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We are fun-guys!

We are fun-guys!. There’s fungus among us!. Fungi are diverse and widespread 100,000 described species Really as many as 1.5 MILLION? Honey mushroom - 2000 years old, 1,800 football fields (underground) or a yeast cell Essential in ecosystem nutrient recycling Mycology.

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We are fun-guys!

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  1. We are fun-guys!

  2. There’s fungus among us! • Fungi are diverse and widespread • 100,000 described species • Really as many as 1.5 MILLION? • Honey mushroom - 2000 years old, 1,800 football fields (underground) or a yeast cell • Essential in ecosystem nutrient recycling • Mycology

  3. There’s fungus among us!

  4. Fungi are heterotrophs that feed by absorption • Despite their diversity, fungi share key traits, most importantly the way in which they derive nutrition

  5. Nutrition and Ecology • Fungi are heterotrophs and absorb nutrients from outside of their body • Fungi use enzymes to break down a large variety of complex molecules into smaller organic compounds • The versatility of these enzymes contributes to fungi’s ecological success

  6. Fungi exhibit diverse lifestyles: • Decomposers • Parasites • Mutualists

  7. Body Structure • The most common body structures are multicellular filaments and single cells (yeasts) • Some species grow as either filaments or yeasts; others grow as both Animation: Fungal Reproduction and Nutrition

  8. Fungal Morphology • The morphology of multicellular fungi enhances their ability to absorb nutrients • Fungi consist of mycelia, networks of branched hyphae adapted for absorption • Most fungi have cell walls made of chitin

  9. Fig. 31-2 Reproductive structure Hyphae Spore-producing structures 20 µm Mycelium

  10. Specialized Hyphae in Mycorrhizal Fungi • Some unique fungi have specialized hyphae called haustoria that allow them to penetrate the tissues of their host

  11. Fig. 31-4 Hyphae Nematode 25 µm ascomycete (a) Hyphae adapted for trapping and killing prey Plant cell wall Fungal hypha Plant cell Plant cell plasma membrane Haustorium (b) Haustoria

  12. Fig. 31-4a Hyphae 25 µm Nematode (a) Hyphae adapted for trapping and killing prey Lasso sequence at 3 minutes

  13. Morgellons Disease?

  14. Fig. 31-4b Plant cell wall Fungal hypha Plant cell Plant cell plasma membrane Haustorium (b) Haustoria

  15. Mycorrhizae are mutually beneficial relationships between fungi and plant roots • Two types:

  16. Mycorrhizae are mutually beneficial relationships between fungi and plant roots • Ectomycorrhizal fungi form sheaths of hyphae over a root and also grow into the extracellular spaces of the root cortex • Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi extend hyphae through the cell walls of root cells and into tubes formed by invagination of the root cell membrane

  17. Fungi produce spores through sexual or asexual life cycles • Fungi propagate themselves by producing vast numbers of spores, either sexually or asexually • Fungi have different types of life cycles

  18. Fig. 31-5-1 Key Haploid (n) Heterokaryotic (unfused nuclei from different parents) Diploid (2n) Spore-producing structures Spores ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Mycelium GERMINATION

  19. Fig. 31-5-2 Key Heterokaryotic stage Haploid (n) Heterokaryotic (unfused nuclei from different parents) PLASMOGAMY (fusion of cytoplasm) Diploid (2n) KARYOGAMY (fusion of nuclei) Spore-producing structures Zygote SEXUAL REPRODUCTION Spores ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Mycelium GERMINATION

  20. Fig. 31-5-3 Key Heterokaryotic stage Haploid (n) Heterokaryotic (unfused nuclei from different parents) PLASMOGAMY (fusion of cytoplasm) Diploid (2n) KARYOGAMY (fusion of nuclei) Spore-producing structures Zygote SEXUAL REPRODUCTION Spores ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Mycelium MEIOSIS GERMINATION GERMINATION Spores

  21. Sexual Reproduction • Fungal nuclei are normally haploid, with the exception of transient diploid stages formed during the sexual life cycles • Sexual reproduction requires the fusion of hyphae from different mating types (“sexes”) • Fungi use sexual signaling molecules called pheromones to communicate their mating type (like many animals including primates!)

