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Nitrogen Starvation-Induced Changes in Amino Acid and Free Ammonium Pools in Schizophyllum commune Colonies

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Abstract

Wood-decay fungi depend upon recycling of nitrogen-containing molecules to maintain growth in nitrogen-deficient environments. One of the pools that can support growth in these organisms is the pool of free amino acids. The free amino acid (AA) composition of Schizophyllum commune mycelium grown on the surface of nitrogen-rich (M = 6.6 mM L-asparagine) and nitrogen-poor medium (M01 = 0.06 mM L-asparagine) has been examined: When mycelium is grown on M, alanine, glutamate, and asparagine account for almost 2/3 of the amino acid pool. The free amino acid concentration is reduced by 75% for mycelium grown on the M01 medium, with alanine and glutamate predominating. In addition, free NH4+ increases by 60% in nitrogen-deprived mycelia. Except for asparagine, which is absorbed by the apices, the concentration of all free amino acids is higher in the centers of M-grown, 4-day-old mycelia than in the apices. Hyphae grown to exponential growth on M and transferred to M01 for 12 h show greater free amino acid and NH4+ concentrations in the apices, most likely indicating increased translocation to the apices.

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Hanks, ., Hearnes, ., Gathman, . et al. Nitrogen Starvation-Induced Changes in Amino Acid and Free Ammonium Pools in Schizophyllum commune Colonies. Curr Microbiol 47, 444–449 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-003-4003-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-003-4003-y

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