Automated Quantification of the Impact of the Wood-decay fungus Physisporinus vitreus on the Cell Wall Structure of Norway spruce by Tomographic Microscopy
M. J. Fuhr, C. St\"uhrk, B. M\"unch, F. W. M. R. Schwarze, M., Schubert

TL;DR
This study introduces an automated, non-destructive imaging method using high-resolution X-ray computed tomography to quantify microscopic cell wall elements in Norway spruce wood affected by the fungus Physisporinus vitreus, aiding in understanding wood decay and biotechnological applications.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel automated imaging technique for quantifying microscopic cell wall elements in wood, enabling detailed analysis of fungal impact on wood structure.
Findings
Automated localization of cell wall elements in wood using tomographic microscopy.
Quantitative analysis of cell wall properties such as area, orientation, and size distribution.
First application of this method to study fungal impact on wood at microscopic level.
Abstract
Wood-decay fungi decompose their substrate by extracellular, degradative enzymes and play an important role in natural ecosystems by recycling carbon and minerals fixed in plants. Thereby, they cause significant damage to the wood structure and limit the use of wood as building material. Besides their role as biodeteriorators wood-decay fungi can be used for biotechnological purposes, e.g. the white-rot fungus Physisporinus vitreus for improving the uptake of preservatives and wood-modification substances of refractory wood. Therefore, the visualization and the quantification of microscopic decay patterns are important for the study of the impact of wood-decay fungi in general, as well as for wood-decay fungi and microorganisms with possible applications in biotechnology. In the present work, we developed a method for the automated localization and quantification of microscopic cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWood and Agarwood Research · Cultural Heritage Materials Analysis · Wood Treatment and Properties
