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Zoosporic Fungi Phylum Chytridiomycota

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Title: Zoosporic Fungi Phylum Chytridiomycota


1
Zoosporic FungiPhylum Chytridiomycota
  • General Mycology Pl P 421/521

2
Zoospore
  • Microscopic
    (2-14 x 2-6 micron),
    uninucleate, unicellular,
    flagellated spore
    lacking a
    cell wall
  • Formed in a zoosporangium by a process involving
    mitosis and cytoplasmic cleavage
  • Zoospores do not feed, and rely on endogenous
    energy reserves

Catenaria zoospore, from George Barrons website
3
Zoospores
Olpidium zoospores/D. J. S. Barr
4
Flagella (sing. flagellum)
  • 0.25 microns wide, up to 50 microns long
  • Composed of a 9(2) 2 arrangement of
    microtubules enclosed in a plasma membrane

5
Flagella (sing. flagellum)
  • Attached to a kinetosome (basal body)
  • Flagellated centriole highly conserved structure
    composed of 9 triplets of microtubules arranged
    in a cartwheel manner
  • All zoospores have two kinetosomes, but if only
    one flagellum is formed, the second kinetosome is
    non-functional

6
Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote flagellum
Bacterial flagellum from www.arn.org
http//fig.cox.miami.edu/Faculty/Dana/flagellum.jp
g
7
Centriole
  • Nuclear-associated organelle (NAO) involved in
    nuclear divisioninvolved in formation of spindle
    fibers that separate chromosomes during division
  • All eukaryotes with a flagellated stage in their
    lifecycle have a pair of centrioles that
    replicate during cell division

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Flagella
  • One to many flagella depending on the taxonomic
    group
  • Two types of flagella
  • Whiplash
  • Smooth, usually directed backwards, propels the
    zoospore
  • Tinsel
  • With tripartite hairs (mastigonemes) directed
    forward, pulls the zoospore
  • May have only whiplash, whiplash tinsel, or
    only tinsel
  • Flagellum may be of unequal length ( heterokont)

10
Zoospore types from Dick, 2001. Straminipilous
Fungi
11
Zoospore ultrastructure
Plasma membrane
Lipid globules
microbodies
nucleus
ribosomes
Endoplasmic reticulum
Microtubules (cytoskeleton
mitochondria
Kinetosome and non-functioning kinetosome
flagellum
12
Motile Phase
  • Requires water
  • Free-swimming phase is influenced by
  • Endogenous energy reserves (lipids)
  • Environmental conditions

13
Encystment
  • Prior to germination, zoospores must
  • shed or retract flagella
  • Form a cell wall

14
Germination
  • Direct
  • Formation of germ tube
  • Indirect
  • Formation of another zoospore

15
Zoosporangium
  • A typically multinucleate structure that produces
    zoospores by a process call zoosporogenesis
  • Zoosporogenesis involves mitosis and cleavage of
    zoospores from zoosporangium cytoplasm
  • Zoospores release
  • Breakdown of zoosporangial wall
  • Opening of cap-like cover called operculum
  • Discharge papillae plugged with gelatinous
    material

16
Thallus Types
  • Holocarpic
  • Conversion of entire thallus into one
    (monocentric) or more (polycentric) zoosporangia
  • Eucarpic
  • Entire thallus not converted into zoosporangium,
    and other structures may be formed
  • Rhizomyceliumhyphal-like structures connecting
    sporangia, lack nuclei
  • Rhizoidsroot-like structures, lack nuclei
  • Mycelium

17
sporangium
rhizoids
Eucarpic thallus of Spizellomyces Photo by D. J.
S. Barr
18
Thallus types relative to substrate
  • Endobiotic
  • Thallus produced inside host or substrate
  • Epibiotic
  • Thallus produced outside host or substrate
    rhizoids anchor thallus to substrate

19
Zoosporic fungi
  • Kingdom Fungi
  • Phylum Chytridiomycota
  • Kingdom Straminipila
  • Phylum Oomycota
  • Phylum Hyphochytriomycota
  • Phylum Labyrinthulomycota
  • Protista
  • Phylum Plasmodiophoromycota
  • Phylum Myxomycota

20
Phylum Chytridiomycota
  • True Fungi based on
  • Chitinous walls
  • Flattened mitochondrial cristae
  • Lysine synthesis by the alpha aminioadipic acid
    (AAA) pathway characteristic of all true Fungi
    and some protists
  • compare to diaminopimelic acid pathway found in
    bacteria, plants, and some protists

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Classification
  • Two phyla, Blastocladiomycota and Chytridiomycota
  • 123 genera, 900 species in 5 orders
  • Chytridiales
  • Spizellomycetales
  • Monoblepharidales
  • Neocallimasticales
  • Blastocladiales

24
Thallus types
  • Chytridiales, Spizellomycetales and
    Neocallimasticales
  • Relatively simple thalli, holocarpic or eucarpic
    with rhizoids or rhizomycelium
  • Monoblepharidales
  • Filamentous thalli (mycelium)
  • Blastocladiales
  • Stalked thalli with rhizoids

25
Asexual Reproduction
  • Uniflagellate zoospores
  • One whiplash flagellum inserted in posterior part
    of zoospore
  • Zoospores formed in zoosporangia and are released
    through an operculum or discharge papilla

