Synchrotron-based X-ray fluorescence microscopy enables multiscale spatial visualization of ions involved in fungal lignocellulose deconstruction

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作者
Grant Kirker
Sam Zelinka
Sophie-Charlotte Gleber
David Vine
Lydia Finney
Si Chen
Young Pyo Hong
Omar Uyarte
Stefan Vogt
Jody Jellison
Barry Goodell
Joseph E. Jakes
机构
[1] Durability and Wood Protection Research,Department of Physics and Astronomy
[2] USDA Forest Service,Departamento de Biotecnologia
[3] Forest Products Laboratory,Department of Microbiology
[4] Building and Fire Sciences,undefined
[5] USDA Forest Service,undefined
[6] Forest Products Laboratory,undefined
[7] Advanced Photon Source,undefined
[8] Argonne National Laboratory,undefined
[9] Northwestern University,undefined
[10] Escola de Engenharia de Lorena,undefined
[11] Universidade de São Paulo,undefined
[12] Centro I+D,undefined
[13] CMPC Celulosa,undefined
[14] Center for Agriculture,undefined
[15] Food and the Environment,undefined
[16] University of Massachusetts - Amherst,undefined
[17] University of Massachusetts - Amherst,undefined
[18] Forest Biopolymers Science and Engineering,undefined
[19] USDA Forest Service,undefined
[20] Forest Products Laboratory,undefined
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摘要
The role of ions in the fungal decay process of lignocellulose biomaterials, and more broadly fungal metabolism, has implications for diverse research disciplines ranging from plant pathology and forest ecology, to carbon sequestration. Despite the importance of ions in fungal decay mechanisms, the spatial distribution and quantification of ions in lignocellulosic cell walls and fungal hyphae during decay is not known. Here we employ synchrotron-based X-ray fluorescence microscopy (XFM) to map and quantify physiologically relevant ions, such as K, Ca, Mn, Fe, and Zn, in wood being decayed by the model brown rot fungus Serpula lacrymans. Two-dimensional XFM maps were obtained to study the ion spatial distributions from mm to submicron length scales in wood, fungal hyphae with the dried extracellular matrix (ECM) from the fungus, and Ca oxalate crystals. Three-dimensional ion volume reconstructions were also acquired of wood cell walls and hyphae with ECM. Results show that the fungus actively transports some ions, such as Fe, into the wood and controls the distribution of ions at both the bulk wood and cell wall length scales. These measurements provide new insights into the movement of ions during decay and illustrate how synchrotron-based XFM is uniquely suited study these ions.
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