Spathaspora mengyangensis C.Y. Chai & F.L. Hui, 2020

Lv, Shi-Long, Chai, Chun-Yue, Wang, Yun, Yan, Zhen-Li & Hui, Feng-Li, 2020, Five new additions to the genus Spathaspora (Saccharomycetales, Debaryomycetaceae) from southwest China, MycoKeys 75, pp. 31-49 : 31

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.75.57192

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4FA77618-533E-5262-A5E3-F8DED137CA00

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Spathaspora mengyangensis C.Y. Chai & F.L. Hui
status

sp. nov.

Spathaspora mengyangensis C.Y. Chai & F.L. Hui sp. nov. Figure 3 View Figure 3

Type.

China, Yunnan Province, Jinghong City, Mengyang Town, in rotting wood from a tropical rainforest, July 2017, K.F. Liu & L. Zhang (holotype, NYNU 17741T preserved in a metabolically-inactive state), ex-holotype: CICC 33267; CBS 15227.

Etymology.

Mengyangensis refers to the geographical origin of the type strain of this species.

Description.

In YM broth after 3 days at 25 °C, cells are ovoid (3-7 × 5-7.5 μm) and occur singly or in pairs (Fig. 3a View Figure 3 ). Budding is multilateral. Sediment is formed after a month, but a pellicle is not observed. After 3 days of growth on YM agar at 25 °C, colonies are white to cream-coloured, butyrous and smooth with entire margins. After 14 days at 25 °C on Dalmau plate culture on CM agar, pseudohyphae are present, but true hyphae are not formed (Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ). Sporulation occurs on CM agar after 14 days at 25 °C. Unconjugated asci are formed from single cells with one elongated ascospore which are tapered and curved at the ends (Fig. 3c View Figure 3 ). Xylose fermentation is negative using Durham tubes, but ethanol is produced from xylose when determined with alcohol oxidase and peroxidase tests. Glucose, d-ribose, d-xylose, sucrose, maltose, trehalose, methyl α-d-glucoside, cellobiose, salicin, arbutin, inulin, ribitol, d-glucitol, d-mannitol, 2-keto-d-gluconate, succinate and ethanol are assimilated. No growth occurs with galactose, l-sorbose, d-glucosamine, l-arabinose, d-arabinose, l-rhamnose, melibiose, lactose, raffinose, melezitose, glycerol, erythritol, xylitol, galactitol, myo -inositol, d-glucono-1, 5-lactone, 5-keto-d-gluconate, d-gluconate, d-glucuronate, dl-lactate, citrate or methanol. For the assimilation of nitrogen compounds, growth on ethylamine, l-lysine, glucosamine or d-tryptophan is present, whereas growth on nitrate, nitrite, cadaverine, creatine, creatinine or imidazole is absent. Growth is observed at 30 °C, but not at 35 °C. Growth in the presence of 10% NaCl plus 5% glucose, 0.01% cycloheximide and 1% acetic acid is absent. Starch-like compounds are not produced. Urease activity and diazonium blue B reactions are negative.

Additional isolate examined.

China, Yunnan Province, Jinghong City, Mengyang Town, in rotting wood from a tropical rainforest, July 2017, K.F. Liu & L. Zhang, NYNU 17705.

Notes.

Phylogenetic analyses show that Sp. mengyangensis is closely related to Sp. elongata and C. subhashii ; however, the independent phylogenetic position and different physiological characters can distinguish Sp. mengyangensis from its sister species Sp. elongata (as mentioned above). Similarly, Sp. mengyangensis differed from C. subhashii by 2.8% substitutions in the D1/D2 domain and 7.8% substitutions in the ITS region ( Groenewald et al. 2016). Physiologically, Sp. mengyangensis can be differentiated from C. subhashii by the ability to assimilate d-ribose, trehalose, d-glucitol and d-mannitol and the inability to assimilate galactose, l-arabinose and melezitose. In addition, C. subhashii can grow at 40 °C, but Sp. mengyangensis cannot.