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Featured researches published by Mary Miranda.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1979
W. T. Starmer; Herman J. Phaff; Mary Miranda; M. W. Miller; J. S. F. Barker
A new heterothallic species of Pichia has been recovered 25 times from widely separated cactus substrates. The organism has been named Pichia opuntiae because the sexually most compatible strains were isolated from Opuntia inermis in Australia. Two varieties are designated based on differences in physiology, habitat, and geographic distribution. P. opuntiae var. opuntiae has a maximum temperature for growth of 30 to 33°C and assimilates citric acid strongly, but assimilation of cellobiose is latent, weak, or negative. P. opuntiae var. thermotolerans grows well at 37°C, but not at 39°C; it assimilates cellobiose strongly but does not assimilate citric acid. Ecologically, P. opuntiae var. opuntiae is associated with Opuntia inermis (tribe Opuntiaeae, subtribe Opuntiinae) in Australia; P. opuntiae var. thermotolerans is associated with species of the cactus tribe Pachycereeae, subtribe Pachycereinae, from various locations in the North American Sonoran Desert. A discussion of the physiological and host-plant shifts for these two varieties and three similar cactophilic yeasts is presented. The base composition of the nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid of P. opuntiae var. opuntiae (average of four strains) is 33.64 ± 0.25 mol% guanine plus cytosine and that of P. opuntiae var. thermotolerans (average of 3 strains) is 33.13 ± 0.23 mol% guanine plus cytosine. The type strain of P. opuntiae and of the type variety, P. opuntiae var. opuntiae, is UCD-FS&T 77-40 (= ATCC 36836 = CBS 7010). The type strain of P. opuntiae var. thermotolerans is UCD-FS&T 76-211 (= ATCC 36834 = CBS 7012).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1978
W. T. Starmer; Herman J. Phaff; Mary Miranda; M. W. Miller
A new species of the genus Pichia has been recovered 38 times in the Sonoran Desert from “rot pockets” of cereoid cacti and from Drosophila species which utilize the cacti. We have named the species Pichia amethionina due to its absolute requirement for methionine or cysteine. P. amethionina is heterothallic and demonstrates an agglutination reaction when opposite mating types are mixed. Two varieties are designated based on the combination of mannitol assimilation and ecological habitat. P. amethionina var. amethionina, the type variety, was recovered from cacti in the subtribe Stenocereinae and cannot assimilate mannitol, whereas P. amethionina var. pachycereana was found in cacti of the subtribe Pachycereinae and can assimilate mannitol. Results are given which demonstrate that the assimilation of mannitol is controlled by a single genetic locus. An evaluation of the interfertility and postmating viability among the two varieties and possibly identical organisms was made. The base composition of the nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid (average of 10 strains) is 33.05 ± 0.19 mol% guanine plus cytosine. The type strain of P. amethionina and of the type variety, P. amethionina var. amethionina, is UCD-FST 76-401B (=ATCC 36080 = CBS 6940). The type strain of P. amethionina var. pachycereana is UCD-FST 76-384A (=ATCC 36079 = CBS 6943).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1978
W. T. Starmer; Herman J. Phaff; Mary Miranda; M. W. Miller
A novel representative of the yeast genus Pichia has been recovered 190 times during the period 1971 to 1976. We regard this organism as belonging to a new species, Pichia cactophila. Strains were found in the necrotic tissue of 16 species of cactus and in the crops of 3 species of Drosophila which utilize the cacti as host plants. Isolates were obtained from widely separate geographic localities (throughout Mexico, Southwestern United States, and Hawaii). The new species forms predominantly two-spored asci. Both homothallic and heterothallic strains were observed. The metabolic capability of P. cactophila, like that of P. membranaefaciens, is limited to oxidative utilization of only a few compounds. P. cactophila can be differentiated from P. membranaefaciens by its strong growth on D-glucosamine and by the lower guanine-plus-cytosine content (36.3 to 37.5 mol%) of its nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid. The type strain of P. cactophila is UCD-FST 76-243A (= ATCC 34932 = CBS 6926).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1978
Herman J. Phaff; W. T. Starmer; Mary Miranda; M. W. Miller
A novel member of the yeast genus Pichia was recovered 67 times during the period 1971 to 1976. We have named this new species Pichia heedii in honor of William B. Heed. Most strains were isolated from the soft-rot of Lophocereus schottii and from Drosophila pachea, which utilizes L. schottii as a host plant. All strains were found in the Sonoran Desert. The species has four-spored asci and is heterothallic. P. heedii has metabolic capabilities similar to those of P. membranaefaciens, but the base composition of its nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid is 10 to 12 mol% lower than that of P. membranaefaciens. P. heedii may be differentiated from other cactus-specific Pichia species by its ability to assimilate D-xylose and from P. membranaefaciens by its cactus habitat, small cell size, and relatively high maximum temperature of growth. The type strain of P. heedii is UCD-FST 76-356 (= ATCC 34936 = CBS 6930).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1976
M. W. Miller; Herman J. Phaff; Mary Miranda; William B. Heed; W. T. Starmer
