| Microbiology, 5/e Lansing M Prescott,
Augustana College Donald A Klein,
Colorado State University John P Harley,
Eastern Kentucky University
The Fungi (Eumycota), Slime Molds, and Water Molds
Study Outline- Introduction
- Fungi-eucaryotic, spore-bearing organisms with absorptive metabolism and no chlorophyll; reproduce sexually and asexually
- Mycologists-scientists who study fungi
- Mycology-the study of fungi
- Mycotoxicology-the study of fungal toxins and their effects on various organisms
- Mycoses-diseases in animals caused by fungi
- Belong to the kingdom Fungi within the domain Eucarya; is a monophyletic group known as the eumycota (true fungi)
- Distribution
- Primarily terrestrial with a few freshwater and marine organisms
- Many are pathogenic in plants or animals
- Form beneficial associations with plant roots (mycorrhizae) or with algae or cyanobacteria (lichens)
- Importance
- Decomposers-break down organic material and return it to environment
- Major cause of plant disease; also cause disease in animals, including humans
- Industrial fermentation-bread, wine, beer, cheese, tofu, soy sauce, steroid manufacture, antibiotic production, and the production of the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine
- Research-fundamental biological processes can be studied in these simple eucaryotic organisms
- Structure
- Thallus-body or vegetative structure of a fungus; fungal cell walls are usually composed of chitin, a nitrogen-containing polysaccharide consisting of N-acetyl glucosamine residues
- Yeast-unicellular fungus with single nucleus; reproduces asexually by budding, or sexually by spore formation; daughter cells may separate after budding or may aggregate to form colonies
- Mold-a fungus with long, branched, threadlike filaments
- Hyphae-the filaments of a mold; may be coenocytic (i.e., have no cross walls within the hyphae) or septate (i.e., have cross walls)
- Mycelia-bundles or tangled masses of hyphae
- Dimorphism-a property of some fungi, which change from the yeast (Y) form (within an animal host) to the mold (M) form (in the environment); this is referred to as the YM shift; the reverse relationship exists in plant-associated fungi
- Nutrition and Metabolism
- Most fungi are saprophytes, securing nutrients from dead organic material (chemoorganoheterotrophs); fungi secrete hydrolytic enzymes that promote external digestion
- Glycogen is the primary storage polysaccharide
- Most are aerobic (some yeasts are facultatively anaerobic); obligate anaerobic fungi are found in the rumen of cattle
- Reproduction
- Asexual reproduction-occurs by several mechanisms
- Transverse fission
- Budding
- Direct spore production
- Hyphal fragmentation-component cells behave as arthrospores or chlamydiospores (if enveloped in thick cell wall before separation)
- Sporangiospores are produced in sporangium (sac) at the end of an aerial hypha (sporangiophore)
- Conidiospores are unenclosed spores produced at the tip or on the sides of aerial hypha
- Blastospores are produced when a vegetative cell buds off
- Sexual reproduction
- Involves the union of compatible nuclei
- Some fungi are self-fertilizing (male and female gametes produced on the same mycelium (homothallic), while others require outcrossing between different but sexually compatible mycelia (heterothallic)
- Zygote formation proceeds by one of several mechanisms
- Fusion of gametes
- Fusion of gamete-producing bodies (gametangia)
- Fusion of hyphae
- Sometimes there is immediate fusion of nuclei and cytoplasm; however, more common is a delayed fusion of nuclei, resulting in the formation of a cell with two haploid nuclei (dikaryotic stage)
- Zygotes can develop into spores (zygospores, ascospores, or basidiospores); spores are used for identification purposes and also aid fungal dissemination
- Characteristics of the Fungal Divisions
- Division Zygomycota-zygomycetes
- Most are saprophytes; a few are plant and animal parasites
- Coenocytic hyphae (no crosswalls), with many haploid nuclei
- Asexual reproduction leads to the formation of sporangiospores
- Sexual reproduction leads to the formation of zygospores; these are tough, thick-walled zygotes that can remain dormant when the environment is too harsh for growth
- Representative member: Rhizopus stolonifer (commonly known as bread mold, but also grows on fruits and vegetables)
