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CH 7-Fungal Classification and Replication

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Title: CH 7-Fungal Classification and Replication


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CH 7-Fungal Classification and Replication
  • Medical Micro
  • S.S. Magrogan

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The Fungi
  • ubiquitous and diverse group of organisms
  • degrade organic matter.
  • heterotrophic existence as saprobes (organisms
    that live on dead or decaying matter),
  • symbionts (organisms that live together and in
    which the association is of mutual advantage),
  • commensals (organisms living in a close
    relationship in which one benefits from the
    relationship and the other neither benefits nor
    is harmed),
  • or as parasites (organisms that live on or
    within a host, from which they derive benefits
    without making any useful contribution in return
    in the case of pathogens the relationship is
    harmful to the host).

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More on Fungi
  • Can be major causes of human disease
  • Among immunocompromised
  • Among hospitalized with serious underlying
    diseases.
  • Fungi are opportunistic pathogens with high
    morbidity and mortality.
  • Overall incidence of specific invasive mycoses
    continues to increase with time (Table 7-1)
  • The list of opportunistic fungal pathogens
    likewise increases each year.
  • In short, there are no nonpathogenic fungi!

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Fungal Infections
  • This increase in fungal infections can be
    attributed to
  • the ever-growing number of immunocompromised
    patients,
  • including transplant patients, individuals with
    acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS),
  • patients with cancer and who are undergoing
    chemotherapy,
  • individuals who are hospitalized with other
    serious underlying conditions and who undergo a
    variety of invasive procedures.

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Basic Anatomy of a Fungal Cell
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Disease Causing Fungi
  • Table 7-1.
  • Candida species
  • Cryptococcus neoformans
  • Coccidioides immitis
  • Aspergillus species
  • Histoplasma capsulatum
  • Agents of Zygomycosis
  • Agents of Hyalohyphomycosis
  • Agents of Phaeohyphomycosis
  • Sporothrix schenckii
  • Malassezia furfur

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Fungi Life Style
  • aerobic respiration
  • some are facultatively anaerobic (fermentative)
  • others are strict anaerobes.
  • fungi are heterotrophic and biochemically
    versatile,
  • producing both primary (e.g., citric acid,
    ethanol, glycerol) and secondary (e.g.,
    antibiotics penicillin, amanitens, aflatoxins)
    metabolites.
  • Relative to the bacteria, fungi are slow growing
    with cell-doubling times in terms of hours rather
    than minutes.

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Classifying Fungi
  • Five major classes of fungi of medical importance
    is shown in Table 7-3
  • Only approximately 200 are known to cause human
    disease, (Deuteromycetes) although this number
    appears to be increasing.
  • Reproduce by the formation of spores, which may
    be sexual (involving meiosis, preceded by fusion
    of the protoplasm and nuclei of two compatible
    mating types) or asexual (involving mitosis
    only).
  • Classes Zygomycetes, Ascomycetes,
    Archiascomycetes, and Basidiomycetes
  • produce both sexual and asexual spores -Table 7-4
  • The form of the fungus producing sexual spores is
    termed the teleomorph,
  • the form producing asexual spores is termed the
    anamorph.
  • The fact that the teleomorph and anamorph of the
    same fungus have different names (e.g.,
    Ajellomyces capsulatum teleomorph and
    Histoplasma capsulatum anamorph) is a source of
    confusion for nonmycologists.

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More Classification
  • morphology and
  • mode of spore production
  • ultrastructural features,
  • biochemical and molecular characteristics,
  • Fungi may be unicellular or multicellular.
  • The simplest grouping yeasts or moulds.

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Yeast vs Mold
  • Yeast
  • reproduces by budding or by fission
  • "mother" cell pinches off a portion of itself to
    produce "daughter" cell.
  • The daughter cells may elongate to form
    sausagelike pseudohyphae.
  • Yeasts are usually unicellular and produce round,
    pasty, or mucoid colonies on agar.

