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Cold adaptation in the phytopathogenic fungi causing snow molds

Journal

MYCOSCIENCE
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 26-38

Publisher

MYCOLOGICAL SOC JAPAN
DOI: 10.1007/s10267-008-0452-2

Keywords

Antifreeze protein; Cold-active enzyme; Frost resistance; Psychrophile; Snow mold

Categories

Funding

  1. Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [19570100, 18255005]

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Snow molds are psychrophilic or psychrotrophic fungal pathogens of forage crops, winter cereals, and conifer seedlings. These fungi can grow and attack dormant plants at low temperatures under snow cover. In this review, we describe the biodiversity and physiological and biochemical characteristics of snow molds that belong to various taxa. Cold tolerance is one of the important factors related to their geographic distribution, because snow molds develop mycelia under snow cover and because they should produce intra- and extracellular enzymes active at low temperatures for growth and infection. Basidiomycetous snow molds produce extracellular antifreeze proteins. Their physiological significance is to keep the extracellular environment unfrozen. The psychrophilic ascomycete Sclerotia borealis shows normal mycelial growth under frozen conditions, which is faster than that on unfrozen media at optimal growth temperature. This fungus does not produce extracellular antifreeze proteins, but osmotic stress tolerance enables the fungus to grow at subzero temperatures. In conclusion, different taxa of snow molds have different strategies to adapt under snow cover.

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