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Cunninghamella Intermedia
Cunninghamella is a genus of fungi in the order Mucorales, and the family Cunninghamellaceae. The genus was circumscribed by French mycologist Alphonse Louis Paul Matruchot in Ann. Mycol. Vol.1 on page 47 in 1903. The genus name of ''Cunninghamella'' is in honour of David Douglas Cunningham (1843–1914), who was a Scottish doctor and researcher who worked extensively in India on various aspects of public health and medicine. Species , Index Fungorum lists 13 valid species of ''Cunninghamella'': *'' Cunninghamella bertholletiae'' *'' Cunninghamella binarieae'' R.Y.Zheng 2001 *''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' *''Cunninghamella candida'' Yosh.Yamam. 1929 *''Cunninghamella clavata'' R.Y.Zheng & G.Q.Chen 1998 *''Cunninghamella echinulata'' ( Thaxt.) Thaxt. ex Blakeslee 1905 *''Cunninghamella elegans'' Lendn. 1905 *''Cunninghamella homothallica'' Komin. & Tubaki 1952 *''Cunninghamella intermedia'' K.B.Deshp. & Mantri 1966 *''Cunninghamella multiverticillata'' R.Y.Zheng & ...
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Louis Matruchot
Alphonse Louis Paul Matruchot (born 14 January 1863 in Verrey-sous-Salmaise and died 5 July 1921 in Paris) was a French mycologist. In 1883 he began work as an assistant teacher at the Lycée Saint-Louis in Paris. In 1889 he received his agrégation for natural sciences, becoming a préparateur of botany at the École normale supérieure (serving from 1889 to 1892). He earned his doctorate in 1892, later being appointed ''chef de travaux pratiques'' to the faculty of Paris. In 1902-04 he was a lecturer at the École normale supérieure, followed by an assignment as deputy assistant professor (1904-12). Matruchot was a member of the Société mycologique de France and the Société botanique de France (1890). Selected publications * ''Recherches sur le développement de quelques mucédinées'', 1892 – Research on the development of some mucidines. * ''Les mycelium truffiers blancs'', 1903 with Émile Boulanger – The white truffle mycelium Mycelium (plural mycelia) is ...
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Cunninghamella Blakesleeana
''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' is a fungus species in the genus ''Cunninghamella''. Biotechnology use Microbiological oxidation of steroids has been studied using ''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' H-334. ''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' has been used to transform cortexolone to hydrocortisone Hydrocortisone is the name for the hormone cortisol when supplied as a medication. Uses include conditions such as adrenocortical insufficiency, adrenogenital syndrome, high blood calcium, thyroiditis, rheumatoid arthritis, dermatitis, asthma, .... References External links Cunninghamellaceae Fungi described in 1927 {{zygomycota-stub ...
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Cunninghamella Multiverticillata
Cunninghamella is a genus of fungi in the order Mucorales, and the family Cunninghamellaceae. The genus was circumscribed by French mycologist Alphonse Louis Paul Matruchot in Ann. Mycol. Vol.1 on page 47 in 1903. The genus name of ''Cunninghamella'' is in honour of David Douglas Cunningham (1843–1914), who was a Scottish doctor and researcher who worked extensively in India on various aspects of public health and medicine. Species , Index Fungorum lists 13 valid species of ''Cunninghamella'': *'' Cunninghamella bertholletiae'' *'' Cunninghamella binarieae'' R.Y.Zheng 2001 *''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' *''Cunninghamella candida'' Yosh.Yamam. 1929 *''Cunninghamella clavata'' R.Y.Zheng & G.Q.Chen 1998 *''Cunninghamella echinulata'' ( Thaxt.) Thaxt. ex Blakeslee 1905 *''Cunninghamella elegans'' Lendn. 1905 *''Cunninghamella homothallica'' Komin. & Tubaki 1952 *''Cunninghamella intermedia'' K.B.Deshp. & Mantri 1966 *''Cunninghamella multiverticillata'' R.Y.Zheng & ...
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Cunninghamella Intermedia
Cunninghamella is a genus of fungi in the order Mucorales, and the family Cunninghamellaceae. The genus was circumscribed by French mycologist Alphonse Louis Paul Matruchot in Ann. Mycol. Vol.1 on page 47 in 1903. The genus name of ''Cunninghamella'' is in honour of David Douglas Cunningham (1843–1914), who was a Scottish doctor and researcher who worked extensively in India on various aspects of public health and medicine. Species , Index Fungorum lists 13 valid species of ''Cunninghamella'': *'' Cunninghamella bertholletiae'' *'' Cunninghamella binarieae'' R.Y.Zheng 2001 *''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' *''Cunninghamella candida'' Yosh.Yamam. 1929 *''Cunninghamella clavata'' R.Y.Zheng & G.Q.Chen 1998 *''Cunninghamella echinulata'' ( Thaxt.) Thaxt. ex Blakeslee 1905 *''Cunninghamella elegans'' Lendn. 1905 *''Cunninghamella homothallica'' Komin. & Tubaki 1952 *''Cunninghamella intermedia'' K.B.Deshp. & Mantri 1966 *''Cunninghamella multiverticillata'' R.Y.Zheng & ...
