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Chapter 29: The Fungi

Characteristics of Fungi

  • Fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs that secrete digestive enzymes onto their food source and then absorb the predigested food.

  • Fungi are characterized by cell walls that contain chitin.

  • A fungus may be a unicellular yeast or a filamentous, multicellular mold.

    • The body of most multicellular fungi consists of long, threadlike filaments called hyphae that branch and form a tangled mass called a mycelium.

  • In most fungi perforated septa, or cross walls, divide the hyphae into individual cells.

    • In some fungi the hyphae are coenocytes that form an elongated, multinuclear cell.

Fungal Reproduction

  • Most fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually by means of spores.

    • Spores are produced on aerial hyphae.

    • When fungal spores land in a suitable spot, they germinate.

  • When fungi of two different mating types meet, their hyphae fuse, a process called plasmogamy.

    • The cytoplasm fuses, but the nuclei remain separate.

    • The fungi enter a dikaryotic (n + n) stage in which each new cell formed has one nucleus of each type.

  • Karyogamy, fusion of the nuclei, takes place in the hyphal tip and results in a diploid (2n) zygote nucleus.

  • Meiosis produces four genetically different haploid (n) nuclei.

    • Each nucleus becomes part of a spore.

    • When the spores germinate, they form new mycelia by mitosis.

  • Genetically similar asexual spores are produced by mitosis.

    • When these spores germinate, they also develop into mycelia.

Fungal Diversity

  • Like animals, some fungi have flagellate cells—for example, chytrid gametes and spores—and the flagellate cells propel themselves with a single posterior flagellum.

    • Also like animal cells, fungal mitochondria have platelike cristae.

  • Based on chemical and structural characters, fungi are classified, along with animals and choanoflagellates, as opisthokonts.

  • Chytrids, or chytridiomycetes, produce flagellate spores at some stage in their life cycle.

    • No other fungi have flagella.

    • Thus, chytrids probably were the earliest fungi to evolve; the most recent common ancestor of all fungi was a flagellate protist.

  • Chytrids reproduce both asexually and sexually.

    • Their gametes and zoospores are flagellate.

    • Allomyces, a common chytrid, spends part of its life as a multicellular haploid thallus and part as a multicellular diploid thallus.

    • The haploid thallus produces two types of flagellate gametes that fuse.

    • Both plasmogamy and karyogamy occur, producing a flagellate zygote.

    • The diploid thallus bears zoosporangia that produce diploid zoospores and resting sporangia in which haploid zoospores form by meiosis.

    • The haploid zoospores form new haploid thalli.

  • Zygomycetes, such as the black bread mold, Rhizopus, form a haploid thallus that produces both asexual spores and sexual spores.

    • Asexual spores germinate and form new thalli.

    • In sexual reproduction hyphae of two different haploid mating types form gametangia.

    • Plasmogamy occurs as the gametangia fuse.

    • Karyogamy occurs, and a diploid zygote is formed; the zygote develops into a zygospore.

    • Meiosis produces recombinant haploid zygospores.

    • When zygospores germinate, each hypha develops a sporangium at its tip.

    • Spores are released and develop into new hyphae.

  • Microsporidia, currently classified as zygomycetes, are opportunistic pathogens that penetrate and infect animal cells with their long, threadlike polar tubes

  • Glomeromycetes have coenocytic hyphae.

    • They reproduce asexually with large, multinucleate spores called blastospores.

    • Glomeromycetes are symbionts that form intracellular associations called mycorrhizae with the roots of plants.

    • Because they extend their hyphae into root cells, glomeromycetes are endomycorrhizal fungi.

    • The most common endomycorrhizae are called arbuscular mycorrhizae because the hyphae inside the root cells form branched, tree-shaped structures known as arbuscules.

  • Ascomycetes include yeasts, cup fungi, morels, truffles, and blue-green, pink, and brown molds.

    • Some ascomycetes form mycorrhizae; others form lichens.

    • Ascomycetes produce asexual spores called conidia; they produce sexual spores called ascospores in saclike asci.

    • The asci line a fruiting body called an ascocarp.

  • In ascomycetes haploid mycelia of opposite mating types produce septate hyphae.

    • Plasmogamy occurs, and nuclei are exchanged.

    • A dikaryotic (n + n) stage occurs in which hyphae form and produce asci and an ascocarp.

    • Karyogamy occurs, followed by meiosis.

    • The recombinant nuclei divide by mitosis, producing eight haploid nuclei that develop into ascospores.

    • When the ascospores germinate, they can form new mycelia.

  • Basidiomycetes include mushrooms, puffballs, bracket fungi, rusts, and smuts.

  • These fungi produce sexual spores called basidiospores on the outside of a basidium.

