Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Aspergillus unguis

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Class
  
Eurotiomycetes

Genus
  
Aspergillus

Division
  
Ascomycota

Order
  
Eurotiales

Rank
  
Species

Similar
  
Aspergillus restrictus, Aspergillus sydowii, Aspergillus ustus, Aphanoascus fulvescens, Wallemia sebi

Aspergillus unguis is a member of the genus Aspergillus in the phylum Ascomycota, and the asexual state (anamorph) of Emericella unguis. Aspergillus unguis is a filamentous soil-borne fungus found on decomposing plant matter and other moist substrates including with building materials and household dust. Aspergillus unguis occurs mainly in tropical and subtropical soils but has also been isolated from various marine and aquatic habitats. The species was first isolated in 1935 by Weill and L. Gaudin. Historically, A. unguis was assigned to the A. nidulans group, a common group of soil-borne fungi due to the resemblance of its ascospores and cleistothecia to those of Emericella nidulans. Aspergillus unguis is distinctive, however, in possessing spicular hyphae. A number of synonyms have been collapsed into this species, including: Sterigmatocystis unguis, Aspergillus laokiashanensis and Aspergillus mellinus.

Contents

Growth and morphology

Colonies typically reach up to 2 cm in diameter at 10 days incubation, growing optimally at 30 °C (86 °F). A number of growth media are suitable for the cultivation of this species, including Sabouraud maltose agar, Czapek’s agar, Raulin’s agar. The colonies of A. unguis are first white in colour becoming greenish or chrome green in the centre, and ultimately dull brown colour similar to chocolate. The dark colour is due to the presence of melanin or melanin like-pigments within the cell wall. This dark brown colouration is unique to the species and has cause some researchers to include it in the dematiaceous fungi, a group of unrelated, darkly coloured moulds that includes some serious opportunistic pathogens of humans. Despite its outward similarity to the dematiaceous fungi, the latter group conventionally excludes members of the order Eurotiales.

The conidiophoress are smoothed walled, non-septate, reaching 45-65 µm in length. The mature sporulating heads are 250-300 µm in diameter and columnar. The conidiophores terminate in hemispherical vesicles 9-12 µm, wide, that become covered by primary and secondary metulae giving rise to phialides. The conidia are spherical in shape, roughly 3 µm in diameter and develop brownish vein-like structures on the spore walls over time. Conidia are borne in columns at the tips of aspergilloid conidiophores. The spicular hyphae of A. unguis are aseptate and become brown in colour, thick-walled and irregularly roughened and tapering with blunt apex. They reach a length of 1000 µm or greater.

Ecology

Aspergillus unguis is a soil-dwelling fungus that prefers high water activity (aw).

Human disease

Disease of the nail and skin caused by A. unguis has been reported. This species was one of two most common fungi encountered in the homes of asthmatic children in Detroit, Michigan, reported from 72% of homes. It has also been reported as a colonist of water damaged construction materials in Finland where it was found to produce the mycotoxin, sterigmatocystin, a potent carcinogen and mutagen.

Beta-glucosidase

Production of beta-glucosidases is well known in members of the genus Aspergillus, however only few species can produce glucose tolerant isoforms. Beta-glucosidases produced by A. unguis are characteristically highly glucose-tolerant. For this reason, the fungus has been investigated industrially for use in the hydrolysis of cellulose hydrolysis and biomass conversion (cellulose to glucose to fuel ethanol).

Depsidones

Four bioactive, chlorinated depsidones have been isolated from strains of this species obtained from seaweed collected off the coasts of China and Thailand. These compounds exhibited potent inhibitory effects against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), brine shrimp larvae (test for compound cytotoxicity and pesticide-ability) and the human lung tumor line A-549. No activity was found against E. coli strain AB1157+; however depsidones 1, 3 & 4, and to a lesser extent 2, exhibited selective bioactivity on strain AB3027-. Some compounds introduced DNA damage. Only depsidone 1 showed significant anti-proliferatory activity on human cancer cells. Folipastatin, another depsidone is inhibitory to phospholipase A2, an important enzyme in the lipolysis pathway that also is related to the expression of inflammatory mediators such as arachidonic acid. Exposure of hypertensive rats to this compound produced an anti-inflammatory effect with mild ]]edema]] at the injection site but without an increase in blood pressure edemas on the hypertensive rats.

Guisinol

Guisinol was isolated from a strain of the teleomorph, Emericella unguis derived from a mollusc collected from coastal Venezuela. This compound also inhibit the growth of MRSA in vitro.

Unguinol

The metabolite unguinol, produced uniuquely by A. unguis, is a growth promotor specific to monogastric animals such as chickens. It also been investigated as a potential herbicide due to its ability to selectively inhibit pyruvate, phosphate dikinase (PPDK), a key enzyme in gluconeogenesis and photosynthesis.

References

Aspergillus unguis Wikipedia