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Komin
Komin may refer to: * Komin, Dubrovnik-Neretva County Komin is a small town in Dubrovnik-Neretva County in Croatia , image_flag = Flag of Croatia.svg , image_coat = Coat of arms of Croatia.svg , anthem = "Lijepa naša domovino"("Our Beautiful Homeland") , ..., a village near Ploče, Croatia * Komin, Zagreb County, a village near Sveti Ivan Zelina, Croatia * Komin (surname) * Kawamoto Kōmin (1810–1871), Japanese scholar {{disambiguation, geo, surname ...
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Cunninghamella Homothallica
Cunninghamella is a genus of fungi in the order Mucorales, and the family Cunninghamellaceae. The genus was circumscribed by French mycologist Alphonse Louis Paul Matruchot in Ann. Mycol. Vol.1 on page 47 in 1903. The genus name of ''Cunninghamella'' is in honour of David Douglas Cunningham (1843–1914), who was a Scottish doctor and researcher who worked extensively in India on various aspects of public health and medicine. Species , Index Fungorum lists 13 valid species of ''Cunninghamella'': *'' Cunninghamella bertholletiae'' *'' Cunninghamella binarieae'' R.Y.Zheng 2001 *''Cunninghamella blakesleeana'' *''Cunninghamella candida'' Yosh.Yamam. 1929 *''Cunninghamella clavata'' R.Y.Zheng & G.Q.Chen 1998 *''Cunninghamella echinulata'' ( Thaxt.) Thaxt. ex Blakeslee 1905 *''Cunninghamella elegans'' Lendn. 1905 *''Cunninghamella homothallica'' Komin. & Tubaki 1952 *''Cunninghamella intermedia'' K.B.Deshp. & Mantri 1966 *''Cunninghamella multiverticillata'' R.Y.Zheng & ...
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Cunninghamella Elegans
''Cunninghamella elegans'' is a species of fungus in the genus '' Cunninghamella'' found in soil. It can be grown in Sabouraud dextrose broth, a liquid medium used for cultivation of yeasts and molds from liquid which are normally sterile. As opposed to '' C. bertholletiae'', it is not a human pathogen, with the exception of two documented patients. Description ''Cunninghamella elegans'' is a filamentous fungus that produces purely gray colonies. Electron microscopy studies show that the conidia are covered with spines. Use as a fungal organism capable of xenobiotics metabolism ''Cunninghamella elegans'' is able to degrade xenobiotics. It has a variety of enzymes of phases I (modification enzymes acting to introduce reactive and polar groups into their substrates) and II (conjugation enzymes) of the xenobiotic metabolism, as do mammals. Cytochrome P450 monooxygenase, aryl sulfotransferase, glutathione S-transferase, UDP-glucuronosyltransferase, UDP-glucosyltransferas ...
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Albert Francis Blakeslee
Albert Francis Blakeslee (November 9, 1874 – November 16, 1954) was an American botanist. He is best known for his research on the poisonous jimsonweed plant and the sexuality of fungi. He was the brother of the Far East scholar George Hubbard Blakeslee. Early life and education Albert Francis Blakeslee was born on November 9, 1874 in Geneseo, New York, to Augusta Miranda Hubbard Blakeslee and Francis Durbin Blakeslee, a Methodist minister. Blakeslee attended Wesleyan University, graduating in 1896. At Wesleyan, Blakeslee played several sports and won academic prizes in mathematics and chemistry. He received a master's degree from Harvard University in 1900 and a doctorate in 1904. He also studied at the University of Halle-Wittenberg in Germany from 1904 to 1906. ''Datura'', jimsonweed, research Blakeslee used the jimsonweed plant as a model organism for his genetic research. His experiments included using colchicine to achieve an increase in the number of chromosomes, whic ...
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Roland Thaxter
Roland Thaxter (August 28, 1858 – April 22, 1932) was an American mycologist, plant pathologist, botanist, and entomologist, renowned for his contribution to the insect parasitic fungi—Laboulbeniales. His college education was completed at Harvard, where he dedicated forty years to mycological and botanical research. His five-volume series on fungi in the order Laboulbeniales laid a solid foundation of research on these insect ectoparasites. He also contributed to the field of Plant Pathology. Biography Roland Thaxter was born in Newtonville, Massachusetts, 1858, the third and youngest child in the family. His parents were Levi Thaxter and Celia Thaxter, Celia (née Laighton) Thaxter. He married Mabel Gray Thaxter in 1887. Thaxter's personality was influenced greatly by his literary family. His father was a lawyer and an authority who brought the works of the poet Robert Browning to the American public. His mother, Celia Thaxter, was a distinguished poet, most well known for he ...
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Cunninghamella Echinulata
''Cunninghamella echinulata'' is a fungal species in the genus ''Cunninghamella.'' It is an asexually reproducing fungus and a mesophile, preferring intermediate temperature ranges. ''C. echinulata'' is a common air contaminant, and is currently of interest to the biotechnology industry due to its ability to synthesize γ-linolenic acid as well as its capacity to bioconcentrate metals. This species is a soil saprotroph that forms rhizoids, preferring soils enriched in nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. It has been reported occasionally an agent of mucormycosis following the inhalation of fungal spores. Czapek's agar is a suitable growth medium for the propagation of ''C. echinulata.'' Taxonomy, growth and morphology ''Cunninghamella echinulata'' is a member of the family, Cunninghamellaceae (phylum Mucoromycota). This species is closely related to ''C. elegans'', and both species share highly similar characteristics of growth and morphology. Colonies tend to be rapidly grow ...
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