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FILAMENTOUS ASCOMYCETES I
IB General Mycology Lecture 21 Thursday, November 6, 2003
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FILAMENTOUS ASCOMYCETES
Mycelium septate Septa with single pore or many small pores Woronin bodies present at pores Nuclei haploid, except during meiosis Antheridia & ascogonia may or may not be formed prior to meiosis Ascogenous hyphae formed
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SEPTAL PORE
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Woronin Bodies
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NUCLEUS PASSING THROUGH PORE
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GENERAL LIFE CYCLE
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MEIOSIS & ASCOSPOROGENESIS
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In-class activity How is a crozier like a clamp connection?
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ASCOGONIA
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TEM of crosier by Charles Mims
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Crosiers & Developing Asci
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TEM of developing ascus by Charles Mims
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TEM of ascospores developing within an ascus by Charles Mims
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TEM of maturing ascospores within an ascus by Charles Mims
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TYPES OF ASC0MATA Cleistothecium - round & completely closed
Apothecium - open & saucer shaped Perithecium - flask shaped with an opening at the top Pseudothecium - may look like a perithecium but it is stromatic & is formed prior to the ascogenous hyphae
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TYPES OF ASCI Prototunicate - one functional wall that deliquesces early Unitunicate - one functional wall that remains as one wall when ascospores are discharged Bitunicate (fissitunicate) - two functional walls that separate when ascospores are discharged
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Hamathecium None Paraphyses Apical paraphyses Pseudoparaphyses
Catenophyses
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ONYGENALES Sexual apparatus - antheridium surrounded by a coiled ascogonium Homothallic or heterothallic Asci unitunicate, globose to subglobose Ascus wall breaks down to release ascospores (deliquescent) Ascospores usually non-septate (amerospores)
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ONYGENALES Ascoma is a cleistothecium of thin cottony hyphae or very thin layer of pseudoparenchyma tissue Peridial hyphae (peridium = wall of cleistothecium) similar to vegetative hyphae, colored and/or rough walled
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ONYGENALES Anamorphs are solitary holoblastic (determinate) or arthric (thallospores) Taxonomic characters - peridial wall ornamentation, ascospore characters Ecology - keratinophilic, cellulolytic - saprophytes and parasites of animals Habitat - soil, plant debris, faecal pellets of carnivores, birds’ nests and droppings, hoofs and horns
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PATHOGENS OF HUMANS ringworm (tinea), athletes foot, jock itch
Trichophyton (A)/ Arthroderma (T) Microsporum (A)/ Nannizzia (T) Geophilic - soil inhabiting species that are only occasionally pathogenic to humans Zoophilic - live on animals but occasionally infect humans anthropophilic - species that live only on humans
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DERMATOPHYTES Keratinophylic - live on hair, nails, dead skin cells (protein keratin) Symptoms caused by enzymes that irritate epidermal cells Treatment may be systemic (griseofulvum) or topical (azole antifungals, ciclopirox, others)
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NORTH AMERICAN BLASTOMYCOSIS
Blastomyces dermatitidis (A) / Ajellomyces dermatitidis (T) Thought to occur in soil in midwest, US-Canadian border from the Great Lakes to the east coast. Infection through inhalation of conidia into the lungs
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NORTH AMERICAN BLASTOMYCOSIS
fever, chills, cough, chest pain, pneumonia (sometimes fatal), skin lesions fungus is dimorphic - filamentous in nature, yeast-like in body (or above 30C) Itraconazole daily for six months or if life threatening, amphotericin B
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dimorphic - yeast stage
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HISTOPLASMOSIS Histoplasma capsulatum (A) / Emmonsiella (Ajellomyces) capsulatum Grows as hyphae in soil enriched with bird droppings Ohio and Mississippi river valleys, Great Lakes to east coast, Florida, Texas Infection by breathing in conidia
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HISTOPLASMOSIS most people remain asymptomatic
fever, chills, headache, chest pain, malaise, nodules in the lung chronic pulmonary histoplasmosis mimics TB (diagnosis is very important) acute disease requires treatment with amphotericin B, followed by itraconazole immunocompromised patients require lifelong treatment if infected
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Conidium of H. capsulatum
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Yeast stage of H. capsulatum
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VALLEY FEVER aka desert rheumatism, California disease - occurs in desert SW, Mexico, SA Coccidioides immitis (only imperfect state known, connected to Onygenales by 18S r-DNA sequences) Inhalation of conidia (arthrospores), symptoms somewhat similar to histoplasmosis Most people recover but sometimes the disease is fatal
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EUROTIALES Asci free on mycelium or in ascomata
Ascomal wall thin, mesh-like or solid layer Sexual fusion usually by a trichogyne and undifferentiated hypha Asci spherical to ovoid, evanescent
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EUROTIALES Ascospores 1-celled, oblate, spherical, globose
Ascospores smooth or with reticulations, spines or thickened rings Conidial states phialidic, conidia seceding schizolytically, in dry chains
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EUROTIALES Ubiquitous in distribution
Found commonly in soils and on plant litter Associated with cellulosic, starchy or oily substrates
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EUROTIALES Decomposers Agents of biodeterioration
Human pathogens (aspergillosis, penicilliosis) Aflatoxin & ochratoxin production
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EUROTIALES Important in cheese industry
Production of industrially important acids (citric, gallic, fumaric, oxalic, gluconic), and enzymes (alpha-galactosidase) Production of antibiotics (penicillin, cephalosporin, griseofulvum
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PENICILLIUM Teleomorph genera – Eupenicillum Talaromyces
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Discovery of penicillin
Changed the world. In 1928, Alexander Fleming found P. notatum growing on a Petri dish (dish is still preserved). In 1939, Howard Florey & Ernest Chain began work on how to use and identify the antibiotic produced by P. notatum. In 1941, work began in Peoria, IL, to increase production of the antibiotic. “Moldy Mary” brought in a moldy melon colonized by the high yielding species, P. chrysogenum.
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Discovery of penicillin
In 1942, the first patient was treated successfully in New Haven, Connecticut (Anne Miller). In 1945, Fleming, Florey & Chain received the Nobel Prize for their work.
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PENICILLIUM
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From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II
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From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II
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ASPERGILLUS Teleomorph genera - Eurotium Neosartorya Emericella
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Eurotium/Aspergillus
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ASPERGILLUS
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Conidial state of Aspergillus (Picture from David Geiser)
Conidial state of Aspergillus (Picture from David Geiser)
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Hülle cells (picture from David Geiser)
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Young conidiophores of Aspergillus (SEM from Charles Mims)
Young conidiophores of Aspergillus (SEM from Charles Mims)
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Mature conidiophores of Aspergillus (SEM from Charles Mims)
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SEM of conidiogenesis in Aspergillus (from Charles Mims)
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SEM of conidiogenesis in Aspergillus (from Charles Mims)
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EUROTIUM ASCI
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ASCOSPORES OF EUROTIUM
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From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II
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