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Introduction to Kingdom Fungi. Pl P 421/521 General Mycology LECTURE 2. What is a fungus? . A eukaryotic , heterotrophic organism devoid of chlorophyll that obtains its nutrients by absorption, and reproduces by spores . . Modes of nutrition . Fungi=absorptive heterotrophs
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Introduction to Kingdom Fungi Pl P 421/521 General Mycology LECTURE 2
What is a fungus? • A eukaryotic, heterotrophic organism devoid of chlorophyll that obtains its nutrients by absorption, and reproduces by spores.
Modes of nutrition • Fungi=absorptive heterotrophs • Animals=phagotrophic heterotroph • Heterotroph (chemo-organotrophs): an organism incapable of synthesizing carbohydrates from inorganic sources; requires preformed organic compounds produced by other organisms • Plants=autotrophs
Hyphae (singular, hypha) • Cylindrical, branching filaments composed of a tubular cell wall filled with cytoplasm and organelles • Most fungal hyphae are 2-10 m diameter
Fungal cell wall composition • Structural components: • chitin microfibrils [ß(1-4)-linked polymer of N-acetylglucosamine] • chitosan in Zygomycota [ß(1-4)-linked polymer of glucosamine] • ß-linked glucans • Gel-like components: • Mannoproteins (form matrix throughout wall)
Other cell wall components • Antigenic glycoproteins, agglutinans, adhesions—on cell wall surface • Melanins—dark brown to black pigments (confer resistance to enzyme lysis, confer mechanical strength and protect cells from UV light, solar radiation and desiccation) • Plasma membrane—semi-permeable
Septa • Septa—regular cross-walls formed in hyphae. Hyphae with septa are septate, those lacking septa except to delimit reproductive structures and aging hyphae are called aseptate or coenocytic. • primary septa are formed as a process of hyphal extension and generally have a septal pore, which allows for cytoplasmic and organelle movement. • Secondary or adventitious septa are imperforate, formed to wall off ageing parts of the mycelium.
Septal pores--Ascomycota • Woronin bodies
Septal pores--Basidiomycota • Dolipore septa, septal pore caps or parenthosomes Septal pore cap
Fungal nuclei • 1--3 m diam • 3--40 chromosomes • Up to 13--40 Mb (million base pairs) DNA coding for 6,000 to 13,000 genes • Intranuclear division--nuclear envelope remains intact during mitosis (unlike plants and animals)
Tree of eukaryotes, showing variation in genome size. From Keeling and Slamovits (2005). Current Opinion in Genetics and Development 15: 601-608 “Unikont”—eukaryotic cell with one flagellum
Fungi as model organisms • Small genome relative to other eukaryotes • Many fungal genes are homologous to those in other eukaryotes • Easy to grow, short life cycles • Haploid genomes amenable to mutation • Sexual stage for analysis of segregation and recombination of genes; all products of meiosis can be retrieved in haploid spores • Asexual (clonal) reproduction
Beadle and Tatum • Using the common bread mold Neurospora crassa, in 1941 developed the classic concept of “one gene, one enzyme” • Awarded Nobel Prize in 1945
Fungal nuclei • Usually haploid • Nuclear membrane persists during division • Nuclear associated organelles (NAOs): • Associated with the nuclear envelope; function as microtubule-organizing centers during mitosis and meiosis • Spindle pole bodies • In fungi that lack a flagellated stage in lifecycle • Centrioles • In fungi and other organisms possessing flagellated stage in lifecycle
Other organelles • Mitochondria—flattened or plate-like mitochondrial cristae in Fungi (similar to animals) • Golgi bodies—consist of a single, tubular cisternal element (stacked, plate-like cisternae in animals and plants) • Other types: • ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, vacuoles, lipid bodies, glycogen storage particles, microbodies, microtubules, vesicles
Storage Compounds • Glycogen, lipids and trehalose in fungi and animals • Starch in plants
Animal Cell Plant Cell
Fungal Reproduction • Many fungi have the ability to reproduce by asexual and sexual means
Fungal reproduction • Anamorph= asexual stage • Mitospore=spore formed via asexual reproduction (mitosis), commonly called a conidium or sporangiospore • Teleomorph= sexualstage • Meiospore=spore formed via sexual reproduction (e.g., resulting from meiosis), type of spore varies by phylum
Kingdom Fungi • Phyla: • Chytridiomycota • Form motile spores called zoospores • Meiosis occurs in resting sporangium • Glomeromycota • Form spores containing hundreds of nuclei; no known sexual reproduction • Zygomycota • Form asexual spores called sporangiospores • Meiosis occurs in zygospore • Ascomycota (including Deuteromycetes) • Form asexual spores called conidia • Meiosis occurs in ascus • Basidiomycota • Meiosis occurs in basidium
Concept of fungal holomorph • Asexual and sexual reproduction may be separated in time and space • The holomorph is the entire fungus—including asexual and sexual stages if both are formed
Fungal life cycles • The vegetative thallus predominates in the life cycle of a fungus • The thallus may be haploid (1n), dikaryotic (n+n) or diploid (2n) in different groups of fungi • Ploidy of thallus is determined by the timing of these events in the life cycle: • Plasmogamy (cell fusion) • Karyogamy (nuclear fusion) • Meiosis (reduction division)
n n+n Plasmogamy n+n 2n Karyogamy Fungal life cycles mitosis Life cycle is predominantly haploid (n) 2n n Meiosis
n + n 2n Karyogamy 2n n Meiosis Fungal life cycles mitosis Life cycle is predominantly dikaryotic (n + n) n n + n Plasmogamy
2n n Meiosis n n + n Plasmogamy Fungal life cycles mitosis Life cycle is predominantly diploid (2n) n + n 2n Karyogamy