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Ascomycota (continued) MIKROSKOPIK YEAST, RAGI, KHAMIR… DLL KULIAH 7

Ascomycota (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

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KULIAH 7. Ascomycota (continued) MIKROSKOPIK. YEAST, RAGI, KHAMIR… DLL. PEMBAGIAN ASCOMYCOTA. Class 1: Laboulbeniomycetes parasitic attachments to arthropods. Class 2: Protoascomycetes lack of ascogenous hyphae and ascomata . Class 3: Euascomycetes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Ascomycota (continued)

MIKROSKOPIK

YEAST, RAGI, KHAMIR… DLL

KULIAH 7

Page 2: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

PEMBAGIAN ASCOMYCOTA

Class 1: Laboulbeniomycetesparasitic attachments to arthropods.

Class 2: Protoascomyceteslack of ascogenous hyphae and ascomata.

Class 3: Euascomycetesmost of the fungi which form ascomata. The orders are separated on the structure of the ascus and the manner of ascus opening.

Page 3: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

From Spatafora et al. 2006. A five-gene phylogeny of Pezizomycotina. Mycologia 98: 1018-1028

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Filamentous ascomycetes

Sacccharomycetales

Archiascomycetes

Basidiomycetes

Characterized by DNA sequence analysis

Ascocarps; ascogenous hyphae; specialized ascus tip; conidia; Woronin bodies

Absence of ascogenous hyphae and ascocarps; most asci without specialized tips

Classification from Alexopoulos et al. 1996

Page 5: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

RAGI

Ascomycetous yeastsCharacterized by absence of ascogenous hyphae and ascocarpsAsci mostly prototunicateOccur in slime fluxes, nectar, fresh or decaying fruit—able to grow in high osmotic conditions (high sugar content)Others occur in soil, dung, water, digestive tracts of animalsMany species are symbiotic with insects

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Schizosaccharomyces

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Saccharaomyces

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Somatic structures

Yeast A single-celled fungus

that reproduces by budding (or fission)

Pseudomycelium Series of cells

adhering after budding

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Budding

Bipolar Multilateral

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Asexual reproduction

ConidiaArthrospores

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plasmogamy

copulation

karyogamy

budding

2n somatic cells

meiosis

Mature ascus

1n somatic cells

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Identification

Microscopic appearance Unicellular or budding Size & shape of yeast cells Multilateral or bipolar budding Form, structure and mode of ascus formation Ascospore shape

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Identification

Physiological tests—91 different tests Ferment different sugars Assimilation tests (carbon and nitrogen

source) Vitamin requirements Growth at 37C Growth in cyclohexamide Hydrolyse urea Form acid

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Importance

BrewingBakingFood productionIndustrial applicationsModel systems (S. cerevisiae)ProbioticsAnimal pathogens

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MICROSCOPIC (NON-YEAST)

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From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II

Ascospore by D. Geiser

•Aspergillus anamorph•Cleistothecia yellow to orange-red•Wall composed of single layer of flattened cells• Ascospores flattened, usually with equatorial groove.

Eurotium

Page 17: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Aspergillus anamorphCleistothecial wall surrounded by hülle cellsAscospores small, colored, lens-shaped with flange

From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II

Emericella

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Emericella

Hülle cells, D. Geiser

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Anamorphs--Aspergillus

SEM by Charles Mims

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Penicillium anamorphCleisothecia hard, white becoming colored (yellow, orange, brown)Ascospores small, hyaline or yellowish, lens-shaped

From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II

Eupenicillium

Page 21: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Image by David Geiser

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Anamorphs--Penicillium

phialides

Branches (metulae)

Page 23: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

From Hanlin, 1998. Illustrated Genera of Ascomycetes Vol II

TalaromycesPaecilomyces or Penicillium anamorphCleistothecium whitish to bright yellowWall composed of interwoven hyphaeAscospores ellipsoidal, with spiny walls

Page 24: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Anamorphs--Paecilomyces

Divergent phialides with swollen base and long, tapering neck

Colonies may be pink, purple, yellow, brown or white, but never green as in Penicillium spp.

