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26 The Fungi (Eumycota) 1 Copyright © McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings, LLC. Permission required for reproduction or display. True Fungi: Eumycota • Eukaryotic, spore-bearing • Chemoorganoheterotrophs with absorptive metabolism • Saprophytes – absorb nutrients from dead organic material by releasing degradative enzymes – osmotrophy - absorb soluble products • Reproduce sexually and asexually • Super Group Opisthokonta 2 Terminology • Mycology – study of fungi • Mycologists – scientists who study fungi • Mycoses – diseases caused by fungi • Mycotoxicology – study of fungal toxins and their effects 3 Taxonomy of Fungi • 90,000 fungal species have been described, possible 1.5 million • six major fungal groups Chytridiomycota Zygomycota Glomeromycota Ascomycota Basidiomycota Microsporidia 4 5 Fungal Distribution and Importance • Primarily terrestrial, few aquatic – global from polar to tropical • Primarily terrestrial – few aquatic species • Many are pathogenic in plants or animals • Some form associations – mycorrhizae – associations with plant roots – lichens • associations with algae or cyanobacteria 6 Fungal Distribution and Importance… • Decomposers – degrade complex organic material in the environment to simple organic compounds and inorganic molecules – carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and other critical constituents are recycled for other living organisms 7 Fungal Distribution and Importance… • Industrial importance – fermentation – yeast used in making bread, wine, beer, cheese, soy sauce – organic acids – citric and gallic acid – certain drugs – ergometrine, cortisone – antibiotics – penicillin, griseofulvin – immunosuppressive agents - cyclosporin 8 Fungal Distribution and Importance… • Research use – geneticists, cytologists, biochemists, biophysicists, and microbiologists – Saccharomyces cerevisiaea (Bakers/Brewers Yeast • yeast model system for cell biology, genetics, and cancer 9 Pathogenic Fungi • Fungi are eukaryotic saprophytes – ~50 produce mycoses in humans – five groups depending on route of infection • superficial, cutaneous, subcutaneous are all direct contact • systemic infections have disseminated to visceral tissues (most are dimorphic, acquired from inhalation of spores) • opportunistic mycoses 10 Opportunistic Diseases • Opportunistic microorganism – harmless in its normal environment but pathogenic in a compromised host • Compromised host – seriously debilitated and has lowered resistance to infection – causes include (but not limited to): • malnutrition/alcoholism • cancer • diabetes • another infectious disease • trauma from surgery or injury • immunosuppression by drugs/hormones • genetic deficiencies • advanced age 11 12 Fungal Structure • Cell walls composed of chitin polysaccharide • Single-celled microscopic fungi = yeasts • Body/vegetative structure of a fungus = thallus (pl. thalli) (undifferentiated structure) – multicellular fungi are called molds – thallus consists of long, branched hyphae filaments tangled into a mycelium mass 13 Fungal Reproduction • Asexual reproduction – Parent cell undergoes mitosis to form daughter cells – May proceed through a spore form 14 Fungal Reproduction • Sexual reproduction – Involves fusion of compatible nuclei • Homothallic: Sexually-compatible gametes are formed on the same mycelium (self-fertilizing) • Heterothallic: Require outcrossing between different, yet compatible mycelia (+ and – mating strains) – A dikaryotic stage can exist temporarily prior to fusion of two haploid nuclei 15 Zygomycota • Zygomycetes • Most are saprophytes – a few are plant and animal parasites • Form coenocytic hyphae containing numerous haploid nuclei • Some of industrial importance – foods, antibiotics and other drugs, meat tenderizer, and food coloring 16 Zygomycota • Usually reproduce asexually by spores that develop at the tips of aerial hyphae • Sexual reproduction occurs when environmental conditions are not favorable – requires compatible opposite mating types – hormone production causes hyphae to produce gametes – gametes fuse, forming a zygote – zygote becomes zygospore 17 Genus Rhizopus • R. stolonifer – grows on surface of moist carbohydrate rich foods such as bread – hyphae quickly cover surface as rhizoids, absorb nutrients – stolon hyphae become form new rhizoids 18 Importance of Genus Rhizopus • Rhizopus-Burkholderia symbiosis – seedling blight in rice bacterium Burkholderia growing within Rhizopus produces toxin • Used to produce tempeh from soybeans • Used with soybeans to make sufu curd • Commercially – used to produce anesthetics, birth control, alcohols, meat tenderizers, yellow coloring in margarine 19 Ascomycota • Ascomycetes or sac fungi – found in freshwater, marine, and terrestrial habitats – red, brown, and blue-green molds cause food spoilage – some are human and plant pathogens – some yeasts and truffles are edible – some used as research tools 20 Ascomycota Yeast Life Cycle • Alternates between haploid and diploid – in nutrient rich, mitosis and budding occurs at non-scarred regions – nutrient poor, meiosis and haploid ascus containing ascospores formed • haploid cells of opposite mating types fuse • tightly regulated by pheromones • Many are dimorphic (yeast form and mold form 21 22 Ascomycota Filamentous Form Life Cycle • Asexual reproduction - conidia • Sexual reproduction – ascus formation with ascospores – opposite mating types form zygote – ascospores forcefully released from ascocarp, germinate • Sclerotia masses of hyphae survive the winter then germinate 23 24 Genus Aspergillus • A. fumigatus – ubiquitous environmental – allergies and significant pathogen (ABPA and Farmer's Lung) • A. oryzae – production of fermented foods – important in biotechnology • A. flavus – Aflatoxin B 25 Aspergillosis • Usually caused by Aspergillus fumigatus; also caused by A. flavus • Invasive disease results in pulmonary infection – with fever, chest pain and cough that disseminates to brain, kidney – in severely compromised individuals, lungs may fill with mycelia • Diagnosis by examination of pathological specimens or by isolation and characterization of fungus • Treatment with antifungal drugs; treat underlying disease 26 More about Ascomycota • Claviceps purpura – parasite on higher plants – ergotism • toxic condition from eating infected grain • due to lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) • Candida, Blastomyces, Histoplasma – human pathogens • Stachybotrys – “sick building syndrome” • Aspergillus – aflatoxins and cancer 27 Candidiasis • Caused by Candida albicans or C. glabrata, dimorphic fungi – members of normal microbiota but numbers kept in check by other microbes • disease in healthy individuals occurs as result of disruption of normal microbiota – can also be spread by sexual contact – wide spectrum of disease but most infections involve the skin or mucous membranes 28 Nosocomial Candidiasis • Important nosocomial pathogens • May represent up to 10% of nosocomial bloodstream infections • Mortality ~50% when in bloodstream and disseminates to visceral organs 29 Candidiasis • Oropharyngeal candidiasis (thrush) – common disease of newborns, denture wearers, and those on steroid therapies • Paronychia and onychomycosis – associated with Candida infections of the subcutaneous tissues of digits and nails, respectively • usually result from continued immersion of hands • Intertriginous candidiasis – involves axillae, groin, and skin folds 30 Candidiasis • Napkin (diaper) candidiasis – found in infants whose diapers are not changed frequently • Candidal vaginitis – occurs when lactobacilli are depleted 31 Candidiasis • Diagnosis of candidiasis is difficult • Treatment, control, and prevention – no satisfactory treatment – antifungals used for cutaneous lesions and systemic candidiasis 32 Airborne Diseases • Blastomycosis – systemic mycosis caused by Blastomyces dermatitidis (dimorphic fungus) – three clinical forms: cutaneous, pulmonary, and disseminated – after lung inhalation spreads rapidly to skin causing cutaneous ulcers and abscesses – serologic tests for diagnosis – amphotericin B/other anti-fungal drugs for treatment 33 Airborne Diseases • Coccidioidomycosis – endemic areas • Valley fever, San Joaquin fever, or Desert Rheumatism – dimorphic • inhale the arthroconidia, converts to large spherule in body • Diagnosis – demonstration