Lesson 1 Mycology
Lesson 1 Mycology
- Eukaryotic
o Organism with two nucleus
o Contrast with bacteria and viruses
- Oxygen requirement
o Aerobic or facultatively anaerobic (Tortora)
o Obligate aerobes that grow best at a neutral pH (Mahon)
Though they can tolerate a wide pH range
- Moisture
o Necessary for growth
But spores and conidia survive in dry conditions for extended lengths of time
- Chemoheterotrophic
o Requiring organic compound for energy and carbon
- Most are decomposers
- Mycology
o Study of fungi
- Constitute a generally diverse organisms
- Generally classified as
o Molds and Fleshy Fungi
Thallus (body)
Consist of Hyphae
o Long filaments of cells joined together
o Singular: hypha
o Can grow to immense proportions.
Grow by elongated at the tips
When a fragment breaks off, it can grow into a new
hyphae
o Two types:
Septate Hyphae
Divided by Septae (Singular: septum)
o Cross-walls that divides them into
distinct, uninucleate (one-nucleus) cell-
like units
Coenocytic hyphae
Contain no septa and appear as long,
continuous cells with many nuclei
o Vegetative hyphae
Portion of the hypha that obtains nutrients
o Reproductive or Aerial hyphae
Concerned with reproduction
Named that way since it projects above the surface of
the medium on which the fungus is growing
Bears reproductive spore
o Mycelium
A filamentous mass that grows from the hyphae when
environmental conditions are suitable
A mass of hyphae
Visible to unaided/naked eye
o Yeasts
Unicellular Fungi
Typically spherical or oval
Non-filamentous
Widely distributed in nature
Frequently found as a white powdery coating on fruits and leaves
Types
Fission yeast
o Symmetric Division
Produces two new cells
o During fission
Parent cell elongates
Nucleus divides into two
Colonies on a solid medium have similar appearance as
to those of bacterial colonies
Capable of facultative anaerobic growth
o Can use oxygen or any organic compound as the final electron
acceptor
o Makes them capable of surviving any environment
o Performs aerobic respiration
When it receives oxygen
Metabolises carbohydrates into carbon dioxide and
water
o When denied oxygen
Ferments carbohydrates into ethanol and carbon
dioxide
Used in
o Brewing
o Wine-making
o Baking
Budding yeast
o Asymmetric division
o Parent cell forms a protuberance (bud) on its outer surface
When bud elongates
Parent cell’s nucleus divides
o One of the nucleus migrate into the bud
Cell wall material is established between parent
cell and bud
o Bud breaks away and becomes a parent
cell
o One parent cell can produce 24 daughter cells
Pseudo-hyphae
Short chain of cells formed by the buds that
failed to detach themselves
- Some are recognised as
o Classic pathogen
o Environmental saprobes
Living on non-living materials
Environmental fungus that derives nutrients from dead organic material
Generally non-pathogenic to humans
- Beneficial
o Important in the food chain
Decompose dead plants thereby recycling the vital plants
Primary decomposes of hard parts of plants which cannot be digested by
animals
Using the extracellular enzyme such cellulases
o Mycorrhizae
Symbiotic fungi
Nearly all plants depend on this
Helps the roots absorb water and minerals from the soil
o Valuable to animals
Fungi-farming ants
Cultivate fungi that break down cellulose and lignin from plants
o Provides glucose
Ants can then digest
Humans
Use fungi for
o Food
Mushrooms
o Produce foods
Bread
Citric acid
o Drugs
Alcohol
Penicillin
Fungi Bacteria
Cell Type Eukaryotic Prokaryotic
Cell membrane Sterols present Sterols absent, except for
mycoplasma
Cell wall Glucans, mannans, chitin (no Peptidoglycan
peptidoglycan)
Spores Produce a wide variety of sexual Endospores (not for
and asexual reproductive spores reproduction); some asexual
reproductive sproes
Metabolism Limited to heterotrophic, Heterotrophic,
aerobic, facultatively anaerobic chemoheterotrophic,
photoautotrophic, aerobic,
facultatively anaerobic,
anaerobic
Sensitivity to antibiotics Often sensitive to polyenes, Often sensitive to penicillin,
imidazoles, and griseofulvin tetracyclines, and
aminoglycosides
Characteristics of Fungi
Life Cycle
- Filamentous Fungi
o Asexual reproduction
Fragmentation of their hyphae
- Spores
o Asexual and sexual reproduction of fungi can happen by its formation
o Fungi are usually identified by spore type
Bacterial endospores
Allow a bacterial cell to survive adverse environmental conditions
One vegetative bacterial cell = one endospore
o Not a true reproduction since it doesn’t increase the total
number of cells
Fungal spore
Breaks off the parents cell and producing a new organism
o True reproduction
Can survive for extended periods in dry or hot environments
o Most do not exhibit the extreme tolerance and longevity of
bacterial endospores.