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Molds
  • Moulds
  • multicellular organisms
  • Have threadlike tubular structures called hyphae
    that elongate at their tips by a process known as
    apical extension.
  • Hyphae are either coenocytic (hollow and
    multinucleate) or septate (divided by partitions
    or cross-walls) (see Figure 7-2).
  • The hyphae form together to produce a matlike
    structure called a mycelium.
  • The colonies formed by moulds are often described
    as filamentous, hairy, or woolly.
  • On or beneath the surface hyphae, termed
    vegetative hyphae,
  • hyphae that project above the surface of the
    medium, so-called aerial hyphae.
  • The aerial hyphae may produce specialized
    structures known as conidia (asexual reproductive
    elements
  • The conidia are easily airborne and serve to
    disseminate the fungus.
  • The size, shape, and certain developmental
    features of conidia are used as a means of
    identifying fungi to genus and species. Many
    fungi of medical importance are termed dimorphic
    because of the fact that they may exist in both a
    yeast form and a mould form.

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Asexual Spores
  • Asexual spores consist of two general types
  • sporangiospores
  • asexual spores produced in a containing structure
    or sporangium
  • Sporangiospores are characteristic of genera
    belonging to the class Zygomycetes,
  • Rhizopus
  • Mucor spp.
  • conidia.
  • Conidia are asexual spores that are borne naked
    on specialized structures,
  • Aspergillus spp,
  • Penicillium spp.,
  • dermatophytes.

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Four Other Groups of Fungi
  • Ascomycetes
  • Basidiomycetes
  • Zygomycetes
  • Archiascomycetes

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ZYGOMYCETES
  • Moulds
  • broad, sparsely septate, coenocytic hyphae.
  • Produce sexual zygospores following the fusion of
    two compatible mating types.
  • The asexual spores of the order Mucorales are
    contained within a sporangium (sporangiospores).
  • The sporangia are borne at the tips of stalklike
    sporangiophores that terminate in a bulbous
    swelling called the columella
  • The presence of rootlike structures, called
    rhizoids, is helpful in identifying specific
    genera within the Mucorales.
  • Most Zygomycetes encountered clinically belong to
    the order Mucorales.
  • The other order, the Entomophthorales, are less
    common and include the genera, Basidiobolus and
    Conidiobolus. T
  • These organisms cause tropical subcutaneous
    zygomycosis.
  • The asexual spores are borne singly on short
    sporophores and are forcibly ejected when mature.

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ASCOMYCETES
  • include both yeasts (Saccharomycetes) and
    moulds.
  • The hyphae are septate,
  • asexual spores are produced from conidiogenous
    cells borne on conidiophores.
  • The sexual spore of the Ascomycetes is the
    ascospore, characterized by its production within
    a sac or ascus.

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ARCHIASCOMYCETES
  • new class that was recently described to include
    an organism, Pneumocystis carinii, that had
    formerly been considered a protozoan.
  • The reclassification of Pneumocystis was based on
    molecular evidence that it was most closely
    related to the ascomycete Schizosaccharomyces
    pombe.
  • Further molecular studies resulted in the naming
    of human-derived strains as Pneumocystis
    jiroveci.
  • The organism exists in a vegetative, trophic form
    that reproduces asexually by binary fission.
  • Fusion of compatible mating types results in a
    spherical cyst or spore case, which on maturity
    contains eight spores.

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BASIDIOMYCETES
  • rarely encountered clinically
  • The only human pathogen is Filobasidiella
    neoformans,
  • the sexual form of Cryptococcus neoformans.
  • The sexual spore of the Basidiomycetes is the
    basidiospore,
  • characterized by the extension from a club-shaped
    structure, the basidium.

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DEUTEROMYCETES
  • includes both yeasts and moulds that share a
    common lack of a sexual phase
  • Many of the fungi pathogenic to humans are
    included in this class
  • septate hyphae
  • produce conidia from conidiophores and
    conidiogenous cells.
  • The yeasts reproduce by budding, and the moulds
    produce conidia by either a blastic (budding)
    process or a thallic process, in which hyphal
    segments fragment into individual cells or
    arthroconidia.
  • Identification of individual genus and species
    is based in part on microscopic evaluation of the
    mode of development of the conidium from the
    conidiogenous cell.

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Disease Causing Fungi
  • The largest group of fungi causing infections in
    humans, the Deuteromycetes Table 7-4
  • does not produce known sexual spores.
  • Its important to know sexual nature of fungi
    because
  • Irrespective of the ability of a given fungus to
    produce sexual spores, in clinical situations it
    is common to refer to the organisms by their
    asexual designations.
  • The anamorphic (asexual) state is isolated from
    clinical specimens
  • Sexual or teleomorphic phase occurs only under
    very specialized conditions in the laboratory.

