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Beveled Slide Style

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Title: Beveled Slide Style Author: Nan Shastry Last modified by: emad Created Date: 6/5/2006 7:52:32 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Beveled Slide Style


1
INTRODUCTION TO MYCOLOGY
By
Dr. Emad AbdElhameed Morad
Lecturer of Medical Microbiology and Immunology
2
  • Fungi are eukaryotic organisms.
  • Their cell wall consists of chitin.
  • Their cell membrane contains ergosterol.

Eukaryotes (Fungi) Prokaryotes (Bacteria)
10-100 um 0.1-10 um
Nuclear membrane No nuclear membrane
multiple Single chromosome
Histones No histones
Mitotic division Binary fission
Organelles No organelles
Chitin Peptidoglycan
Ergosterol No ergosterol
80 S ribosomes 70 S ribosomes
3
  • Classification

4
Morphological
Clinical
Systematic
5
Fungal morphology
Yeast
Mold
Dimorphic
6
  • Oval or round cells that reproduce by budding to
    form blastospores.
  • May form pseudohyphae (if blastospores remain
    attached to each other).
  • Examples Candida, Cryptococcus.

Yeasts
7
Budding yeast cells
Pseudohyphae
8
  • Also called filamentous fungi or mycelial fungi.
  • Formed of filaments called hyphae.
  • Hyphae interlace to form mycelium.
  • Hyphae on culture plate are two types vegetative
    hyphae for absorbing nutrients and aerial hyphae
    that carry conidia.
  • Hyphae may be septate or aseptate.
  • Reproduce by formation of conidia.
  • Conidia may be unicellular (microconidia) or
    multicellular (macroconidia).
  • Examples are dermatophytes aspergillus.

Molds
9

Hyphae
Mycelium
Microconidia
Macroconidia
10
  • These fungi occur in two forms
  • At the room temperature (22 degree), it appears
    as mold.
  • In the body (37 degree), it appears as yeast
    cells.
  • Examples Histoplasma Blastomyces.

Dimorphic fungi
At 22 degree
At 37 degree
11
Clinical classification
Superficial mycoses
Cutaneous mycoses
Subcutaneous mycoses
Systemic mycoses
Opportunistic mycoses
Allergy mycetismus mycotoxicosis
12
  • Fungal infections confined to the stratum corneum
    without tissue invasion.
  • Example Tinea versicolor caused by Malassezia
    furfur.

Superficial mycoses
13
  • Fungal infections that involve keratinized
    tissues as skin, hair, nail.
  • Example Tinea caused by dermatophytes.

Cutaneous mycoses
14
  • Fungal infections that are confined to
    subcutaneous tissues without dissemination to
    distant sites.
  • Example mycetoma (madura foot).

Subcutaneous mycoses
15
  • Also called endemic mycoses.
  • Begin as primary pulmonary lesions that may
    disseminate to any organ.
  • Caused by dimorphic fungi.

Systemic mycoses
16
  • Affect immunocompromised individuals
  • Examples are
  • Candidiasis caused by Candida albicans.
  • Cryptococcosis caused by Cryptococcus
    neoformans.
  • Aspergillosis caused by aspergillus fungus.
  • Pneumocystis pneumonia caused by pneumocystis
    jiroveci in AIDS patients.

Opportunistic mycoses
17
  • Allergy occurs to fungal spores particularly
    those of aspergillus fungus.
  • Example bronchial asthma.
  • The fungal flesh itself is toxic.
  • Example Amanita mushroom poisoning.

Allergy
Mycetismus
18
  • Aflatoxins produced by Aspergillus flavus which
    infects grains and peanuts. This toxin is
    hepatotoxic and cause tumors in animals and
    suspected of causing hepatic carcinoma in humans.
  • Ergotism which is caused by the mold Claviceps
    purpura. This mold infects grains and produce
    alkaloids (ergotamine and LSD) that cause
    neurological effects.

Mycotoxicosis
19
  • It is based on the type of fungal spores
  • Sexual spores
  • Asexual spores

Systematic classification
20
Sexual spores
  • Zygospores
  • Fungi forming zygospores are called zygomycetes.
  • Ascospores
  • Ascospores are carried in ascus.
  • Fungi forming ascospores are called ascomycetes.
  • Basidiospores
  • Basidiospores are carried on basidium.
  • Fungi forming basidiospores are called
    basidiomycetes.

Deuteromycetes are fungi whose sexual spores are
unknown. But, they produce asexual spores.
21
Zygospores
Ascospores
Basidiospores
22
Asexual spores
  • Blastospores
  • Produced by budding of the yeast cells.
  • Conidia
  • Produced by molds.
  • May be microconidia or macroconidia.
  • Arthrospores
  • Produced by fragmentation of hyphae.
  • Chlamydospores
  • Rounded thick walled spores produced by candida
    fungus.
  • Sporangiospores
  • Spores formed within a sac called sporangium.
    Formed by zygomycetes.

23
Blastospores
Microconidia
Macroconidia
Arthrospores
Chlamydospores
Sporangiospores
24
Laboratory diagnosis of fungal infections
25
  • Specimen
  • According to the site of infection.
  • For example, skin scales, nails, hair clippings
    for dermatophyte examination.
  • Microscopic examination of these specimens using
    KOH 10
  • KOH dissolves keratin but does not affect fungi.
    Branching hyphae are detected among epithelial
    cells.
  • Fungal stains such as lactophenol cotton blue
    could be used.

26
  • Culture

27
  • Identification of the isolated fungus on culture
    is done by
  • For molds identification is done by

Microscopic examination
Macroscopic examination
Slide culture to study morphology of conidia
Colony morphology color on surface and
reverse
28
  • For yeasts identification is done by

Biochemical reactions
Microscopic examination
Oval budding Gram Ve yeast cells.
29

GOOD LUCK
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