o Types
Asexual Spores
Anamorph
Formed by the hyphae of one organism
o Produced by an individual fungus through mitosis and
subsequent cell division
o There is no fusion of the nuclei of cells
Genetically identical with parent cell when they germinate
Two Types
o Conidiospore/conidium
A unicellular or multicellular spore that is not enclosed
in a sac
Conidophore
Conidia are formed in a chain at the end of its
tail
Example
o Penicillin
o Aspergillus
Arthroconidia
Conidia formed by the fragmentation of a
septate hypha into single, slightly thickened
cells
Example
o Coccidioides immitis
Blastoconidia
Formed from the buds of its parent call
Example
o Yeasts
Candida albicans
Cryptococcus
Chlamydoconidium/chlamydospore
A thick-walled spore formed by rounding and
enlargement within a hyphal segment
Example
o Candida albicans.
o Sporangiospore
Formed within a sporangium, or sac, at the end of an
aerial hypha called a sporangiophore
A sporangium contain hundreds of sporangiospores
Examples
Rhizopus
Sexual Spores
Teleomorph
Result from the fusion of nuclei from two opposite mating strains of the
same species of fungus
o A fungal sexual spore results from sexual reproduction
o Made less frequently than asexual spores
Because it requires two different mating strains
Organisms that grow from sexual spores will have genetic
characteristics of both parental strains
Phases
o Plasmogamy
A haploid nucleus of a donor cell (+) penetrates the
cytoplasm of a recipient cell (-)
o Karyogamy
The (+) and (-) nuclei fuse to form a diploid zygote
nucleus.
o Meiosis
The diploid nucleus gives rise to haploid nuclei (sexual
spores), some of which may be genetic recombinants.
Zygospore
o Fusion of haploid cells produces zygospore
Deuteromycota/deuteromycetes
A “holding category” for fungi whose sexual reproduction has not yet
been observed
rRNA is used to classify these organisms
- Fungi
o Generally adapted to environments that would be hostile to bacteria
o Chemoheterotrophs
o Absorbs nutrients rather than ingesting them
o Nutritional characteristics:
Fungi usually grow better in an environment with a pH of about 5, which is too
acidic for the growth of most common bacteria.
Almost all molds are aerobic. Most yeasts are facultative anaerobes.
Most fungi are more resistant to osmotic pressure than bacteria; most can
therefore grow in relatively high sugar or salt concentrations
Fungi can grow on substances with a very low moisture content, generally too
low to support the growth of bacteria.
Fungi require somewhat less nitrogen than bacteria for an equivalent amount of
growth.
Fungi are often capable of metabolizing complex carbohydrates, such as lignin (a
component of wood), that most bacteria can’t use for nutrients
- Zygomycota
o Conjugation fungi
o Saprophytic molds that have coenocytic hyphae
Saprophytic
Obtaining food by absorbing dissolved organic materials
o Example
o Rhizopus stolonifera
Common black bread mold
Its asexual spores are sporangiospores
When the sporangium breaks open, the sporangiospores are dispersed
If they fall on a suitable medium, they will germinate into a new mold
thallus.
Zygospores
Sexual spores
A large spore enclosed in a thick wall
Forms when the nuclei of two cells that are morphologically similar to
each other fuse.
- Microsporidia
o Unusual eukaryotes
They lack mitochondria
Don’t have microtubules
Obligate intracellular parasites
o Sexual reproduction has not been observed
Probably occurs within the host
o Have been reported to be the cause of a number of human diseases most notably in
AIDS patients
o Cheonic diarrhea
o Keratoconjunctivitis
Inflammation of the conjunctiva near the cornea
- Ascomycota
o Sac fungi
Because of Ascus
A sac-like structure wherein ascospore are produced
o forms when the nuclei of two cells that can be either
morphologically similar or dissimilar fuse
o Molds with septate hyphae and some yeasts
o Their asexual spores
Usually conidia produced in long chains from the conidiophore.
Conidia = dust
These spores freely detach from the chain at the slightest disturbance
and float in the air like dust.
- Basidiomycota
o club fungi
also possess septate hyphae
derived from the club shape of the basidium
o Includes fungi that produce mushroom
o Basidiospores
Formed externally on a base pedestal called a basidium
Usually four basidiospores per basidium.
o Some of the basidiomycota produce asexual conidiospores.
o Example
Cryptococcus neoformans
Mycoses/Fungal Disease
Books Used:
Chapter 12.1 (pages 324-333) - Gerard J. Tortora, Berdell R. Funke, Christine L. Case – Microbiology, an
introduction 13E
* study outline (page 357) also helps since most info sa lesson ni Dean kay from this book (seriously,
dean was just reading this chapter most of the time)