  22. Plasmogamy is the union of two parent mycelia • In most fungi, the haploid nuclei from each parent do not fuse right away; they coexist in the mycelium, called a heterokaryon • The different nuclei may even swap DNA similar to “crossing over”.

  23. Hours, days, or even centuries may pass before the occurrence of karyogamy, nuclear fusion (kary = nucleus) • During karyogamy, the haploid nuclei fuse, producing diploid cells • The diploid phase is short and undergoes meiosis (halving!), producing haploid spores

  24. Asexual Reproduction • In addition to sexual reproduction, many fungi can reproduce asexually • Molds produce haploid spores by mitosis and form visible mycelia

  25. Fig. 31-6 2.5 µm

  26. Other fungi that can reproduce asexually are yeasts, which inhabit moist environments • Instead of producing spores, yeasts reproduce asexually by simple cell division and the pinching of “bud cells” from a parent cell

  27. Fig. 31-7 10 µm Parent cell Bud Sacchromyces cervisiae

  28. Many molds and yeasts have no known sexual stage

  29. The ancestor of fungi was an aquatic, single-celled, flagellated protist • Fungi and animals are more closely related to each other than they are to plants or other eukaryotes

  30. The Origin of Fungi • Fungi, animals, and their protistan relatives form the opisthokonts clade

  31. Fig. 31-8 Animals (and their close protistan relatives) UNICELLULAR, FLAGELLATED ANCESTOR Nucleariids Opisthokonts Chytrids Fungi Other fungi

  32. The oldest undisputed fossils of fungi are only about 460 million years old

  33. The Move to Land • Fungi were among the earliest colonizers of land and probably formed mutualistic relationships with early land plants

  34. Fig. 31-11 Hyphae 25 µm Chytrids (1,000 species) Zygomycetes (1,000 species) Fungal hypha Glomeromycetes (160 species) Ascomycetes (65,000 species) Basidiomycetes (30,000 species)

  35. Fig. 31-11a Hyphae 25 µm Chytrids (1,000 species)

  36. Chytrids • Chytrids (phylum Chytridiomycota) are found in freshwater and terrestrial habitats • They can be decomposers, parasites, or mutualists • Molecular evidence supports the hypothesis that chytrids diverged early in fungal evolution • Chytrids are unique among fungi in having flagellated spores, called zoospores Video: Allomyces Zoospore Release Video: Phlyctochytrium Zoospore Release

  37. Fig. 31-UN1 Chytrids Zygomycetes Glomeromycetes Ascomycetes Basidiomycetes

  38. Fig. 31-12 Flagellum 4 µm

  39. Until recently, systematists thought that fungi lost flagella only once in their evolutionary history • Molecular data indicate that some “chytrids” are actually more closely related to another fungal group, the zygomycetes; chytrids are a paraphyletic group

  40. Fig. 31-11b Zygomycetes (1,000 species)

  41. Zygomycetes • The zygomycetes (phylum Zygomycota) exhibit great diversity of life histories • They include fast-growing molds, parasites, and commensal symbionts • The zygomycetes are named for their sexually produced zygosporangia • Zygosporangia, which are resistant to freezing and drying, can survive unfavorable conditions

  42. Fig. 31-UN2 Chytrids Zygomycetes Glomeromycetes Ascomycetes Basidiomycetes

  43. The life cycle of black bread mold (Rhizopus stolonifer) is fairly typical of the phylum

  44. Some zygomycetes, such as Pilobolus, can actually “aim” their sporangia toward conditions associated with good food sources • Toward light = grass = cows = dispersal! • 25m/sec = 1,million times its length/sec. • Fastest aerial acceleration in nature

  45. Fig. 31-14 Fungus Cannon! 0.5 mm

  46. Fig. 31-11c Fungal hypha Glomeromycetes (160 species)

  47. Glomeromycetes • The glomeromycetes (phylum Glomeromycota) were once considered zygomycetes • They are now classified in a separate clade • Glomeromycetes form arbuscular mycorrhizae

  48. Fig. 31-UN3 Chytrids Zygomycetes Glomeromycetes Ascomycetes Basidiomycetes

  49. Fig. 31-15 Branched hyphae inside root cell (cleared) 2.5 µm

  50. Fig. 31-11d Ascomycetes (65,000 species)

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