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HUMAN MYCOSES
  • Classification of Human Mycoses
  • In addition to the formal taxonomic
    classification of fungi, fungal infections may be
    classified according to the tissues infected, as
    well as by specific characteristics of organism
    groups.
  • These classifications include the superficial,
    cutaneous, and subcutaneous mycoses the endemic
    mycoses and the opportunistic mycoses

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SUPERFICIAL MYCOSES
  • Infections that are limited to the very
    superficial surfaces of the skin and hair.
  • Nondestructive and of cosmetic importance only.
  • The clinical infection pityriasis versicolor is
    characterized by discoloration or depigmentation
    and scaling of the skin. Tinea nigra refers to
    brown- or black-pigmented, macular patches
    localized primarily to the palms. The clinical
    entities of black and white piedra involve the
    hair and are characterized by nodules composed of
    hyphae that encompass the hair shaft. The fungi
    associated with these superficial infections
    include Malassezia furfur, Phaeoannelomyces
    (Exophiala) werneckii, Piedraia hortae, and
    Trichosporon spp.

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CUTANEOUS MYCOSES
  • infections of the keratinized layer of skin,
    hair, and nails.
  • These infections may elicit a host response and
    become symptomatic.
  • Signs and symptoms include itching, scaling,
    broken hairs, ringlike patches of the skin, and
    thickened, discolored nails.
  • The Dermatophytes are fungi classified in the
    genera Trichophyton, Epidermophyton, and
    Microsporum.
  • Infections of the skin involving these organisms
    are called dermatophytoses.
  • Tinea unguium refers to infections of the toes
    involving these agents.
  • Onychomycoses includes infections of the nails
    caused by the dermatophytes, as well as
    nondermatophytic fungi such as Candida spp. and
    Aspergillus spp.

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SUBCUTANEOUS MYCOSES
  • Subcutaneous mycoses involve the deeper layers of
    the skin, including the cornea, muscle, and
    connective tissue, and are caused by a broad
    spectrum of taxonomically diverse fungi.
  • The fungi gain access to the deeper tissues,
    usually by traumatic inoculation, and remain
    localized, causing abscess formation, nonhealing
    ulcers, and draining sinus tracts.
  • The host immune system recognizes the fungi,
    resulting in variable tissue destruction and,
    often, epitheliomatous hyperplasia.
  • Infections may be caused by hyaline moulds such
    as Acremonium spp. and Fusarium spp. and by
    pigmented or dematiaceous fungi such as
    Alternaria spp., Cladosporium spp., and Exophiala
    spp. (Phaeohyphomycoses, Chromoblastomycoses).
  • Subcutaneous mycoses tend to remain localized and
    rarely disseminate systemically.

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ENDEMIC MYCOSES
  • Endemic mycoses are fungal infections caused by
    the classic dimorphic fungal pathogens
    Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis,
    Coccidioides immitis, and Paracoccidioides
    brasiliensis.
  • These fungi exhibit thermal dimorphism (i.e.,
    exist as yeast at 37C and mould at 25C) and are
    generally confined to specific geographic regions
    where they occupy specific environmental or
    ecologic niches.
  • The endemic mycoses are often referred to as
    systemic mycoses, because these organisms are
    true pathogens and can cause infection in healthy
    individuals.
  • Recently the dimorphic fungus Penicillium
    marneffei was added to the list of agents causing
    endemic mycoses.
  • All of these agents produce a primary infection
    in the lung, with subsequent dissemination to
    other organs and tissues.

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OPPORTUNISTIC MYCOSES
  • The opportunistic mycoses are infections caused
    by fungi that are normally found as human
    commensals or in the environment.
  • With the exception of Cryptococcus neoformans,
    these organisms exhibit inherently low or limited
    virulence and cause infection in individuals who
    are debilitated, immunosuppressed, or who carry
    implanted prosthetic devices or vascular
    catheters.
  • Virtually any fungus can serve as an
    opportunistic pathogen, and the list of those
    identified as such becomes longer each year.
  • The most common opportunistic fungal pathogens
    are the yeasts Candida spp. and Cryptococcus
    neoformans, the mould Aspergillus spp., and
    Pneumocystis jiroveci.
  • Because of its inherent virulence, Cryptococcus
    neoformans is often considered a "systemic"
    pathogen.
  • Although this fungus may cause infection in
    immunologically normal individuals, it clearly is
    seen more often as an opportunistic pathogen in
    the immunocompromised population.
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