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Fungal–fungal co-culture: a primer for generating chemical diversity

Authors :
Sonja Knowles
Huzefa A Raja
Christopher Roberts
Nicholas Oberlies
Source :
Natural Product Reports. 39:1557-1573
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2022.

Abstract

Covering: 2002 to 2020In their natural environment, fungi must compete for resources. It has been hypothesized that this competition likely induces the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites for defence. In a quest to discover new chemical diversity from fungal cultures, a growing trend has been to recapitulate this competitive environment in the laboratory, essentially growing fungi in co-culture. This review covers fungal-fungal co-culture studies beginning with the first literature report in 2002. Since then, there has been a growing number of new secondary metabolites reported as a result of fungal co-culture studies. Specifically, this review discusses and provides insights into (1) rationale for pairing fungal strains, (2) ways to grow fungi for co-culture, (3) different approaches to screening fungal co-cultures for chemical diversity, (4) determining the secondary metabolite-producing strain, and (5) final thoughts regarding the fungal-fungal co-culture approach. Our goal is to provide a set of practical strategies for fungal co-culture studies to generate unique chemical diversity that the natural products research community can utilize.

Details

ISSN :
14604752 and 02650568
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Natural Product Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....58862cd213e4845fe75b4c69e12f66ad