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1.
Lett Appl Microbiol ; 65(2): 173-181, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28561311

ABSTRACT

A mutualistic fungus of the leaf-cutting ant Atta mexicana was isolated and identified as Leucoagaricus gongylophorus. This isolate had a close phylogenetic relationship with L. gongylophorus fungi cultivated by other leaf-cutting ants as determined by ITS sequencing. A subcolony started with ~500 A. mexicana workers could process 2 g day-1 of plant material and generate a 135 cm3 fungus garden in 160 days. The presence of gongylidia structures of ~35 µm was observed on the tip of the hyphae. The fungus could grow without ants on semi-solid cultures with α-cellulose and microcrystalline cellulose and in solid-state cultures with grass and sugarcane bagasse, as sole sources of carbon. The maximum CO2 production rate on grass (Vmax  = 17·5 mg CO2  Lg-1  day-1 ) was three times higher than on sugarcane bagasse (Vmax  = 6·6 mg CO2  Lg-1 day-1 ). Recoveries of 32·9 mgglucose  gbiomass-1 and 12·3 mgglucose  gbiomass-1 were obtained from the fungal biomass and the fungus garden, respectively. Endoglucanase activity was detected on carboxymethylcellulose agar plates. This is the first study reporting the growth of L. gongylophorus from A. mexicana on cellulose and plant material. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: According to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report about the growth of Leucoagaricus gongylophorus, isolated from the colony of the ant Atta mexicana, on semisolid medium with cellulose and solid-state cultures with lignocellulosic materials. The maximum CO2 production rate on grass was three times higher than on sugarcane bagasse. Endoglucanase activity was detected and it was possible to recover glucose from the fungal gongylidia. The cellulolytic activity could be used to process lignocellulosic residues and obtain sugar or valuable products, but more work is needed in this direction.


Subject(s)
Agaricales/enzymology , Ants/microbiology , Cellulase/metabolism , Cellulose/metabolism , Lignin/metabolism , Symbiosis , Agaricales/genetics , Agaricales/growth & development , Agaricales/isolation & purification , Animals , Biomass , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Glucose/analysis , Hyphae , Phylogeny , Plant Leaves/microbiology
2.
Int J Numer Method Biomed Eng ; 29(2): 217-32, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23345266

ABSTRACT

We present a method to efficiently simulate coronary perfusion in subject-specific models of the heart within clinically relevant time frames. Perfusion is modelled as a Darcy porous-media flow, where the permeability tensor is derived from homogenization of an explicit anatomical representation of the vasculature. To account for the disparity in length scales present in the vascular network, in this study, this approach is further refined through the implementation of a multi-compartment medium where each compartment encapsulates the spatial scales in a certain range by using an effective permeability tensor. Neighbouring compartments then communicate through distributed sources and sinks, acting as volume fluxes. Although elegant from a modelling perspective, the full multi-compartment Darcy system is computationally expensive to solve. We therefore enhance computational efficiency of this model by reducing the N-compartment system of Darcy equations to N pressure equations, and N subsequent projection problems to recover the Darcy velocity. The resulting 'reduced' Darcy formulation leads to a dramatic reduction in algebraic-system size and is therefore computationally cheaper to solve than the full multi-compartment Darcy system. A comparison of the reduced and the full formulation in terms of solution time and memory usage clearly highlights the superior performance of the reduced formulation. Moreover, the implementation of flux and, specifically, impermeable boundary conditions on arbitrarily curved boundaries such as epicardium and endocardium is straightforward in contrast to the full Darcy formulation. Finally, to demonstrate the applicability of our methodology to a personalized model and its solvability in clinically relevant time frames, we simulate perfusion in a subject-specific model of the left ventricle.


Subject(s)
Heart/physiology , Models, Theoretical , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Finite Element Analysis , Humans , Porosity , Pressure
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