardwoods and conifers [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Canker and white rot (but not decay of heartwood) [ | |
| Mostly strictly saprotrophic, but can cause cankers, decay and mortality of weak trees [ | |
| Pathogen causing heart rot [ | |
| Human [ | |
| Fruit rot in | |
| Rot in multiple plant families [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Pathogenicity on hardwood hosts [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Plant pathogen [ | |
| Heart rot in | |
| Pathogenicity on trees and nematodes [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Causes distinct white rots in dead and living wood [ | |
| Plant pathogen [ | |
| Human pathogen that can cause mycotic diseases [ | |
| Root rot, fruit rot, chlorosis and wilting on various plants [ | |
| Human and animal pathogen [ | |
| Xylem rot [ | |
| Necrosis, associated with esca and heart rot [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Wound pathogen mainly on older grapevines [ | |
| Necrotrophic parasite [ | |
| Pathogen on apple and other trees [ |
*Also part of Table 3
Endophytes used or proposed to make mycelium materials
| Species | Description (Reference) |
|---|---|
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ | |
| Endophyte [ |
*Also part of Table 2
Volatile compounds of T. versicolor when grown on beech wood [159] or potato dextrose [159, 160] in the absence of mushroom formation
| Compound (Class) | Beech wood | Potato dextrose | Interaction (Reference) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,2-Dimethylcyclopropane (H) | + | ||
| 2-Methylbutane (H) | + | ||
| Isopropyl alcohol (Alc) | + | + | |
| 2-Methylpentane (H) | + | ||
| 2-Butanol (Alc) | + | ||
| 3-Methylfuran (F) | + | ||
| Dimethyl carbonate (Es) | + | ||
| Methyl propionate (Es) | + | ||
| 3-Methyl-2-butanone (K) | + | + | |
| 3-Methyl-2-butanol (Alc) | + | ||
| 1,3,5-Trioxane ( | + | ||
| 3-Pentanone (K) | + | ||
| 2,5-Dimethylfuran (F) | + | ||
| 2,4,4-Trimethyl-1-pentene (H) | + | ||
| 2-Methyl-3-pentanone (K) | + | ||
| 3-Ethyl-2-methylpentane (H) | + | ||
| Cycloheptatriene (H) | + | + | |
| 2-Methyl-3-pentanol (Alc) | + | ||
| Octane (H) | + | + | |
| 2,3-Dimethylbutanoic acid methyl ester (Es) | + | ||
| 3-Methylhexanal (Ald) | + | ||
| Ethylbenzene (H) | + | ||
| Xylene (H) | + | ||
| Nonane (H) | + | + | R [ |
| Methyl furan-3-carboxylate (F) | + | ||
| 3-Ethyl-2-methyl-3-pentanol (Alc) | + | ||
| Ethyltoluene (H) | + | ||
| Methyl 2-furoate (Es) | + | + | |
| 3-Octanone (K) | + | SR [ | |
| 2-Pentylfuran (F) | + | R [ | |
| (1,2-Dimethylpropyl)cyclopropane ( | + | ||
| Phthalic anhydride | + | ||
| Selinene (T) | + | ||
| Cedrene (T) | + | ||
| Longipinene (T) | + | ||
| Thujopsene (T) | + | ||
| Cuparene (T) | + | ||
| Cadinene (T) | + | + | |
| Diphenylphenol (Alc) | + |
Compound class: (Alc) Alcohols; (Ald) Aldehydes; (Es) Esters; (F) Furans; (H) Hydrocarbons; (K) Ketones; (T) Terpenes; (–) undescribed. Interaction: (A) insect attraction; (R) insect repellent; (SR) terrestrial molluscs repellent
Volatile compounds of P. ostreatus when grown on sugarcane bagasse [78], wheat straw [164] or Raper medium [78] in the absence of mushroom formation
| Compound (Class) | Ligno-cellulose | Raper medium | Interaction (Reference) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Heptene (H) | + | ||
| 2-Methylbutanol (Alc) | + | ||
| 1-Hexanal (Ald) | + | ||
| 1-Octene (H) | + | SR [ | |
| 1,3-Octadiene (H) | + | ||
| α-Pinene (T) | + | A [ | |
| 2-Octen-3-one (K) | + | + | |
| 1-Octen-3-ol (Alc) | + | + | A [ |
| 3-Octanone (K) | + | + | SR [ |
| 3-Octanol (Alc) | + | + | |
| Octanal (Ald) | + | A [ | |
| 2-Octenol (Alc) | + | + | |
| 1-Octanol (Alc) | + | + | |
| 4-Methoxybenzaldehyde (Ald) | + | R [ |
Compound classes: (Alc) Alcohols; (Ald) Aldehydes; (H) Hydrocarbons; (K) Ketones; (T) Terpenes. Insect interaction: (A) attraction; (R) insect repellent; (SR) terrestrial molluscs repellent
Fig. 1Risk mitigation of fungal material processing