4.5 Article

Taxonomy of Penicillium section Citrina

Journal

STUDIES IN MYCOLOGY
Volume -, Issue 70, Pages 53-138

Publisher

CENTRAALBUREAU SCHIMMELCULTURE
DOI: 10.3114/sim.2011.70.02

Keywords

citreoviridin; citrinin; soil fungi; taxonomy; phylogeny

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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Species of Penicillium section Citrina have a worldwide distribution and occur commonly in soils. The section is here delimited using a combination of phenotypic characters and sequences of the nuclear ribosomal RNA gene operon, including the internal transcribed spacer regions ITS1 and ITS2, the 5.8S nrDNA (ITS) and partial RPB2 sequences. Species assigned to section Citrina share the production of symmetrically biverticillate conidiophores, flask shaped phialides (7.0-9.0 mu m long) and relatively small conidia (2.0-3.0 mu m diam). Some species can produce greyish-brown coloured cleistothecia containing flanged ascospores. In the present study, more than 250 isolates presumably belonging to section Citrina were examined using a combined analysis of phenotypic and physiological characters, extrolite profiles and ITS, beta-tubulin and/or calmodulin sequences. Section Citrina includes 39 species, and 17 of those are described here as new. The most important phenotypic characters for distinguishing species are growth rates and colony reverse colours on the agar media CYA, MEA and YES; shape, size and ornamentation of conidia and the production of sclerotia or cleistothecia. Temperature-growth profiles were made for all examined species and are a valuable character characters for species identification. Species centered around P. citrinum generally have a higher maximum growth temperature (33-36 degrees C) than species related to P westlingii (27-33 degrees C). Extrolite patterns and partial calmodulin and beta-tubulin sequences can be used for sequence based identification and resolved all species. In contrast, ITS sequences were less variable and only 55 % of the species could be unambiguously identified with this locus.

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