The
cap is in diameter, initially egg-shaped, then convex but flattening with age, and sometimes slightly depressed at the center. The cap surface is smooth, white, but cream-colored in the center. The margin (cap edge) is non-striate, non-appendiculate (without any
partial veil remnants hanging along the cap margin); the
flesh white. The
gills are free from attachment to the stem, white to whitish, crowded closely together, and up to 5 mm in height. The lamellulae are long and tapering, plentiful, and arranged in 2–3 tiers. The
stem is by , roughly cylindrical or slightly tapering upward, with apex slightly expanded. The surface is white to whitish, smooth, or sometimes with fibrous small scales. The bulb at the base of the stem is roughly spherical and wide. The
volva is limbate (has a distinct edge), thin, membranous, with free limb up to in height, and both surfaces are white. The
ring is near the top of the stem, thin, membranous, white, persistent or may be torn from the stem during expansion of the cap. All tissues of the fruit body will turn yellow if a drop of dilute
potassium hydroxide is applied. The
spores are spherical or nearly so, rarely broadly ellipsoid, and measure 9.5–12 by 9–11.5
μm. They are
hyaline (translucent) and colorless,
amyloid (absorbing
iodine when stained with
Melzer's reagent), thin-walled, smooth, and have a small
apiculus. The spore-bearing cells, the
basidia, are 27–55 by 10–15 μm, club-shaped, and two-spored (rarely one-spored) unlike most
agaric mushrooms which typically have four-spored basidia. The basidia of
A. exitialis have
sterigmata (slender projections that attach the spores) that are 5–7 μm long.
Chemistry The fruit bodies of
A. exitialis contain a unique
purine nucleoside that is coupled with an
amino acid derivative named
N2-(1-methoxycarbonylethyl)guanosine. The discovery and identification of this chemical was the first report of a naturally occurring nucleoside in which an amino acid derivative is bonded through its α-amino
nitrogen (the nitrogen bonded to the
α-carbon) to a
nucleobase aglycone by a C-N (carbon to nitrogen) bond. The new compound was determined to be toxic in the
brine shrimp lethality test, but it did not have
cytotoxic activity against a variety of human cancer
cell lines. Other compounds isolated from the fungus include
β-carboline and russulaceramide (a
ceramide formerly found in some
Russula mushrooms).
Similar species A. exitialis is similar to
A. bisporigera, a species originally described by
George Francis Atkinson from the United States. In comparison to
A. exitialis,
A. bisporigera differs by its lower placement of the ring on the stem, smaller spores (typically 8–9.5 by 7–8.5 μm), and different structure of the volva. American specimens of
A. bisporigera have more abundant inflated cells than that of
A. exitialis. Two other white Asian species,
A. oberwinklerana and
A. subjunquillea var.
alba also resemble
A. exitialis, but are four-spored. ==Distribution and habitat==