lentinus การใช้
- The molecular studies showed that some Polyporus species are belonging to the Lentinus-radiation.
- A protease inhibitor was isolated from the Shiitake mushroom ( " Lentinus edodes " ).
- It was first described in 1853 by mycologist Miles Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis as " Lentinus micheneri ".
- Found in Africa, it was described as new to science in 1928 by Belgian mycologist Maurice Beeli as " Lentinus luteopunctatus ".
- Found in western North America, it was originally described in 1965 as a species of " Lentinus " by American mycologist Orson K . Miller.
- Laccases are proteins that are produced by " Lentinus sp "; its active site contains a group of polyphenol oxidases incorporated with four copper ions.
- ""'Lentinus roseus " "'is a species of edible mushroom in the family Polyporaceae, first found in northern Thailand.
- ""'Lentinus concentricus " "'is a species of edible mushroom in the family Polyporaceae, first found in northern Thailand.
- ""'Lentinus megacystidiatus " "'is a species of edible mushroom in the family Polyporaceae, first found in northern Thailand.
- It has been found that a change in a single locus of a gene of the gilled mushroom " Lentinus tigrinus " causes it to have a closed fruiting body.
- The real " Pleurotus sajor-caju " is a completely separate species of mushroom, which was returned to the genus " Lentinus " by Pegler in 1975.
- "' Secotioid "'fungi are an intermediate growth form between mushroom-like hymenomycetes and closed bag-shaped geotropic orientation of the hymenophore needed to allow the spores to be dispersed by wind, and the basidiospores are not forcibly discharged or otherwise prevented from being dispersed ( e . g . gills completely inclosed and never exposed as in the secotioid form of " Lentinus tigrinus " ) note some mycologists do not consider a species to be secotioid unless it has lost ballistospory.
- However, there is strong phylogenetic evidence for the segregation of a group of brown rot causing fungi at the level of order, including " Neolentinus " and " Heliocybe " and " Gloeophyllum ", from the Polyporales where " Lentinus " and " Panus " are classified . " Heliocybe " has also been placed into synonymy with " Neolentinus ", but anatomically they differ by the absence versus the presence of clamp connections and phylogenetically " Heliocybe " is distinct, being either a sister group to " Neolentinus " or to a " Neolentinus-Gloeophyllum "-clade, or allied to " Gloeophyllum odoratum ".