Aspergillus reticulatus explained
Aspergillus reticulatus is a species of fungus in the genus Aspergillus. It is from the Robusti section.[1] The species was first described in 2017.[1] It has been isolated from a lung biopsy in the United States, air in Puerto Rico and elsewhere in the United States, dust in Belgium, oil paintings in Slovenia, and a leather shoe in the Czech Republic.[1] It has been reported to produce asperglaucide, aurantiamide, indole alkaloid A, and clavatol D.[1]
References
- Sklenar . F. . Jurjevic . Z. . Zalar . P. . Frisvad . J.C. . Visagie . C.M. . Kolarik . M. . Houbraken . J. . Chen . A.J. . Yilmaz . N. . Seifert . K.A. . Coton . M. . Déniel . F. . Gunde-Cimerman . N. . Samson . R.A. . Peterson . S.W. . Hubka . V.. 2017. Phylogeny of xerophilic aspergilli (subgenus Aspergillus) and taxonomic revision of section Restricti . Studies in Mycology. 88. 161–236 . 10.1016/j.simyco.2017.09.002. 29158611 . 5678892 .