Sydney Institute of Agriculture, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Biomedical Building, Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh, Sydney, NSW, 2015, Australia.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2018 Feb;102(4):1639-1650. doi: 10.1007/s00253-018-8777-z. Epub 2018 Jan 23.
Mushrooms are an important food crop for many millions of people worldwide. The most important edible mushroom is the button mushroom (Agaricus bisporus), an excellent example of sustainable food production which is cultivated on a selective compost produced from recycled agricultural waste products. A diverse population of bacteria and fungi are involved throughout the production of Agaricus. A range of successional taxa convert the wheat straw into compost in the thermophilic composting process. These initially break down readily accessible compounds and release ammonia, and then assimilate cellulose and hemicellulose into compost microbial biomass that forms the primary source of nutrition for the Agaricus mycelium. This key process in composting is performed by a microbial consortium consisting of the thermophilic fungus Mycothermus thermophilus (Scytalidium thermophilum) and a range of thermophilic proteobacteria and actinobacteria, many of which have only recently been identified. Certain bacterial taxa have been shown to promote elongation of the Agaricus hyphae, and bacterial activity is required to induce production of the mushroom fruiting bodies during cropping. Attempts to isolate mushroom growth-promoting bacteria for commercial mushroom production have not yet been successful. Compost bacteria and fungi also cause economically important losses in the cropping process, causing a range of destructive diseases of mushroom hyphae and fruiting bodies. Recent advances in our understanding of the key bacteria and fungi in mushroom compost provide the potential to improve productivity of mushroom compost and to reduce the impact of crop disease.
蘑菇是全球数百万人的重要食物来源。最重要的食用蘑菇是双孢蘑菇(Agaricus bisporus),这是可持续食品生产的一个极好例子,它是在由回收农业废弃物制成的选择性堆肥上栽培的。在整个 Agaricus 的生产过程中,都涉及到大量的细菌和真菌。一系列演替分类群将小麦秸秆转化为高温堆肥过程中的堆肥。这些分类群最初会轻易地分解可利用的化合物并释放氨,然后将纤维素和半纤维素同化到堆肥微生物生物量中,这是 Agaricus 菌丝体的主要营养来源。这个堆肥过程的关键是由一个微生物联合体完成的,其中包括嗜热真菌 Mycothermus thermophilus(Scytalidium thermophilum)和一系列嗜热变形菌和放线菌,其中许多菌最近才被鉴定出来。某些细菌分类群已被证明可以促进 Agaricus 菌丝的伸长,并且在作物生长期间,细菌活性是诱导蘑菇子实体产生所必需的。然而,为了商业蘑菇生产而分离蘑菇生长促进细菌的尝试尚未成功。堆肥细菌和真菌也会在作物生长过程中造成经济上重要的损失,导致一系列破坏性的蘑菇菌丝和子实体疾病。我们对蘑菇堆肥中关键细菌和真菌的理解的最新进展为提高蘑菇堆肥的生产力和减少作物病害的影响提供了潜力。