1.Re-evaluation of the Genus Antrodia (Polyporales, Basidiomycota) in Korea.
Myung Soo PARK ; Ying QUAN ; Paul Eunil JUNG ; Seung Yoon OH ; Yeongseon JANG ; Jae Jin KIM ; Young Woon LIM
Mycobiology 2014;42(2):114-119
The wood decay fungi Antrodia P. Karst. play important ecological roles and have significant industrial and economic impacts as both wood degraders and sources of pharmaceutical and biotechnological products. Although each Antrodia species has distinct morphological characteristics, the misidentification rate is especially high due to their simple morphological characters. A combination of morphological and internal transcribed spacer region sequence analyses revealed that 27 of 89 specimens previously identified by morphology alone were correct, whereas 35 of these specimens were misidentified as other Antrodia species. We report here that seven Antrodia species exist in Korea (A. albida, A. heteromorpha, A. malicola, A. serialis, A. sinuosa, A. sitchensis, and A. xantha) and based on these specimens, we provide taxonomic descriptions of these species, except for A. serialis, which was only confirmed by isolate.
Antrodia*
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Fungi
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Korea
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Sequence Analysis
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Wood
2.Delimitation of Russula Subgenus Amoenula in Korea Using Three Molecular Markers.
Myung Soo PARK ; Jonathan J FONG ; Hyun LEE ; Seung Yoon OH ; Paul Eunil JUNG ; Young Ju MIN ; Soon Ja SEOK ; Young Woon LIM
Mycobiology 2013;41(4):191-201
Distinguishing individual Russula species has been difficult due to extensive phenotypic plasticity and obscure morphological and anatomical discontinuities. Due to highly similar macroscopic features, such as the presence of a red-cap, species identification within the Russula subgenus Amoenula is particularly difficult. Three species of the subgenus Amoneula have been reported in Korea. We used a combination of morphology and three molecular markers, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS), 28S nuclear ribosomal large subunit (LSU), and RNA polymerase II gene (RPB2), for identification and study of the genetic diversity of Russula subgenus Amoenula in Korea. We identified only two species in Korea (R. mariae and R. violeipes); these two species were indistinguishable according to morphology and LSU, but were found to be reciprocally monophyletic species using ITS and RPB2. The markers, ITS, LSU, and RPB2, have been tested in the past for use as DNA barcoding markers, and findings of our study suggest that ITS and RPB2 had the best performance for the Russula subgenus Amoneula.
DNA
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Genetic Variation
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Korea*
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Plastics
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RNA Polymerase II