Page 25: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

The good and the bad

Penicillium spp.—antibiotic productionPenicillium roqueforti—blue cheesePenicillium spp.—blue and green molds on bread, cheese, fruits, vegetablesAspergillus flavus—aflatoxins (moldy peanuts)A. flavus/A. niger--aspergillosis

Page 26: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK
Page 27: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

PenicillinPenicillium notatum growing in Alexander Fleming’s Petri dish of Staphylococcus in 1928 led to the discovery of penicillinHoward Florey & Ernest Chain (1939) began work on purification and trials1941—work moved to US (NRRL in Peoria, IL) to escape bombing in London (WWII)

Fermentation vessels and corn steep liquor Mary Hunt (“Moldy Mary”) brought in P. chyrogenum

on a melon1945—Fleming, Florey & Chain received Noble Prize

Page 28: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Penicillium notatum

Penicillin prevents cross-linking of small peptide chains in peptidoglycan, the main wall polymer in bacteria. Newly formed cells are abnormal in shape and susceptible to osmotic lysis.

Page 29: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Fungal taxon/group Est. # species # known metabolites

Aspergillus, Eurotium, Emericella 200 525

Penicillium, Talaromyces, Eupenicillium 200 380

Trichoderma, Hypocrea 20 54

Cephalosporium-like hyphomycetes 140 116

Mucor, Rhizopus, Phycomyces 70 26

Oomycetes, Chytridiomycota 450 3

Yeasts 600 50

Basidiomycetes 30,000 300

Page 30: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

POWDERY MILDEW

Biotrophs of vascular plants Biotroph: an obligate parasite growing on another

living organism21 genera, 437 species infecting > 40,000 species of plants (mostly dicots)Most species are host specific, a few are omnivorous, infecting hundreds of host species

Page 31: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Powdery Mildew Symptoms

Photo by Claudia Nitschwitz

Page 32: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

CharacteristicsMycelium is mostly superficial

Anchored to host epidermis by appressoriaNutrients obtained via haustoria

Haustoria are intracellular structuresOverwinter as mycelium in infected buds or as ascomataAsexual reproduction via conidiaSexual reproduction via ascospores formed in cleistothecia

Page 33: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Asexual reproduction

Erect, hyaline conidiophores are usually formed on superficial mycelium;One-celled, hyaline thin-walled conidia are produced holoblastically in basipetal chainsOne colony can produce > 30,000 conidia

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Conidia

Wind-dispersedGermination can occur at low relative humidityGermination involves germ tube, appressorium and penetration peg formationApex of penetration peg enlarges to form haustorium

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From APSnet.org

Page 36: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Plant cell wallPlasma membrane

Host cytoplasm

Plasma membrane

haustorium

appressorium

Penetration peg

fungus

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Microsphaera alni anamorph on Vaccinium

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Sexual reproduction

Cleistothecia formed on superficial mycelium in late summer/early fallAsci Formed in basal layer Globose to pyriform Discharge of spore by rupture of ascus tip

Page 39: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Asci/Ascospores

One to numerous asci/cleistotheciumAscospores hyaline, one-celled, ovoid1-8 ascospores/ascusNumber of asci/cleistothecium is important character in identification

Page 40: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

From APSnet.org

Page 41: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Identification

Anamorph typeNumber of asci/ascocarpCleistothecial appendages Mycelioid Rigid

Spear-like with inflated baseWith curled tipsWith dichotomously branched tips

Page 42: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Microsphaera alni cleistothecia

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Sawadaea bicornis cleistothecia

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Sawadaea bicornis cleistothecial appendages

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Mycelioid AppendagesSeveral asci/ascocarp:

Eryisiphe (100 spp)Oidium anamorph

One ascus/ascocarp: Sphaerotheca (50 spp.)

Appendages with curled tipsOidium anamorph

Page 46: Ascomycota  (continued) MIKROSKOPIK

Dichotomously branched appendage tips

One ascus/ascocarp: Podosphaera (12 spp.)

Oidium anamorph

Several asci/ascocarp:

Sawadaea (6 spp.)Oidium anamorph

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Spear-like appendages--Phyllactinia

Ovulariopsis and Streptopodium anamorphs

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Appendages with curled tips

Uncinula (81 spp) Oidium anamorph Several asci/ascocarp