Kingdom Fungi: Prof. Khaled Abu-Elteen
Kingdom Fungi: Prof. Khaled Abu-Elteen
Introduction
•100,000 species
•Only 100 human pathogens, fungi associated
diseases are rising, due to nosocomial
infections and in immunocompromised patients
(ie. HIV, diabetes, transplant folks)
•Aspergillosis, Blastomycosis—pulmonary
infections and dissemination may be involved.
•5,000 plant pathogens=$1 billion/yr
Fungal Characteristics
Eukaryotic
Most are Multicellular and some are unicellular.
Heterotrophic
Absorb nutrients - may be saprobes (absorb from dead
material), parasites, or mutualistic symbionts (with algae
make lichen).
Secrete powerful hydrolytic enzymes.
Cell walls contain chitin, an amino sugar polysaccharide
also found in arthropod exoskeletons
Lack flagella
Characteristics of fungi
A. eukaryotic, non- vascular organisms
D. typically not motile, although a few (e.g. Chytrids) have a motile phase.
I. Most fungi store their food as glycogen (like animals). Plants store
food as starch.
M. Most fungi have very small nuclei, with little repetitive DNA.
Septa
Coenocytic
The Body of a Fungus
Fungi exist mainly in the form of slender
filaments (hyphae).
long chains of cells joined end-to-end divided by
cross-walls (septa)
rarely form complete barrier
cytoplasm freely streams in hyphae
mycelium - mass of connected hyphae
grows through and penetrates substrate
MYCELIUM
Intertwined filamentous mass formed by hyphae,
visible to the unaided eye
Forms when environmental conditions are right
Vegetative mycelium: Mycelial portion remaining
INSIDE the substrate to obtain nutrition
Reproductive mycelium: Mycelial portion extends
into air ,responsible for SPORE reproduction
hypha
mycelia
Introduction of fungi
Other characteristics of fungi
the ability to synthesize lysine by the -amino
adipic acid pathway (AAA-pathway)
possession of a chitinous cell wall
plasma membranes containing the sterol
ergosterol
and microtubules composed of tubulin.
Structure
Cell wall
Plasma membrane
Microtubules
Nucleus
Fungal wall
Shape of fungi
Protect against osmotic lysis
It the wall contains pigments (melanin)
protect the cell against ultraviolet radiation or
the lytic enzymes of other organisms
It can have antigenic properties
Cell wall components
Predominance of polysaccharides, lesser
amounts of proteins and lipids
Table 1 Major polysaccharide components of
fungal walls
Division Fibrillar components Matrix components
Chytridiomycota Chitin, glucan Glucan
Zygomycota Chitin, chitosan Polyglucoronic acid,
glucuronomannoproteins
Ascomycota/ Chitin, (1,3)-(1,6)- -(1,3)-Glucan,
deuteromycota glucans galacto-
Basidiomycota Chitin, (1,3)- (1,6)- mannoproteins ,,
glucans
Chitin ( N-Acetyl-1-4-β-D- glucosamine
Cell wall components
The major polysaccharides of cell wall matrix
consist of glucans such as manans, chitosan, and
galactans
Glucan refers to a group of D-glucose polymers having
glycosidic bonds
Insoluble -glucans are apparently amorphous in cell
wall
Mannans, galactomannans, rhamnomannans are
responsible for the immunologic response to the
medically important yeasts and molds
Cell Wall Structure In Fungi
Cell wall components
Consisting of chitinous microfibrils embedded in
the matrix of small polysaccharides, proteins,
lipids, inorganic salts, and pigments
Chitin is a (1-4)-linked polymer of N-acetyl-D-
glucosamine (GlcNAc)
Produced in cytosol (from UDP GlcNAc into
chains of chitin by chitin synthetase)
The chitin microfibrils are transported to the
plasmalemma and subsequently integrated into
the new cell wall
Monosaccharides with taxon association
D-galactose (Ascomycota)
D-galactosamine ( Ascomycota )
L-fucose (Mucorales & Basidiomycota)
D-glucosamine (Mucorales)
D-xylose (Basidiomycota)
Uronic acids (Mucorales)
D-rhamnose (Ascomycota)*
*somewhat rare
Cell wall components
In addition to chitin, glucan, and mannan, cell
walls may contain lipid, protein, chitosan, acid
phosphatase, amylase, protease, melanin, and
inorganic ions (phosphorus, calcium, and
magnesium)
The outer cell wall of dermatophytes contains
glycopeptides that may evoke both immediate
and delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity
Plasma membrane
The main role of the plasma membrane
To regulate the uptake and release of materials
Integral membrane protein (chitin syntase,
glucan syntase)
Signal transduction
Plasma membrane
Similar to mammalian plasma membrane,
differing in having the nonpolar sterol
ergosterol, rather than cholesterol
regulates the passage of materials into and
out of the cell by being selective permeable
Several antifungal agents interfere with
ergosterol synthesis (i.e., amphotericin B)
Microtubules
Composed of the protein tubulin, which
consists of a dimer composed of two
protein subunits.
Microtubules are long, hollow cylinders ~ 25
nm in diameter
Involved in the movement of organelles,
chromosomes, nuclei, and Golgi vesicle
containing cell wall precursor
Microtubules
Assist in the movement of chromosomes
during mitosis and meiosis
the destruction of cytoplasmic microtubules
interferes with the transport of secretory
materials to the cell periphery, which may
inhibit cell wall synthesis
Nucleus
The nucleus is bounded by a double nuclear
envelope and contains chromatin and a
nucleolus
Fungal nuclei are variable in size, shape, and
number
The number of chromosomes varies with the
particular fungus
S.cerevisiae ; 18 (n)
T.mentagophytes ; 4 (n)
The growth of hyphae
Apical extension
Balance between wall
synthesis and wall lysis
The apical vesicles are p
roduced from Golgi bodie
s and then transported to
the tip
Hydrogenosome:
functionally
equivalent to the
mitochondria of
aerobic organisms
Fungal nutrition
A. Absorptive mode
over whole surface or via restricted absorbing regions ,
e.g. a. rhizoids in "lower" fungi
b. substrate hyphae* in "higher" fungi
c. apical tips of hyphae
*The substrate hyphae of molds nourish the
aerial hyphae and reproductive hyphae
B. Extracellular digestion
Fungi secrete enzymes that depolymerize complex
natural products (proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, etc.) so
they can be absorbed as sources of carbon and energy.
rhizoids
Myceli
a
The nutrient requirement of fungi
Carbon needs for the synthesis of
carbohydrates, lipids, nucleic acids, and
proteins.
Simple sugars, polysaccharides, citric acid, glycerol
Nitrogen for synthesis of amino acids for
proteins, purines and pyrimidines for nucleic
acids, glucosamine for chitin, and various
vitamins
Amino acid, ammonium, nitrate
Nutrition
C/N ratio (20:1)
Other elements
P : energy-rich compound metabolism,
phospholipid in lipid bilayer
K : coenzyme
Mg : concer with sporulation
S : protein component
Trace elements
Fe, Cu, Mn, and Zn
Nutrition
Czapek-Dox medium
widely used for the culture of fungi
Budding
yeasts
Binary fission
Morphology
Mold
Multicellular, hyphae, septate & nonseptate,
hyaline & dematiaceous, diameter 4-20 µm
Sexual and asexual reproduction
Sporothrix schenckii
therapy .
:Medically important fungi are in four phyla