THE FUNGI
Chapter Overview
This
chapter discusses the characteristics of the members of the kingdom Fungi. The
diversity of these organisms is described, and their ecological and economic
impact is discussed. In addition, certain protists-the slime molds and water
molds, which resemble fungi-are also presented in this chapter.
Chapter Objectives
After
reading this chapter you should be able to:
- discuss the distribution of fungi and their roles
in the environment
- discuss the morphological characteristics of
fungi
- describe the external digestion of organic matter
by fungi
- explain the formation of both asexual and sexual
spores for reproduction
- discuss the five major types of true fungi:
zygomycetes, ascomycetes, basidiomycetes, deuteromycetes, and chytrids
- discuss the criteria upon which fungi are
categorized
- discuss the slime molds and water molds and their
resemblance to fungi
1. Fungi are widely distributed and are found
wherever moisture is present. They are of great importance to humans in both
beneficial and harmful ways.
2. Fungi exist primarily as filamentous
hyphae. A mass of hyphae is called a mycelium.
3. Like some bacteria, fungi digest insoluble
organic matter by secreting exoenzymes, then absorbing the solubilized
nutrients.
4. Two reproductive structures occur in the
fungi: (1) sporangia form asexual spores, and (2) gametangia form
sexual gametes.
5. The zygomycetes are characterized by
resting structures called zygospores—cells in which zygotes are formed.
6. The ascomycetes form zygotes within a
characteristic saclike structure, the ascus. The ascus contains two or more
ascospores.
7. Yeasts are unicellular fungi—mainly
ascomycetes.
8. Basidiomycetes possess dikaryotic hyphae
with two nuclei, one of each mating type. The hyphae divide uniquely, forming
basidiocarps within which club-shaped basidia can be found. The basidia bear
two or more basidiospores.
9. The deuteromycetes (Fungi Imperfecti) have
either lost the capacity for sexual reproduction, or it has never been
observed.
Study Outline
- Introduction
- Fungi-eucaryotic, spore-bearing organisms with
absorptive metabolism and no chlorophyll; reproduce sexually and
asexually
- Mycologists-scientists who study fungi
- Mycology-the study of fungi
- Mycotoxicology-the study of fungal toxins and
their effects on various organisms
- Mycoses-diseases in animals caused by fungi
- Belong to the kingdom Fungi within the domain
Eucarya; is a monophyletic group known as the eumycota (true fungi)
- Distribution
- Primarily terrestrial with a few freshwater and
marine organisms
- Many are pathogenic in plants or animals
- Form beneficial associations with plant roots (mycorrhizae) or with algae or cyanobacteria (lichens)
- Importance
- Decomposers-break down organic material and
return it to environment
- Major cause of plant disease; also cause disease
in animals, including humans
- Industrial fermentation-bread, wine, beer,
cheese, tofu, soy sauce, steroid manufacture, antibiotic production, and
the production of the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine
- Research-fundamental biological processes can be
studied in these simple eucaryotic organisms
- Structure
- Thallus-body or vegetative structure of a
fungus; fungal cell walls are usually composed of chitin, a
nitrogen-containing polysaccharide consisting of N-acetyl glucosamine
residues
- Yeast-unicellular fungus with single nucleus;
reproduces asexually by budding, or sexually by spore formation; daughter
cells may separate after budding or may aggregate to form colonies
- Mold-a fungus with long, branched, threadlike
filaments
- Hyphae-the filaments of a mold; may be
coenocytic (i.e., have no cross walls within the hyphae) or septate
(i.e., have cross walls)
- Mycelia-bundles or tangled masses of hyphae
- Dimorphism-a property of some fungi, which
change from the yeast (Y) form (within an animal host) to the mold (M)
form (in the environment); this is referred to as the YM shift; the
reverse relationship exists in plant-associated fungi
- Nutrition and Metabolism
- Most fungi are saprophytes, securing nutrients
from dead organic material (chemoorganoheterotrophs); fungi secrete
hydrolytic enzymes that promote external digestion
- Glycogen is the primary storage polysaccharide
- Most are aerobic (some yeasts are facultatively
anaerobic); obligate anaerobic fungi are found in the rumen of cattle
- Reproduction
- Asexual reproduction-occurs by several
mechanisms
- Transverse fission
- Budding
- Direct spore production
- Hyphal fragmentation-component cells behave as
arthrospores or chlamydiospores (if enveloped in thick cell wall before
separation)
- Sporangiospores are produced in sporangium
(sac) at the end of an aerial hypha (sporangiophore)
- Conidiospores are unenclosed spores produced
at the tip or on the sides of aerial hypha
- Blastospores are produced when a vegetative
cell buds off
- Sexual reproduction
- Involves the union of compatible nuclei
- Some fungi are self-fertilizing (male and
female gametes produced on the same mycelium (homothallic), while others
require outcrossing between different but sexually compatible mycelia
(heterothallic)
- Zygote formation proceeds by one of several
mechanisms
- Fusion of gametes
