Cunninghamella echinulata var. elegans (Lendner) Lunn & Shipton[2]
Cunninghamella elegans var. elegans Lendn. 1905
Cunninghamella elegans is a species of fungus in the genus Cunninghamella found in soil.[3]
It can be grown in Sabouraud dextrose broth, a liquid medium used for cultivation of yeasts and molds from liquid which are normally sterile.
As opposed to C. bertholletiae, it is not a human pathogen,[4] with the exception of two documented patients.[5]
^Lendner A. (1907). "Sur quelques Mucorinées". Bulletin de l'Herbier Boissier (in French). 7 (3): 249–51.
^Weitzmann I. (1984). "The case for Cunninghamella elegans, C. bertholletiae and C. echinulata as separate species". Transactions of the British Mycological Society. 83 (3): 527–529. doi:10.1016/S0007-1536(84)80056-X.
^Zhu, Y. Z.; Keum, Y. S.; Yang, L.; Lee, H.; Park, H.; Kim, J. H. (2010). "Metabolism of a Fungicide Mepanipyrim by Soil FungusCunninghamella elegansATCC36112". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. 58 (23): 12379–12384. doi:10.1021/jf102980y. PMID 21047134.
^Weitzman, I.; Crist, M. Y. (1979). "Studies with clinical isolates of Cunninghamella. I. Mating behavior". Mycologia. 71 (5): 1024–1033. doi:10.2307/3759290. JSTOR 3759290. PMID 545137.
^Kwon-Chung, K. J.; Young, R. C.; Orlando, M. (1975). "Pulmonary mucormycosis caused by Cunninghamella elegans in a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia". American Journal of Clinical Pathology. 64 (4): 544–548. doi:10.1093/ajcp/64.4.544. PMID 1060379.
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