1 / 44

Phylum - Zygomycota

Phylum - Zygomycota. Kingdom Fungi. Zygomycota. Vegetative stage – well developed aseptate hyphae Asexual reproduction by nonmotile sporangiospores Sexual reproduction – Zygospore produced in a zygosporangium from fusion of two similar gametangia Ca. 800 spp. Zygomycota. Two classes:

granvillem
Download Presentation

Phylum - Zygomycota

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Phylum - Zygomycota Kingdom Fungi

  2. Zygomycota • Vegetative stage – well developed aseptate hyphae • Asexual reproduction by nonmotile sporangiospores • Sexual reproduction – Zygospore produced in a zygosporangium from fusion of two similar gametangia • Ca. 800 spp.

  3. Zygomycota • Two classes: • Zygomycetes – a polyphyletic class, the largest (665 spp) and best known class • Trichomycetes – smaller (135 spp), less well understood, are commensals on surface and in guts of arthropods

  4. Class - Zygomycetes • Zygospore production is generally similar among species, therefore classification is based on characteristics of asexual reproductive structures • Asexual reproduction is typically by production of sporangiospores, but we will see lines of evolution in which the number of spores/sporangium is reduced until there is only 1 spore/sporangium - conidium

  5. Class - Zygomycetes • Generally divided into 7 orders, we will discuss 3 • Mucorales – mainly saprotrophs, many to one sporangiospore/sporangium • Entomophthorales – mainly parasitic on arthropods, limited mycelium, one sporangiospore/sporangium • Glomales – obligate biotrophs, form arbuscuar mycorrhizae

  6. Class Zygomycetes • Other orders: • Kickxellales – produced septate hyphae and modified one spored sporangia • Dimargaritales – mycoparasites • Zoopagales – parasites of small animals (amoebae, rotifers & nematodes) and fungi including the lethal lollipop, Zoophagus) • Endogonales – saprotrophs

  7. Mucorales • Grow saprotrophically on decaying plant and animal remains in soils, dung, etc. • Produce large numbers of asexual spores that are dispersed in the air • Common contaminants in laboratory • Some are important in spoiling food – common bread mold, storage diseases of fruits and vegetables • Some infect humans and animals – opportunistic pathogens

  8. Mucorales • Typically form aseptate hyphae, septa formed to delimit reproductive structures • Some species form rhizoids

  9. Multispored sporangium • Morphology of sporangia varies, basis for classification • Typical multispored sporangium contains • Sporangium wall • Columella • sporangiophore

  10. Development of sporangium • Tip of sporangiophore swells • Swelling increases, contains multinucleate cytoplasm • Cytoplasm is cleaved to form all spores at one time – cell membrane and cell walls laid down around nuclei

  11. Development of sporangia • After formation, sporangial wall may break and release spores into the air or • A drop of fluid may envelop the sporangium with spores being dispersed by small animals that touch the sporangium

  12. Reduction of sporangium • Several lines of evolution in the reduction of number of spores/sporangium • Examples of modifications of sporangia • Thamnidium – both multispored sporangium and smaller sporangia = sporangiola

  13. Reduction of sporangia • Blakeslea – sporangiola with 3 spores/sporangiolum • Cunninghamella – one spore/sporangiolum, spore wall and sporangiolum wall indisdistinguishable except with EM

  14. Reduction of sporangia • One group in the Mucorales produce cylindrical sporangia = merosporangia • Also see a reduction in the number of spores/sporangium in this line • Syncephalastrum

  15. Other sporangial modifications • Pilobolus – fungal shotgun • Grows on herbivore dung • Sporangiophore contains carotenoids, acts as a lens to focus light and direct the growth of the sporangiophore to point the sporangium at light source

  16. Pilobolus • As the sporangium and sporangiophore mature, the sporangiophore builds up a very high turgor pressure • Sporangium as a whole is shot off suddenly, directly at the light – up to 3 m • A drop of fluid on the sporangium causes it to stick to whatever it hits • Phototrophic ability allows sporangium to be shot out of a pile of dung, land on grass, be eaten by herbivores

  17. Pilobolus • Passage through gut of herbivore activates spore germination • Sporangium is dark in color to prevent damage from UV when attached to grass

  18. Sexual reproduction • Involves fusion of two multinucleate gametangia that are similar in structure, may differ in size • Gametangia are produced as terminal swellings of hyphal branches • After plasmogamy – a thick walled zygospore is produced with a zygosporangium • Both homothallic and heterothallic species

