Regulation of Plant Growth & Development
Online ISSN : 2189-6305
Print ISSN : 1346-5406
Reseach Note
The antimicrobial metal complex protecting the shiro of Tricholoma matsutake from soil micro-organisms
Nobuhiro HiraiKatsutoshi Nishino
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2019 Volume 54 Issue 1 Pages 54-59

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Abstract

Tricholoma matsutake, a basidiomycete, forms ectomycorrhizas with Pinus densiflora as the host tree. Its fruiting body, “matsutake” in Japanese, is an edible and highly prized mushroom, and it grows in a circle called a fairy ring. Beneath the fairy ring of T. matsutake, a whitish mycelium-soil aggregated zone, called “shiro” in Japanese, develops. The front of the shiro, an active mycorrhizal zone, functions to gather nutrients from the soil and roots to nourish the fairy ring. Bacteria and sporulating fungi decrease from the shiro front, whereas they increase inside and outside the shiro front. Ohara and Hamada demonstrated that the shiro front exhibited antimicrobial activity, but the antimicrobial substance has remained unidentified for 50 years. We have identified the antimicrobial substance as the (oxalato)aluminate complex, known as a reaction product of oxalic acid and insoluble aluminum phosphate to release soluble phosphorus. The complex protects the shiro from micro­organisms, and contributes to its development.

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© 2019 The Japanese Society for Chemical Regulation of Plants
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