Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Shiraia bambusicola

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Genus
  
Shiraia Henn. 1900

Phylum
  
Ascomycota

Order
  
Pleosporales

Family
  
incertae sedis

Scientific name
  
Shiraia bambusicola

Rank
  
Species

Subclass
  
Dothideomycetidae

Similar
  
Bambusicola, Pleosporales, Hypocreaceae, Myriangiales, Phaeosphaeria

Shiraia bambusicola is a parasitic fungus on twigs of several genera of bamboos, and its relatively large stromata are used in traditional Chinese medicine. It is the sole species in the monotypic genus Shiraia. It is widely distributed in many provinces of Southern China and also in Japan.

The genus Shiraia, named after Dr. Mitsutaro Shirai, was first established and proposed as a member of the family Nectriaceae by P. Hennings in 1900. Although the familial placement is somewhat uncertain, molecular phylogenetic evidence based on the sequences of ribosomal DNA supports its positioning in the Phaeosphaeriaceae.

The extracts from its stromata contain hypocrellins and shiraiachromes, members of perylenequinone class of natural products, which are photoactivated therapeutic agents. Hypocrellins were firstly found in another filamentous fungus Hypocrella bambuase, which is also parasitic on bamboos.

References

Shiraia bambusicola Wikipedia