- Fusion of gamete-producing bodies (gametangia)
- Fusion of hyphae
- Sometimes there is immediate fusion of nuclei
and cytoplasm; however, more common is a delayed fusion of nuclei,
resulting in the formation of a cell with two haploid nuclei
(dikaryotic stage)
- Zygotes can develop into spores (zygospores,
ascospores, or basidiospores); spores are used for identification
purposes and also aid fungal dissemination
- Characteristics of the Fungal Divisions
- Division Zygomycota-zygomycetes
- Most are saprophytes; a few are plant and
animal parasites
- Coenocytic hyphae (no crosswalls), with many
haploid nuclei
- Asexual reproduction leads to the formation of
sporangiospores
- Sexual reproduction leads to the formation of
zygospores; these are tough, thick-walled zygotes that can remain
dormant when the environment is too harsh for growth
- Representative member: Rhizopus stolonifer
(commonly known as bread mold, but also grows on fruits and vegetables)
- Normally reproduces asexually
- Reproduces sexually by fusion of gametangia if
food is scarce or environment is unfavorable
- Zygospores (diploid) are produced and remain
dormant until conditions are favorable
- Meiosis often occurs at time of germination
- Zygomycetes are used in the production of
foods, anesthetics, coloring agents, and other useful products
- Division Ascomycota-ascomycetes
- Members of this division cause food spoilage, a
number of plant diseases (e.g., powdery mildew, chestnut blight,
ergot,and Dutch elm disease)
- Include many types of yeast, edible morels, and
truffles, as well as the pink bread mold Neurospora crassa
- Mycelia are septate
- Produce conidiospores when reproducing
asexually
- Ascospores (haploid spores located in a sac
called an ascus) are formed when reproducing sexually
- Thousands of asci may be packed together in a
cup-shaped ascocarp
- Division Basidiomycota-basidiomycetes (club
fungi)
- Includes smuts, jelly fungi, rusts, shelf
fungi, stinkhorns, puffballs, toadstools, mushrooms, and bird's nest
fungi
- Basidia are produced at the tips of the hyphae,
in which the basidiospores will develop
- Basidiospores are held in fruiting bodies
called basidiocarps
- Usefulness-many basidomycetes are decomposers;
some mushrooms serve as food (some are poisonous); one is the causative
agent of cryptococcosis; and some are plant pathogens
- Division Deuteromycota-deuteromycetes (commonly
called Fungi Imperfecti)
- This is a classical division grouping together
fungi that lack a sexual reproductive phase or fungi for which a sexual
reproductive phase has not been observed; more recently molecular
systematics places the Deuteromycota among their closest relatives in
the Eumycota and eliminates the Deuteromycota as a separate division
- Most are terrestrial; a few are freshwater or
marine organisms; most are saprophytes or plant parasites; some are
parasitic on other fungi
- Human impact
- Some are human parasites (e.g., causing
ringworm, athlete's foot, histoplasmosis)
- Some are used industrially to produce
antibiotics, cheese, soy sauce, and other products
- Some produce substances that are highly toxic
and carcinogenic to animals (e.g., aflatoxin and trichothecenes)
- Division Chytridiomycota-chytrids (simplest of
true fungi)
- Terrestrial and aquatic fungi that reproduce
asexually by forming motile zoospores
- Microscopic in size; may consist of single
cells, a small multinucleate mass, or a true mycelium
- Reproduce asexually or sexually
- Some saprophytic; others are parasites of
algae, other true fungi, and plants
- Slime Molds and Water Molds
- Resemble fungi in appearance and life-style, but
their cellular organization, reproduction, and life cycles are more
closely related to protists
- Division
Myxomycota-plasmodial (acellular) slime molds
- The multinucleated protoplasm (plasmodium)
moves by amoeboid movement as it phagocytizes organic matter
- Form ornate fruiting bodies when food and/or
moisture are in short supply; fruiting bodies form spores with cellulose
cell walls that are resistant to environmental extremes
- Spores germinate to produce myxamoeba or
flagellated swarm cells
- Myxamoeba and swarm cells are initially
haploid, but eventually fuse to form a diploid zygote
- Zygote feeds, grows and carries out multiple
nuclear divisions, giving rise to a plasmodium
- Division Acrasiomycota-cellular slime molds
- During the vegetative stage, amoeboid cells
called myxamoeba feed phagocytically on bacteria and yeasts
- When food is scarce, myxamoeba form
pseudoplasmodia by aggregating and secreting a slimy sheath around
themselves
- Become sedentary and differentiate into
prestalk and prespore cells
- Form sorocarps that mature to sporangia;
sporangia produce spores
- Released spores will later germinate to form
haploid amoebae to begin the cycle again
- Division Oomycota-oomycetes (water molds)
- Resemble fungi, but cell walls are composed of
cellulose, not chitin
- Produce a relatively large egg cell that is
fertilized by a small sperm cell or an even smaller antheridium; zygote
germinates forming asexual, flagellated zoospores
- Usually saprophytic in freshwater environments;
some parasitic in fish and plants
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