L
Lóránt Hatvani
Researcher at University of Szeged
Publications - 38
Citations - 1050
Lóránt Hatvani is an academic researcher from University of Szeged. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trichoderma & Trichoderma longibrachiatum. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 34 publications receiving 851 citations. Previous affiliations of Lóránt Hatvani include University of Zagreb.
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Peptaibols and related peptaibiotics of Trichoderma. A review.
András Szekeres,Balázs Leitgeb,László Kredics,Zsuzsanna Antal,Lóránt Hatvani,László Manczinger,Csaba Vágvölgyi +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize the data available about the biosynthesis, biological activity and conformational properties of peptaibols and pepta-ibiotics described from Trichoderma species.
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Genetically Closely Related but Phenotypically Divergent Trichoderma Species Cause Green Mold Disease in Oyster Mushroom Farms Worldwide
Monika Komoń-Zelazowska,John Bissett,Doustmorad Zafari,Lóránt Hatvani,László Manczinger,Sheri Woo,Matteo Lorito,László Kredics,Christian P. Kubicek,Irina S. Druzhinina +9 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the evolutionary pathway of T. Pleuroticola could be in parallel to other saprotrophic and mycoparasitic species from the Harzianum clade and that this species poses the highest infection risk for mushroom farms, whereas T. pleurotum could be specialized for an ecological niche connected to components of Pleurotus substrata in cultivation.
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Green Mold Diseases of Agaricus and Pleurotus spp. Are Caused by Related but Phylogenetically Different Trichoderma Species.
Lóránt Hatvani,Zs. Antal,László Manczinger,András Szekeres,Irina S. Druzhinina,Christian P. Kubicek,Adrienn Nagy,Elisabeth Nagy,Csaba Vágvölgyi,László Kredics +9 more
TL;DR: The data document that the green mold disease of P. ostreatus in Hungary is due to the same Trichoderma species as in Korea and the worldwide distribution of the new species indicates the possibility of spreading epidemics; and the two species are specialized on their different substrates.
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Alternative reproductive strategies of Hypocrea orientalis and genetically close but clonal Trichoderma longibrachiatum, both capable of causing invasive mycoses of humans
Irina S. Druzhinina,Monika Komoń-Zelazowska,László Kredics,Lóránt Hatvani,Zsuzsanna Antal,Temesgen Belayneh,Christian P. Kubicek +6 more
TL;DR: The analysis of haplotype association, incongruence of tree topologies and the split decomposition method supported the conclusion that H. orientalis is sexually recombining whereas strict clonality prevails in T. longibrachiatum, a rare case of occurrence of sexual reproduction in opportunistic pathogenic fungi.
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Extracellular proteases of Trichoderma species. A review.
László Kredics,Zsuzsanna Antal,András Szekeres,Lóránt Hatvani,László Manczinger,Cs. Vágvölgyi,Erzsébet Nagy +6 more
TL;DR: The aim of this review is to summarize the information available about the extracellular proteolytic enzyme profiles of Trichoderma strains and about the effect of abiotic environmental factors on protease activities.