Two new cellulolytic fungal species isolated from a 19th-century art collection
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Authors
Coronado Ruiz, Carolina
Avendaño Vega, Roberto
Escudero Leyva, Efraín
Conejo Barboza, Geraldine
Chaverri Echandi, Priscila
Chavarría Vargas, Max
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Abstract
The archive of the Universidad de Costa Rica maintains a nineteenth-century French collection of
drawings and lithographs in which the biodeterioration by fungi is rampant. Because of nutritional
conditions in which these fungi grew, we suspected that they possessed an ability to degrade cellulose.
In this work our goal was to isolate and identify the fungal species responsible for the biodegradation of
a nineteenth-century art collection and determine their cellulolytic activity. Fungi were isolated using
potato-dextrose-agar (PDA) and water-agar with carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC). The identifcation
of the fungi was assessed through DNA sequencing (nrDNA ITS and α-actin regions) complemented
with morphological analyses. Assays for cellulolytic activity were conducted with Gram’s iodine as
dye. Nineteen isolates were obtained, of which seventeen were identifed through DNA sequencing
to species level, belonging mainly to genera Arthrinium, Aspergillus, Chaetomium, Cladosporium,
Colletotrichum, Penicillium and Trichoderma. For two samples that could not be identifed through
their ITS and α-actin sequences, a morphological analysis was conducted; they were identifed as new
species, named Periconia epilithographicola sp. nov. and Coniochaeta cipronana sp. nov. Qualitative
tests showed that the fungal collection presents important cellulolytic activity.
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Keywords
SPECIES, FUNGI, BIOLOGY
Citation
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-24934-7