of spherule • Prevention involves avoiding exposure to dust 34 Airborne Diseases • Cryptococcosis – systemic mycosis caused by yeast Cryptococcus neoformans – source is dried pigeon droppings – inhalation • serious disease including meningitis in immunocompromised (e.g., AIDS); mild or pneumonia-like in others • Detecting encapsulated yeast in clinical specimen is diagnostic 35 Airborne Diseases • Histoplasmosis – common lung disease – caused by Histoplasma capsulatum var. capsulatum (dimorphic) – inhalation of airborne microconidia in bird droppings • converts to yeast phase in body; flu-like illness • only rarely becomes disseminated – Prevented/controlled by wearing protective clothing in endemic areas and by soil decontamination 36 Direct Contact Diseases • Superficial mycoses – piedras • infections of hair shaft – tineas • infections involving outer layers of skin, nails, and hair • Trycophyton – most occur in tropics – treatment, prevention, and control • removal of skin scales and infected hairs • good personal hygiene 37 Direct Contact Diseases • Cutaneous mycoses – dermatomycoses, ringworms, or tineas • different diseases distinguished according to causative agent and area of body affected – most common fungal diseases, occurring worldwide – diagnosis • microscopic examination of skin biopsies and culture on Sabouraud’s glucose agar – treatment, prevention, and control • topical ointments and antifungal agents 38 Direct Contact Diseases • Examples of cutaneous mycoses – Tinea capitis – infection of scalp hair – Tinea pedis – athlete’s foot – Tinea unguium – infection of the nailbed – Tinea cruris – jock itch 39 Subcutaneous Mycoses • Caused by saprophytic inhabitants of soil • Introduced in soil-contaminated puncture wounds • Clinical manifestations – develops slowly over a period of years – nodules form and ulcerate – organisms spread along lymphatic channels, producing more nodules • Diagnosis – culture and examination of fungus from infected tissue • Treatment, prevention, and control – antifungal agents and surgical excision 40 Subcutaneous Mycoses • Chromoblastomycosis – dark brown pigmented nodules • Maduromycosis – destroys subcutaneous tissue and produces serious deformities – often called a eumycotic mycetoma • Sporotrichosis – when spread throughout body, referred to as extracutaneous sporotrichosis 41 Basidiomycota • Basidiomycetes (club fungi) – examples include rusts, shelf fungi, puffballs, toadstools, mushrooms – sexual reproduction form basidium • basidiospores are released at maturity 42 43 Human Impact Basidiomycota • Decomposers • Edible and non-edible mushrooms – toxins are poisons and hallucinogenic • Pathogens of humans, other animals, and plants – e.g., Cryptococcus neoformans – cryptococcosis • systemic infection, primarily of lungs and central nervous system 44 Microsporidia • Obligate intracellular fungal parasites that infect insects, fish, and humans – Aquatic birds are common hosts and contribute to large numbers of spores in environment • Transitional form is a spore structure capable of surviving outside the host • Structurally similar to ‘classic’ fungi – contain chitin, trehalose, and mitosomes – however, lack mitochondria, peroxisomes and centrioles – unique morphology is polar tube essential for host invasion 45 Microsporidia • Obligate intracellular fungi that belong to phylum Microspora – an emerging infectious disease, found mostly in HIV patients • Domestic and feral animals are reservoirs for species that infect humans • Produce highly resistant spore 46 Microsporidia • Infection of host cell occurs when microsporidia extrudes polar tubule from within the spore • Symptoms – wide variety including hepatitis, pneumonia, skin lesions, diarrhea, weight loss, and wasting syndrome • Diagnosis – based on clinical symptoms and identification of microsporidia in gram or giema-stained specimens – identification can also be made using electron microscopy or PCR • Treatment, control, and prevention – some treatment success with antifungal drugs 47 Microsporidia Pathogenesis • Human infections – Enterocystozoon bieneusi • diarrhea • pneumonia – Encephalitozoon cuniculi • encephalitis • nephritis – severe in HIV/AIDS patients 48