Mrs. S.Vaidehi Assistant Professor D.G.Vaishnav College
Mrs. S.Vaidehi Assistant Professor D.G.Vaishnav College
Mrs. S.Vaidehi Assistant Professor D.G.Vaishnav College
Vaidehi
Assistant Professor
D.G.Vaishnav College
50% of world population infected with eukaryotic pathogens
Two microbial kingdoms:
1. Fungi
2. Protista
Subkingdoms
A. Protozoa (animal-like) B. Algae (plant-like)
Kingdom Fungi
mycology = study of fungi
common characteristics of fungi:
1. all are chemoheterotrophs
fungi.
IMPORTANCE
Decomposers
Yeasts- fermentation
bread, wine, and beer. some cheeses, soy sauce
commercial production of many organic acids
(citric, gallic)
drugs (ergometrine, cortisone); and in the
manufacture of many antibiotics (penicillin,
griseofulvin) and the immunosuppressive
drug cyclosporine.
STRUCTURE
The body or vegetative structure of a fungus is
called a thallus
The fungal cell usually is encased in a cell wall
of--------.
YEAST
1. vegetative hyphae
TYPES
hyphae, uninterrupted by cross walls. These
hyphae are
called coenocytic
REPRODUCTION
asexual or sexual.
Asexual reproduction
1. A parent cell can divide into two daughter cells by
central
constriction and formation of a new cell wall.
2. budding yeasts.
3. spore production.
a. A hypha can fragment arthroconidia or
arthrospores
b. cells are surrounded by a thick wall before
separation, chlamydospores
Ifthe spores develop within a sac
[sporangium;
sporangia] at a hyphal tip,
sporangiospores
d. If the spores are not enclosed in a
sac but produced at the tips or sides of
the hypha, conidiospores
e. Spores produced from a vegetative
mother cell by Budding blastospores.
sexual reproduction
yields spores. For example, in the zygomycetes
the zygote develops into a zygospore in the
ascomycetes,
an ascospore and in the basidomycetes; a
basidiospore
LIFE CYCLE OF FUNGI
-fungi can reproduce asexually by:
1. fragmentation of hyphae (mold),
2. budding (budding yeast) or ssion
(ssion yeast)
2. asexual spores
-fungi can reproduce sexually by the formation of spores
spores are formed on the ends of aerial hyphae (not
endospores: reproductive, outside cell)
-asexual spores: -form on the hyphae of one organism
-germinate to form exact clones of the parent
-sexual spores: -form after the fusion of two haploid
nuclei from opposite mating type cells of the same species
-when spore geminates it has characteristics of both parents
-sexual reproduction is NOT common in fungi
Asexual Spores -produced by mitosis and cell
division
-contain DNA that is exact copy of parent
1. Sporangiospore
-spores form in sac called sporangium -
sporangium forms at end of aerial hyphae
called a sporangiophore -hundreds of
sporangiospores in a single
sporangium
2. Conidiospore -spores produced at the end of an
aerial hyphae called a conidiophore -most
common type:
Conidia: chains of conidiospores on conidiophore
Sexual Spores -formed by fusion of two haploid
nuclei into single diploid zygote -zygote then
undergoes meiosis to generate haploid spores
(usually multiples of four)
1. Zygospores