    • Basidia develop on the surface of gills in mushrooms; mushrooms are a type of basidiocarp (a fruiting body).

  • Hyphae in the basidiomycetes have septa. plasmogamy occurs with the fusion of two hyphae of different mating types.

    • A dikaryotic secondary mycelium forms.

    • Then a basidiocarp develops, and basidia form.

    • Karyogamy occurs, producing a diploid zygote nucleus.

    • Meiosis produces four haploid nuclei that become basidiospores.

    • When basidiospores germinate, they form haploid primary mycelia.

Ecological Importance of Fungi

  • Most fungi are decomposers that break down organic compounds in dead organisms, leaves, garbage, and wastes into simpler nutrients that can be recycled.

  • Mycorrhizae are mutualistic associations between fungi and the roots of plants.

    • The fungus supplies water and nutrient minerals to the plant, and the fungus obtains organic compounds from the plant.

    • Glomeromycetes form endomycorrhizae with roots.

    • Some ascomycetes and basidiomycetes are ectomycorrhizal fungi that form mycorrhizae when their hyphae coat tree roots, but do not penetrate the root cells.

  • A lichen is a combination of a fungus and a photoautotroph (an alga or cyanobacterium).

    • In this symbiotic relationship, the photoautotroph provides the fungus with organic compounds.

    • The fungus may provide the photoautotroph with shelter, water, and minerals.

    • Lichens have three main forms: crustose, foliose, and fruticose.

Economic, Biological, and Medical Impact of Fungi

  • Fungi cause huge economic losses by damaging food and crops.

    • On the other hand, some fungi, like mushrooms, are foods; others, like yeasts, are used to produce beer, wine, and bread; and still others are used to produce cheeses or industrial chemicals.

  • Biologists use the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and other fungi as model organisms for research in molecular biology and genetics.

    • Fungi are also being investigated for the biological control of insects.

  • Fungi are used to make many medications, including penicillin and other antibiotics; they are used in bioremediation and to control pests biologically.

  • Fungi are opportunistic pathogens in humans.

    • They cause human diseases, such as histoplasmosis; some fungi produce mycotoxins, such as aflatoxins, which can cause liver damage and cancer.

  • Fungal hyphae infect plants through stomata.

    • Hyphal branches called haustoria penetrate plant cells and obtain nourishment from the cytoplasm.

    • Fungi cause many important plant diseases, including brown rot, corn smut, and wheat rust.

Chapter 29: The Fungi

Characteristics of Fungi

  • Fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs that secrete digestive enzymes onto their food source and then absorb the predigested food.

  • Fungi are characterized by cell walls that contain chitin.

  • A fungus may be a unicellular yeast or a filamentous, multicellular mold.

    • The body of most multicellular fungi consists of long, threadlike filaments called hyphae that branch and form a tangled mass called a mycelium.

  • In most fungi perforated septa, or cross walls, divide the hyphae into individual cells.

    • In some fungi the hyphae are coenocytes that form an elongated, multinuclear cell.

Fungal Reproduction

  • Most fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually by means of spores.

    • Spores are produced on aerial hyphae.

    • When fungal spores land in a suitable spot, they germinate.

  • When fungi of two different mating types meet, their hyphae fuse, a process called plasmogamy.

    • The cytoplasm fuses, but the nuclei remain separate.

    • The fungi enter a dikaryotic (n + n) stage in which each new cell formed has one nucleus of each type.

  • Karyogamy, fusion of the nuclei, takes place in the hyphal tip and results in a diploid (2n) zygote nucleus.

  • Meiosis produces four genetically different haploid (n) nuclei.

    • Each nucleus becomes part of a spore.

    • When the spores germinate, they form new mycelia by mitosis.

  • Genetically similar asexual spores are produced by mitosis.

    • When these spores germinate, they also develop into mycelia.

Fungal Diversity

  • Like animals, some fungi have flagellate cells—for example, chytrid gametes and spores—and the flagellate cells propel themselves with a single posterior flagellum.

    • Also like animal cells, fungal mitochondria have platelike cristae.

  • Based on chemical and structural characters, fungi are classified, along with animals and choanoflagellates, as opisthokonts.

  • Chytrids, or chytridiomycetes, produce flagellate spores at some stage in their life cycle.

    • No other fungi have flagella.

    • Thus, chytrids probably were the earliest fungi to evolve; the most recent common ancestor of all fungi was a flagellate protist.

  • Chytrids reproduce both asexually and sexually.

    • Their gametes and zoospores are flagellate.

    • Allomyces, a common chytrid, spends part of its life as a multicellular haploid thallus and part as a multicellular diploid thallus.

    • The haploid thallus produces two types of flagellate gametes that fuse.

    • Both plasmogamy and karyogamy occur, producing a flagellate zygote.

