Stiff substrate increases mycelium growth rate on surface

IF 4.1 3区 材料科学 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Libin Yang, Xiaoyue Hu, Zhao Qin
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Abstract

Mycelium is crucial in decomposing biomass and cycling nutrients in nature. While various environmental factors can influence mycelium growth, the role of substrate mechanics is not yet clear. In this study, we investigate the effect of substrate stiffness on mycelium growth. We prepared agar substrates of different concentrations to grow the mycelium, but kept other environmental and chemical conditions consistent. We made a time-lapse recording of the growing history with minimum interruption. We repeated our tests for different species. Our results generally support that mycelium grows faster on a stiffer substrate, Ganoderma lucidum gives the highest growth rate and Pleurotus eryngii is most sensitive to substrate stiffness. We combined experimental characterization and computational simulation to investigate the mechanism and discovered that mycelium concentrates on the surface of a rigid substrate, but penetrates the soft one. Our Monte Carlo simulations illustrate that such a penetration allows mycelium to grow in the three-dimensional space, but effectively slows down the surface occupation speed. Our study provides insights into fungal growth and reveals that the mycelium growth rate can be tuned through substrate stiffness, thus reducing the time for producing mycelium-based composites.

Impact statement

We used agar substrates and tuned its stiffness to culture mycelium and compared tune its stiffness to culture mycelium and compare its growth in a well-controlled condition. Our results revealed that mycelium grows faster on stiffer substrates, thus fully occupying the petri dish surface more quickly. We repeated our study several times by testing four species, P. eryngii, G. lucidum, Trametes versicolor, and Flammulina velutipes, and the stiffest substrate always gives the highest mean growing rate than others. The G. lucidum shows the highest spreading rate that is obtained on the stiffest substrate as 39.1 ± 2.0 mm2/h. We found that the mycelium on a soft substrate will grow into the substrate instead of spreading on the stiffer surface. Our Monte Carlo simulations further show that once the fibers grow into a three-dimensional substrate, its growth is slower than growing on a two-dimensional surface, providing a microscopic mechanism of the substrate stiffness effect. This study’s analysis of how substrate stiffness impacts mycelium growth is new, bridging a critical knowledge gap in understanding the relationship between substrate mechanics and fungal ecology. The knowledge from this study has a potential in accelerating sustainable manufacturing of mycelium-based composite by adjusting substrate mechanics.

Graphical Abstract

Abstract Image

坚硬的基质可提高菌丝在表面的生长速度
摘要 菌丝体是自然界中分解生物质和循环养分的关键。虽然各种环境因素都会影响菌丝的生长,但基质力学的作用尚不明确。在本研究中,我们研究了基质硬度对菌丝生长的影响。我们制备了不同浓度的琼脂基质来培养菌丝,但其他环境和化学条件保持一致。我们对菌丝的生长过程进行了延时记录,尽量减少中断。我们对不同的物种进行了重复试验。我们的结果普遍认为,菌丝在较硬的基质上生长得更快,灵芝的生长速度最高,而红豆杉对基质硬度最敏感。我们结合实验表征和计算模拟来研究其机理,发现菌丝集中在刚性基质的表面,但会穿透软基质。我们的蒙特卡罗模拟说明,这种穿透允许菌丝在三维空间中生长,但却有效地减慢了表面占据速度。我们的研究为真菌生长提供了见解,并揭示了菌丝生长速度可以通过基质硬度进行调节,从而缩短了生产基于菌丝的复合材料的时间。影响声明我们使用琼脂基质并调节其硬度以培养菌丝,并在控制良好的条件下比较了调节其硬度以培养菌丝的生长情况。我们的结果表明,菌丝在较硬的基质上生长更快,从而更快地完全占据培养皿表面。我们多次重复研究,测试了四种菌种:红豆杉(P. eryngii)、鹅膏菌(G. lucidum)、多色曲霉(Trametes versicolor)和 velutipes Flammulina。在最硬的基质上,G. lucidum 的蔓延率最高,为 39.1 ± 2.0 mm2/h。我们发现,软基质上的菌丝会向基质内生长,而不是在较硬的表面上蔓延。我们的蒙特卡罗模拟进一步表明,一旦纤维长入三维基底,其生长速度就会比长在二维表面上慢,这就提供了基底硬度效应的微观机制。这项研究对基质硬度如何影响菌丝生长进行了全新的分析,弥补了了解基质力学与真菌生态学之间关系的重要知识空白。这项研究的知识有望通过调整基底力学加速基于菌丝的复合材料的可持续生产。
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来源期刊
Mrs Bulletin
Mrs Bulletin 工程技术-材料科学:综合
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
2.00%
发文量
193
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: MRS Bulletin is one of the most widely recognized and highly respected publications in advanced materials research. Each month, the Bulletin provides a comprehensive overview of a specific materials theme, along with industry and policy developments, and MRS and materials-community news and events. Written by leading experts, the overview articles are useful references for specialists, but are also presented at a level understandable to a broad scientific audience.
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