- Normally reproduces asexually
- Reproduces sexually by fusion of gametangia if food is scarce or environment is unfavorable
- Zygospores (diploid) are produced and remain dormant until conditions are favorable
- Meiosis often occurs at time of germination
- Zygomycetes are used in the production of foods, anesthetics, coloring agents, and other useful products
- Division Ascomycota-ascomycetes
- Members of this division cause food spoilage, a number of plant diseases (e.g., powdery mildew, chestnut blight, ergot,and Dutch elm disease)
- Include many types of yeast, edible morels, and truffles, as well as the pink bread mold Neurospora crassa
- Mycelia are septate
- Produce conidiospores when reproducing asexually
- Ascospores (haploid spores located in a sac called an ascus) are formed when reproducing sexually
- Thousands of asci may be packed together in a cup-shaped ascocarp
- Division Basidiomycota-basidiomycetes (club fungi)
- Includes smuts, jelly fungi, rusts, shelf fungi, stinkhorns, puffballs, toadstools, mushrooms, and bird's nest fungi
- Basidia are produced at the tips of the hyphae, in which the basidiospores will develop
- Basidiospores are held in fruiting bodies called basidiocarps
- Usefulness-many basidomycetes are decomposers; some mushrooms serve as food (some are poisonous); one is the causative agent of cryptococcosis; and some are plant pathogens
- Division Deuteromycota-deuteromycetes (commonly called Fungi Imperfecti)
- This is a classical division grouping together fungi that lack a sexual reproductive phase or fungi for which a sexual reproductive phase has not been observed; more recently molecular systematics places the Deuteromycota among their closest relatives in the Eumycota and eliminates the Deuteromycota as a separate division
- Most are terrestrial; a few are freshwater or marine organisms; most are saprophytes or plant parasites; some are parasitic on other fungi
- Human impact
- Some are human parasites (e.g., causing ringworm, athlete's foot, histoplasmosis)
- Some are used industrially to produce antibiotics, cheese, soy sauce, and other products
- Some produce substances that are highly toxic and carcinogenic to animals (e.g., aflatoxin and trichothecenes)
- Division Chytridiomycota-chytrids (simplest of true fungi)
- Terrestrial and aquatic fungi that reproduce asexually by forming motile zoospores
- Microscopic in size; may consist of single cells, a small multinucleate mass, or a true mycelium
- Reproduce asexually or sexually
- Some saprophytic; others are parasites of algae, other true fungi, and plants
- Slime Molds and Water Molds
- Resemble fungi in appearance and life-style, but their cellular organization, reproduction, and life cycles are more closely related to protists
- Division Myxomycota-plasmodial (acellular) slime molds
- The multinucleated protoplasm (plasmodium) moves by amoeboid movement as it phagocytizes organic matter
- Form ornate fruiting bodies when food and/or moisture are in short supply; fruiting bodies form spores with cellulose cell walls that are resistant to environmental extremes
- Spores germinate to produce myxamoeba or flagellated swarm cells
- Myxamoeba and swarm cells are initially haploid, but eventually fuse to form a diploid zygote
- Zygote feeds, grows and carries out multiple nuclear divisions, giving rise to a plasmodium
- Division Acrasiomycota-cellular slime molds
- During the vegetative stage, amoeboid cells called myxamoeba feed phagocytically on bacteria and yeasts
- When food is scarce, myxamoeba form pseudoplasmodia by aggregating and secreting a slimy sheath around themselves
- Become sedentary and differentiate into prestalk and prespore cells
- Form sorocarps that mature to sporangia; sporangia produce spores
- Released spores will later germinate to form haploid amoebae to begin the cycle again
- Division Oomycota-oomycetes (water molds)
- Resemble fungi, but cell walls are composed of cellulose, not chitin
- Produce a relatively large egg cell that is fertilized by a small sperm cell or an even smaller antheridium; zygote germinates forming asexual, flagellated zoospores
- Usually saprophytic in freshwater environments; some parasitic in fish and plants
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