A novel member of the yeast genus Torulopsis has been recovered 35 times during 1971, 1972, 1973, and 1974 from Drosophila mojavensis, from soft-rot pockets from six species of cacti, and from soil wetted by soft-rot fluid. The collections were made in the Sonoran desert of southern Arizona and of northern Mexico. The new species was named Torulopsis sonorensis after the geography of its habitat. The type strain is UCD (FS&T) 71–148 (= ATCC 32108 = CBS 6792).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1982
Mary Miranda; D. L. Holzschu; Herman J. Phaff; W. T. Starmer
A description is given of a novel member of the yeast genus Pichia that was recovered 13 times in the Sonoran Desert from necrotic tissue of cereoid cacti. Most of the isolates came from organ-pipe cacti. The new yeast occurs in the cactus “rot pockets” in the haploid condition and is heterothallic. Upon mixing of appropriate mating types, zygotes developed with hat-shaped ascospores. Physiologically, the haploid strains resemble Candida tenuis, but this species has a different habitat and shares only 9.2% of its nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid base sequences with P. mexicana. The sexual state is physiologically similar to P. stipitis and an as yet undescribed cactus-specific species of the genus Clavispora, but their deoxyribonucleic acid sequence complementarity is less than 7% compared with P. mexicana. The base composition of the nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid of P. mexicana ranged from 42.2 to 43.0 mol% guanine plus cytosine (five strains). The type strain of P. mexicana is UCD-FST 76-308A (= ATCC 42175 = CBS 7066) and the complementary mating type is UCD-FST 76-391B (= ATCC 42176 = CBS 7067).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1976
Herman J. Phaff; M. W. Miller; Mary Miranda
A novel representative of the yeast genus Pichia has been recovered 11 times during 1968, 1971, and 1972. We regard this organism as belonging to a new species, Pichia scutulata, with two varieties: P. scutulata var. scutulata, the type variety; and P. scutulata var. exigua. Strains of both varieties were found in tree exudates but were geographically separated. P. scutulata var. scutulata was isolated from slime exudates and flux-wetted soil of Myoporum trees on the island of Hawaii (six strains), whereas P. scutulata var. exigua was found in fluxes or insect borings of various trees in the state of Washington, and in the province of British Columbia, Canada (five strains). P. scutulata var. exigua differs from P. scutulata var. scutulata by its slower fermentation rate, weak ability to utilize glycerol, and higher maximum temperature for growth. The type strain of P. scutulata var. scutulata is UCD-FST 71-102 (=ATCC 32651 = CBS 6644), and that of P. scutulata var. exigua is UCD-FST 68-979B1 (= ATCC 24185 = CBS 6836).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1974
Herman J. Phaff; M. W. Miller; Mary Miranda; William B. Heed; W. T. Starmer
A novel representative of the yeast genus Cryptococcus has been recovered 11 times during 1971, 1972, and 1973 from soft-rot pockets in three species of cactus. Cereus schottii Engelm., Cereus giganteus Engelm., and Cereus thurberi Engelm. The collections were made in the Sonoran desert of southern Arizona and of northern Mexico. The rot pockets constitute important breeding sites for Drosophila spp., which presumably feed on the yeasts present. The new species was named after the genus of cactus with which it is associated.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1986
Herman J. Phaff; Mary Miranda; W. T. Starmer; Joanne Tredick; J. S. F. Barker
We describe Clavispora opuntiae, a new cactophilic species of yeast with a wide distribution in necrotic tissue of Opuntia species. The more than 200 strains recognized thus far come from eastern Australia, Hawaii, Venezuela, Spain, various islands in the Caribbean Sea, Mexico, and southwestern areas of the United States. The new species is heterothallic and occurs in nature exclusively in the haploid state. Upon conjugation of complementary mating types, asci are produced with one or two clavate, warty ascospores (as observed by electron microscopy) that are very rapidly released from the asci. Testing for mating types has indicated that one mating type (arbitrarily designated h+ predominates in Australia, Haiti, Dominican Republic, and Montserrat, whereas in all other areas both mating types are found, sometimes in the same plant. The guanine-plus-cytosine content range for the nuclear deoxyribonucleic acids of 11 strains is 43.0 to 44.1 mol% (average, 43.5 mol%; standard deviation, 0.4 mol%). The type strain of C. opuntiae is strain UCD-FST 77-279 (= ATCC 42172 = CBS 7068), and the complementary mating type is strain UCD-FST 78-540A (= ATCC 42173 = CBS 7069).
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1980
Herman J. Phaff; W. T. Starmer; Mary Miranda; M. W. Miller
A new species of Candida has been recovered 40 times from necrotic cactus tissue occurring in widely separated geographic areas. The organism has been named Candida mucilagina because of the extremely slimy, almost watery appearance of its colonies on solid media. Eleven strains were isolated in Baja California Sur, Mexico, where its principal host plant was Stenocereus gummosis (agria), and 29 strains came from rotting cladodes of Opuntia inermis in New South Wales and Queensland, Australia. The base composition of the nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid of C. mucilagina is 43.2 to 44.0 mol% (range of five strains). The type strain of C. mucilagina is UCD-FS&T 76-236C (= ATCC 42174 = CBS 7071).