    • The diploid thallus bears zoosporangia that produce diploid zoospores and resting sporangia in which haploid zoospores form by meiosis.

    • The haploid zoospores form new haploid thalli.

  • Zygomycetes, such as the black bread mold, Rhizopus, form a haploid thallus that produces both asexual spores and sexual spores.

    • Asexual spores germinate and form new thalli.

    • In sexual reproduction hyphae of two different haploid mating types form gametangia.

    • Plasmogamy occurs as the gametangia fuse.

    • Karyogamy occurs, and a diploid zygote is formed; the zygote develops into a zygospore.

    • Meiosis produces recombinant haploid zygospores.

    • When zygospores germinate, each hypha develops a sporangium at its tip.

    • Spores are released and develop into new hyphae.

  • Microsporidia, currently classified as zygomycetes, are opportunistic pathogens that penetrate and infect animal cells with their long, threadlike polar tubes

  • Glomeromycetes have coenocytic hyphae.

    • They reproduce asexually with large, multinucleate spores called blastospores.

    • Glomeromycetes are symbionts that form intracellular associations called mycorrhizae with the roots of plants.

    • Because they extend their hyphae into root cells, glomeromycetes are endomycorrhizal fungi.

    • The most common endomycorrhizae are called arbuscular mycorrhizae because the hyphae inside the root cells form branched, tree-shaped structures known as arbuscules.

  • Ascomycetes include yeasts, cup fungi, morels, truffles, and blue-green, pink, and brown molds.

    • Some ascomycetes form mycorrhizae; others form lichens.

    • Ascomycetes produce asexual spores called conidia; they produce sexual spores called ascospores in saclike asci.

    • The asci line a fruiting body called an ascocarp.

  • In ascomycetes haploid mycelia of opposite mating types produce septate hyphae.

    • Plasmogamy occurs, and nuclei are exchanged.

    • A dikaryotic (n + n) stage occurs in which hyphae form and produce asci and an ascocarp.

    • Karyogamy occurs, followed by meiosis.

    • The recombinant nuclei divide by mitosis, producing eight haploid nuclei that develop into ascospores.

    • When the ascospores germinate, they can form new mycelia.

  • Basidiomycetes include mushrooms, puffballs, bracket fungi, rusts, and smuts.

  • These fungi produce sexual spores called basidiospores on the outside of a basidium.

    • Basidia develop on the surface of gills in mushrooms; mushrooms are a type of basidiocarp (a fruiting body).

  • Hyphae in the basidiomycetes have septa. plasmogamy occurs with the fusion of two hyphae of different mating types.

    • A dikaryotic secondary mycelium forms.

    • Then a basidiocarp develops, and basidia form.

    • Karyogamy occurs, producing a diploid zygote nucleus.

    • Meiosis produces four haploid nuclei that become basidiospores.

    • When basidiospores germinate, they form haploid primary mycelia.

Ecological Importance of Fungi

  • Most fungi are decomposers that break down organic compounds in dead organisms, leaves, garbage, and wastes into simpler nutrients that can be recycled.

  • Mycorrhizae are mutualistic associations between fungi and the roots of plants.

    • The fungus supplies water and nutrient minerals to the plant, and the fungus obtains organic compounds from the plant.

    • Glomeromycetes form endomycorrhizae with roots.

    • Some ascomycetes and basidiomycetes are ectomycorrhizal fungi that form mycorrhizae when their hyphae coat tree roots, but do not penetrate the root cells.

  • A lichen is a combination of a fungus and a photoautotroph (an alga or cyanobacterium).

    • In this symbiotic relationship, the photoautotroph provides the fungus with organic compounds.

    • The fungus may provide the photoautotroph with shelter, water, and minerals.

    • Lichens have three main forms: crustose, foliose, and fruticose.

Economic, Biological, and Medical Impact of Fungi

  • Fungi cause huge economic losses by damaging food and crops.

    • On the other hand, some fungi, like mushrooms, are foods; others, like yeasts, are used to produce beer, wine, and bread; and still others are used to produce cheeses or industrial chemicals.

  • Biologists use the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and other fungi as model organisms for research in molecular biology and genetics.

    • Fungi are also being investigated for the biological control of insects.

  • Fungi are used to make many medications, including penicillin and other antibiotics; they are used in bioremediation and to control pests biologically.

  • Fungi are opportunistic pathogens in humans.

    • They cause human diseases, such as histoplasmosis; some fungi produce mycotoxins, such as aflatoxins, which can cause liver damage and cancer.

  • Fungal hyphae infect plants through stomata.

    • Hyphal branches called haustoria penetrate plant cells and obtain nourishment from the cytoplasm.

    • Fungi cause many important plant diseases, including brown rot, corn smut, and wheat rust.

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