26
Zoospore release in Chytrium
Photos by D. J. S. Barr
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Sexual Reproduction
  • Plasmogamy can involve one of five different
    structures depending on species
  • Isogamous planogametes
  • Anisogamous planogametes
  • Nonmotile female gamete and motile male gamete
  • Gametangial copulation
  • Somatogamy

31
Sexual Reproduction
  • Plasmogamy and karyogamy results in formation of
    resting sporangium
  • Thickened, often pigmented and/or ornamented wall
  • Germination of resting sporangium occurs after
    meiosis by cleavage of cytoplasm into zoospores

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Order Spizellomycetales
  • Monocentric thalli
  • Blunt rhizoid tips (1-2 microns diam)
  • Inoperculate, multipapillate zoosporangia
  • Amoeboid-like zoospores
  • Mostly soil-inhabiting

34
Order Chytridiales
  • Monocentric or polycentric thalli
  • Slender rhizoid tips (lt 0.5 micron)
  • Inoperculate or operculate if inoperculate, then
    single or multipapillate
  • Regular-shaped zoospores
  • Mostly aquatic

35
Zoospore ultrastructure
Spizellomycetales
Chytridiales
Barr, 1990
36
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis
  • Responsible for decline of amphibian populations,
    particularly frogs, in six continents (Africa,
    South, Central and North America, Europe,
    Australia and Oceania)
  • First reported in 1993
  • Only member of Chytridiomycota to parasitize
    vertebrates

37
How does it kill amphibians?
  • Sporangia restricted to keratinized skin of adult
    frogs and keratinized mouth parts of tadpoles
  • Causes widespread, fatal epidermal infection only
    in adults
  • Epidermal hyperplasia that results may seriously
    impair cutaneous respiration and osmoregulation
  • Toxin production has not been demonstrated

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Order Neocallimasticales
  • Also spelled Neocallimastigales
  • Rumen fungifirst discovered in 1977
  • Obligately anaerobic chytrids that live in
    digestive tract of herbivores (ruminants and
    hind-gut fermenters
  • Some taxa produce polyflagellated zoospores
  • Zoospores lack mitochondria

40
Biology of rumen fungi
  • Zoospores encyst on plant material in rumen and
    intestine
  • Form thallus with well-developed rhizoidal system
    that penetrates plant material
  • Passed from mother to offspring, probably through
    licking or feces
  • No known sexual stage

41
Numbers represent hours after encystment
Life cycle animation
42
Thallus of rumen fungus
Thallus (zoosporangium) of rumen fungus
Polyflagellated zoospore
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Cow Facts
  • Each day, the average cow drinks 120 liters and
    eats 44 kilos (95 lb) of feed
  • The rumen has a volume of 100-150 liters
  • A cow produces 98-190 liters of saliva each day
  • A cow produces an average of 25 kilos (55 lbs) of
    manure/day

46
Phylum Blastocladiomycota
  • Zoospores with tightly organized organelles and
    characterized by nuclear cap
  • Most species are saprotrophs in soil, water, mud,
    plant and animal debris exceptions
  • Coelomomyces, is an obligate endoparasite of
    insects
  • Catenaria species parasitize small animals
  • Physoderma species are plant parasites
  • Separate gametophytic and sporophytic thalli in
    several genera, including Coelomomyces, Allomyces
    and Blastocladiella

47
ZOOSPORE ULTRASTRUCTURE
Nuclear cap
Blastocladiales
Monoblepharidales
48
Coelomomyces
  • Alternating sporophytic and gametophytic stages
    in mosquito larvae and copepod (fish lice) hosts,
    respectively
  • Wall-less hyphal bodies (hyphagens) formed in
    coelom of host

49
Life Cycle of Coelomomyces
Motile zygote encysts, infects mosquito larvae
Conjugation of gametes
Gametophytic thallus lacking cell wall forms in
copepod
Sporothallus develops in host, resting sporangia
formed
Zoospores (meiospores) infect copepod
Resting sporangia
Germination of resting spore
50
Coelomomyces resting spore
Photograph by CC López lastra, JJ García
51
Catenaria
  • Polycentric and eucarpic, with catenate
    zoosporangia and resting spores that are
    connected by rhizomycelium rhizoids present
  • Catenaria anguillulae is a parasite of nematodes,
    copepods and other small animals, but also grows
    in organic debris

52
Catenaria anguillulae
http//helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/catenar.ht
m
53
Allomyces
  • Branched thalli with marked bipolarity (basal
    rhizoids and apical sporangia)
  • Sexual reproduction by anisoplanogametes
  • Female gametes are hyaline and twice the size of
    the orange male gametes
  • Two different thalli are produced
  • Haploid gametophytes
  • Diploid sporophytes

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Top and bottom gametothallus orange male
gametangium, larger hyaline female gametangium
Sporothallus
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Rozella
  • Rozella spp. are holocarpic parasites of chytrids
    and oomycetes, grow inside host as a wall-less
    trophic form, until they produce resting spores
    or zoosporangia
  • May represent earliest diverging lineage of
    fungi lineage may also include Microsporidia

58
Olpidium
  • Currently placed in Spizellomycetales
  • Forms resting spores, zoosporangia in host cells
  • Includes Olpidium brassicae, vector of Lettuce
    Big Vein varicosavirus

www.biltek.tubitak.gov.tr
vegetablemdonline.ppath.cornell.edu
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