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FUNGI-LABS 13 AND 14 PROTOZOA LABS- 15 AND 16 PARASITIC WORMS LABS 17 AND 18 Survey of Eucaryotic Microbes • • • • Fungi Algae Protozoa Parasitic worms 2 Kingdom Fungi • divided into 2 groups: – macroscopic fungi (mushrooms, puffballs, gill fungi) – microscopic fungi (molds, yeasts) – Yeasts are unicellular fungi that do not grow as hyphae • Fungi are aerobic (molds) or facultative anaerobes (yeasts) • Majority are unicellular or colonial; a few have cellular specialization 3 Microscopic Fungi • Exist in two morphologies: – yeast – round ovoid shape, asexual reproduction – hyphae – long filamentous fungi or molds • Some exist in either form – dimorphic – characteristic of some pathogenic molds • At room temperature, it grows as a mold. • At body temperature, it grows as a yeast. 4 5 6 Fungal Nutrition • All are heterotrophic • Majority are harmless saprobes living off dead plants and animals • Some are parasites, living on the tissues of other organisms. • mycoses – fungal infections • Growth temperature 20o-40oC • Extremely widespread distribution in many habitats 7 Fungal Organization • Most grow in loose associations or colonies • Yeast – soft, uniform texture and appearance • Filamentous fungi that grow in the form of multicellular filaments, called hyphae. • – mass of hyphae called mycelium; cottony, hairy, or velvety texture – hyphae may be divided by cross walls – septate – vegetative hyphae – digest and absorb nutrients – reproductive hyphae – produce spores for reproduction 8 9 Fungal Reproduction • Primarily through spores formed on reproductive hyphae • Asexual reproduction – spores are formed through budding or mitosis; conidia or sporangiospores 10 Asexual reproduction in fungi by producing spores 11 Sexual reproduction in fungi • Involves the union of two compatible nuclei not necessarily two gametes with a subsequent meiotic division . • All life cycle consist of ; • Plasmogamy- cell fusion • Karyogamy-nuclear fusion • Meiosis 12 13 14 Roles of Fungi • Adverse impact – mycoses, allergies, toxin production – destruction of crops and food storages – Some common fungal infection are Athlete’s foot, ringworm and yeast infections. – Some fungi can also produce strong toxins (mycotoxins) can lead to hallucinations, canceror paralysis. 15 Beneficial impact decomposers of dead plants and animals – sources of antibiotics, alcohol, organic acids, vitamins – used in making foods and in genetic studies • Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a species of budding yeast. • It is perhaps the most useful yeast owing to its use since ancient times in baking and brewing. • Schizosaccharomyces pombe has been proposed for the early stages of alcoholic fermentation. • Because it metabolizes malic acid, this yeast would be useful in excessively acid musts, but commercial applications have not yielded consistently favorable results. 16 Sabouraud Agar • Allow the growth of yeasts for laboratory purpose. • This selective medium has glucose, peptone, and a low pH. 17 Kingdom Protista • Algae • Protozoa 18 Algae • Photosynthetic organisms • Kelps, seaweeds, euglenids, green algae, diatoms, dinoflagellates, brown algae, and red seaweeds • Microscopic forms are unicellular, colonial, filamentous. • Macroscopic forms are colonial and multicellular. • Contain chloroplasts with chlorophyll and other pigments • Cell wall • May or may not have flagella 19 Algae • Most are free-living in fresh and marine water – plankton. • Provide basis of food web in most aquatic habitats • Produce large proportion of atmospheric O2 • Dinoflagellates can cause red tides and give off toxins that cause food poisoning with neurological symptoms. • Diatoms/ sea jewel have silica walls 20 21 Protozoa • • • • Vary in shape, lack a cell wall Most are unicellular; colonies are rare Most are harmless, free-living in a moist habitat Some are animal parasites and can be spread by insect vectors. • All are heterotrophic. • Feed by engulfing other microbes and organic matter 22 Protozoa • Most have locomotor structures – flagella, cilia, or pseudopods. • Exist as trophozoite - motile feeding stage • Many can enter into a dormant resting stage when conditions are unfavorable for growth and feeding – cyst. • All reproduce asexually, mitosis or multiple fission; many also reproduce sexually – conjugation. 23 24 25 26 27 Helminths • 50 species parasitize humans. • Acquired though ingestion of larvae or eggs in food; from soil or water; some are carried by insect vectors • Dioecious - either male or female reproductive organs • Monoecious /hermaphrodites- contains both male and female organs 28 Parasitic Helminths • Multicellular animals, organs for reproduction, digestion, movement, protection • Parasitize host tissues • Have mouthparts for attachment to or digestion of host tissues • Most have well-developed sex organs that produce eggs and sperm. • Fertilized eggs go through larval period in or out of host body. 29 Major Groups of Parasitic Helminths 1. Phylum Platyhelminthes/ Flatworms – flat, no definite body cavity; digestive tract a blind pouch; simple excretory and nervous systems • cestodes (tapeworms) are intestinal parasites • Trematodes or flukes, are flattened , nonsegmented worms with sucking mouthparts. – no specialized circulatory and respiratory organs, which restricts them to flattened shapes that allow oxygen and nutrients to pass through their bodies by diffusion. 30 Roundworms (nematodes) • Roundworms (nematodes)- round, a complete digestive tract, a protective surface cuticle, spines and hooks on mouth; excretory and nervous systems poorly developed 31 32 33 Clonorchis sinensis • The Clonorchis sinensis is a human liver fluke in the class Trematoda, Phylum Platyhelminthes. • This parasite lives in the liver of humans, and is found mainly in the common bile duct and gall bladder, feeding on bile. • Free floating egg -> snail -> infected fish -> human (gut) 34 Enterobius vermicularis • The pinworm (Enterobius), also known as threadworm or seatworm, is a nematode (roundworm) • a common human intestinal parasite, especially in children • Infection usually occurs through the ingestion of pinworm eggs, either through contaminated hands, food, or less commonly, water. • The chief symptom is itching in the anal area. 35 36 37 Helminth Classification and Identification • Classify according to shape, size, organ development, presence of hooks, suckers, or other special structures, mode of reproduction, hosts, and appearance of eggs and larvae • Identify by microscopic detection of adult worm, larvae, or eggs 38