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Ascomycetes: Phylum Ascomycota. Ascomycetes. Group of fungi characterized by their production of sexual spores in a sac-like structure called an ascus. . “Cup fungus”. Types of Ascomycete. yeast powdery mildew cup fungi many of these produce spores suited for airborne dispersion.
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Ascomycetes • Group of fungi characterized by their production of sexual spores in a sac-like structure called an ascus.
Types of Ascomycete • yeast • powdery mildew • cup fungi • many of these produce spores suited for airborne dispersion.
The Ascomycota • Most are blue-green, red and brown molds that cause food spoilage • Non motile • Penicillin • Form ascospores Internally in Asci
Ascomycetes can cause plant disease • Brown rot of stone fruits (Monilinia fructicola) • chestnut blight (Cryphonectria parasitica)
Beneficial Ascomycete • Many Yeast are also ascomycetes • Edible Morels and truffles
Edible black truffle, Tuber melanosporum spore-bearing structure is produced below ground mainly on oaks and hazelnuts
Ascomycetes growth • Most have either unicellular or filamentous growth forms • Hyphae have perforated septa • Hyphal cells of Vegetative mycelim may be either uninucleated or multinucleated • Some are homothallic others heterothallic
Life cycle of an Ascomycete • Most species undergo asexual reproduction by the formation of multinucleated conidia • Conidia formed from the conidiogenous cells • Conidiogeneous cells are borne at the tips of modified hyphae called conidiophores “conidia bearers”
Conidia- the characteristic asexual spores of ascomycetes shows the stages in the formation of conidia which infects the velvetbean caterpillar
Ascomycetes spore development vs. Zygomycetes spore development • Unlike zygomycetes which produce spores internally within a sporangium, ascomycetes produce their asexual spores externally as conidia.
Sexual reproduction in Ascomycetes • Always involves the formation of an ascus (pl. asci)- saclike structure within which a haploid ascospores are formed following meiosis. • Because the ascus resembles as sac, commonly referred to as “sac fungi” • Both the asci and ascospores are unique structures that distinguish the ascomycetes from all other fungi • Ascus formation usually occurs within a complex structure composed of tightly interwoven hyphae- the ascoma (pl. ascomata) or ascocarp.
Enclosed asci and ascospores of Ascoma called a cleistrothecium
An ascoma of Coniochaeta showing the enclosed asci and ascospores Perithecium- fruiting body contains ascospores
Xylaria fungus “Dead mans fingers” Perithecium with ascospores Finger Xsec
Hymenial layer • Asci usually develop on an inner surface of the asoma, a layer called the hymenium or hymenial layer
Hymenium of an ascomycete showing asci with ascospores section thru the hymenial layer of Morela
Life cycle of Ascomycete • The mycelium grows out from a germinating ascospore • Mycelium begins to reproduce asexually by forming conidia • Many conidia are produced • Conidia are responsible for propagating and disseminating the fungus
Sexual Reproduction • Occurs on the same mycelium that produces conidia • The formation of multinucleate gametangia called antheridia (male) and ascogonia (female) precedes sexual reproduction • Male nuclei pass into the ascogonium via the trichogyne which is an outgrowth of the ascogonium • Genetically different nuclei pair but do not fuse • Ascogenous hyphae now begin to grow • Compatible pairs of nuclei migrate and cell division occurs and creates dikaryotic cells- two compatible haploid nuclei
Crozier- the apical cell of the ascogenous hypha which allows the paired nuclei to divide simultaneously • Compatible pair of nuclei fuse (karyogamy) to form a zygote • Zygote undergoes meiosis producing ascus with 8 nuclei • Haploid nuclei cut off to form ascospores • Ascus as it matures becomes turgid, and finally burst to release its ascospores