  19. Life cycle • Vegetative mycelium is haploid, reproduces asexually by producing sporangiospores in sporangia • In a heterothallic species, when two compatible strains come together, hyphal branches form, enlarge to form progametangia

  20. Life cycle • Septa form, producing multinucleate gametangia and suspensors

  21. Life cycle • Plasmogamy occurs, end walls of gametangia dissolve and cytoplasm of gametangia mixes

  22. Formation of zygospore

  23. Life cycle • Zygospore forms inside zygosporangium • Zygospore develops thick wall, warty appearance, dark in color • Karyogamy occurs at different times in zygospore formation in different species, so zygospore is diploid at some point

  24. Life cycle • When zygospore germinates, meiosis occurs to start the haploid portion of the life cycle over again

  25. Life cycle

  26. Variation in zygospores • Some variation is seen in zygospore formation

  27. Entomophthorales • Arthropod parasites, 240 spp. • Asexual reproduction by one spored sporangiola (conidia) • Mycelium exhibits limited growth in the body of the host, forms septa and fragments • Entomophthora is a parasite of flies – seen when fly is stuck to window, white halo around it

  28. Entomophthora • Mycelium fills up body of fly, forms sporangiophores that extend out of segments of abdomen

  29. Entomophthora • Sporangiophore builds up pressure, shoots off sporangiolum when there is air movement (another fly) • If misses, can form another structure that shoots it off, up to 3 times • Sexual reproduction not well understood, form resting spores that are similar to zygospores

  30. Entomophthorales

  31. Basidiobolus • Another fungus that forcibly ejects its sporangiolum • Grows on a variety of substrates including frog and beetle dung • Sporangiola may be eaten by beetles, which may then be eaten by frog and then grows in dung

  32. Glomales • Obligate biotrophs • Biotrophic in the roots of higher plants, form arbuscular mycorrhizae • Ca 90 spp. • Now placed in a separate phylum by some – the Glomeromycota

  33. Glomerales • Form tree-like structures = arbuscules in cells of plant – exchange of nutrients between fungus and plant • Form large spores in soil – zygospores, azygospores, and chlamydospores depending on species

  34. Glomales • Azygospores • Chlamydospores

  35. Phylogenetic relationships

  36. Trichomycetes • Second class in Zygomycota • Small class, contains 3 orders • All but a few species are obligate commensals in guts or on exoskeleton of arthropods • Found in freshwater (mayfly, stonefly, midges) and terrestrial (millipedes)

  37. Trichomycetes • Thallus is relatively simple – produce a holdfast that anchors them to lining of gut

  38. Trichomycetes • Thallus may be unbranched and aseptate or branched and septate • Variety of asexual spores produced (generally 1 spore/sporangium)

  39. Trichomycetes • Sexual reproduction involves formation of zygospores (in one order) • Fusion of cells in thallus • Formation of zygosporophore and then zygospore

  40. “Lower fungi” • Major groups of lower fungi – Chytridiomycota, Zygomycota, (Oomycota) • Exhibit diversity in vegetative thallus, asexual and sexual reproduction • Mycelium when present is typically aseptate • Used to be placed in one class = “Phycomycetes” – now clear that they do not share a common phylogeny

  41. “Lower fungi” • Asexual reproduction – spores produced inside a sporangium – sporangiospores • In Chytridiomycota and Oomycota, zoospores produced • Transition from multispored sporangia to conidia in both the Oomycota and Zygomycota

  42. Review • Kingdom – Protoctista • Phylum – Dictyosteliomycota - pseudoplasmodium • Phylum – Myxomycota - plasmodium • Kingdom – Stramenopila • Phylum – Oomycota – biflagellate zoospores, oospores • Order – Saprolegniales • Order – Pythiales • Order - Peronosporales

  43. Review • Kingdom – Fungi • Phylum – Chytridiomycota – posterior flagellated zoospore • Order – Chytridiales • Order – Blastocladiales • Phylum – Zygomycota - zygospore • Class Zygomycetes • Order – Mucorales - saprotrophs • Order – Entomophthorales – parasites of arthropods • Order – Glomales – arbuscular mycorrhizae • Class Trichomycetes – commensals in arthropods

  44. Reproduction • Asexual - Sporangia – produce sporangiospores, in some zoospores • Sexual Life cycles • Haploid life cycles – Zygomycota produce zygospore, isogametangia • Diploid life cycles – Oomycota produce oospore, oogonia and antheridia • Haploid – Diploid life cycles – Allomyces, Myxomycota

More Related