Diversity (Sep 2020)

<i>Tuber mesentericum</i> and <i>Tuber aestivum</i> Truffles: New Insights Based on Morphological and Phylogenetic Analyses

  • Giorgio Marozzi,
  • Gian Maria Niccolò Benucci,
  • Edoardo Suriano,
  • Nicola Sitta,
  • Lorenzo Raggi,
  • Hovirag Lancioni,
  • Leonardo Baciarelli Falini,
  • Emidio Albertini,
  • Domizia Donnini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/d12090349
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 349

Abstract

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Tuber aestivum, one of the most sought out and marketed truffle species in the world, is morphologically similar to Tuber mesentericum, which is only locally appreciated in south Italy and north-east France. Because T. aestivum and T. mesentericum have very similar ascocarp features, and collection may occur in similar environments and periods, these two species are frequently mistaken for one another. In this study, 43 T. aestivum and T. mesentericum ascocarps were collected in Italy for morphological and molecular characterization. The morphological and aromatic characteristics of the fresh ascocarps were compared with their spore morphology. Afterwards, we amplified and sequenced the elongation factor 1-α (EF1α) locus and built maximum likelihood trees to assess phylogenetic similarities between the two species. Tuber aestivum and T. mesentericum sequences cluster into different clades, with T. mesentericum sequences divided into three different sub-clades. According to their morphological features, three samples (T7, T8 and T12) were classified as T. mesentericum. However, when fresh, these ascocarps lacked the typical phenolic aromatic note. These specimens fall into the sub-clade III of the T. mesentericum phylogeny, which has the lowest genetic distance from the T. aestivum clade.

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