Fungi CLS 212: Medical Microbiology. Mycology: the study of fungi Characteristics of fungi: 1.All fungi are Eukaryotic organisms.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Classification & General Properties of Fungi
Advertisements

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS
Fungi Mycology Avascular, typically not motile
KINGDOM FUNGI.
Eukaryotic cells Most are multi-celled Some are uni-cellular Heterotrophs Live in moist, warm areas Have Cell Walls FUNGI.
Introduction to Mycology
Fungi.
Kingdom Fungi (ch. 26) If at first you don’t like a fungus … Just wait a little, It will grow on you.  Mycology = study of fungi General Characteristics.
What diseases do yeasts and molds cause?
Introduction to mycology
Kingdom: Fungi.
A mushroom goes into a bar
KINGDOM : FUNGI ABBOTTS COLLEGE KINGDOM FUNGI ABBOTTS.
1 Eukaryotic Microbial Diversity Early attempts at taxonomy: all plants and animals Whitaker scheme (late 20th century) –Five kingdoms –Modified by Woese’s.
Medical Mycology.
VII.Fungal Diseases A.Basic Properties of the Fungi B.Candidiasis C.Dermatomycoses D.Respiratory Fungal Infections.
MYCOLOGY Science for studying of fungi. –To impart sufficient basic science of the medically important fungi to assist you in diagnosing mycotic diseases.
Introduction to Mycology.
Chapter 21 Fungi Honors Biology Spring Kingdom Fungi Eukaryotic Heterotrophic- external digestion/absorption –Saprobe- obtain food from decaying.
Chapter 22 Fungi. , Mycology – is the study of fungi Characteristics of Fungi:  Fungi are eukaryotic – have membrane enclosed organelles.  Fungi are.
Lecture Title: Fungi and their pathogenesis
Fungi. Characteristics Multicellular (few exceptions like yeast) Eukaryotic Heterotrophic, break down food then absorb, saprotrophic Some are parasitic,
Fungus.
Mycology Disease of Yeast & Mold.
KingdomFungi 1. Fungi are important decomposers in the environment 3.
MYCOLOGY Lab no 8.
FUNGI.
The Fungi (the one everyone wants to ask to TWIRP?)
Fungi CLS 212: Medical Microbiology. Introduction Mycology All fungi are Eukaryotic organisms living everywhere on earth. Fungi are Heterotrophic i.e.
Lecturer name: Dr. Ahmed M. Albarraq Lecture Date: Oct Lecture Title: Fungi and their pathogenesis (Foundation Block, Microbiology)
Introduction to Mycology
FUNGI. Fungi General Characteristics eukaryote absorptive heterotroph - saprobe or parasite cell walls made of chitin multicellular (except for yeast)
FUNGI.
Fungi.
The Fungi Kingdom. Mycology -the study of fungi fungi - singular fungus - plural.
Fungi Kingdom. Mycology -the study of fungi fungi - plural fungus – singular 1) eukaryotic Cells have a nucleus 2) heterotrophic they do not make their.
FUNGI. COMMON FUNGI EXAMPLES: Mushrooms, yeasts, molds, morels, bracket fungi, puff balls.
Fungi Section 18-2.
The Fungi Kingdom Mycology -the study of fungi fungi - plural fungus - singular 1) fungi are eukaryotic they have a nuclei & mitochondria 2) they are heterotrophs.
Kingdom Fungi Common Characteristics: Eukaryotic No chlorophyll and are heterotrophs Cell walls of cells are made of chitin Most are multicellular. Only.
Pityriasis versicolor(Tinea versicolor)
Kingdom Fungi Characteristics similar to all Fungi: All eukaryotic
Mycology Lec.1 Dr. Manahil
Kingdom Fungi.
Classification of fungi
Kingdom Fungi Common Characteristics: Eukaryotic No chlorophyll and are heterotrophs Cell walls of cells are made of chitin Most are multicellular. Only.
Fungi Mycology is the study of fungi. Fungi Once confused with plants Range in size from single cell to chains of cells miles long Grow in slightly acidic.
Lab 2 Biology Department.
Part 4: Fungi Traits Multicellular, eukaryotic, non-motile Cell walls made of chitin Heterotrophic (absorb food!) –Have filaments called hyphae…used.
Introduction to fungi. Introduction to fungi objectives Discuss the structure of fungi. How are fungi different from bacteria and viruses? Discuss.
Fungi Chapter 19 I. Characteristics of Kingdom Fungi; A. Eukaryotic 1. parasites; haustoria invade hosts cells * ringworm and athletes foot 2. saprophytes;
The Kingdom Fungi Photo Credit: ©D. Cavagnaro/DRK Photo.
FUNGI… Is Fungi Fun????? Ridgewood High School
Lab 1 Biology Department.
Introduction to Fungi (Mycology)
Kingdom Fungi By Dr.Ghasoun M.Wadai.
Lab 2 Biology Department.
The Kingdom Fungi Photo Credit: ©D. Cavagnaro/DRK Photo.
Lecturer name: Dr. Ahmed M. Al-Barraq Lecture Date: Oct.-2012
CLS 212: Medical Microbiology
Lecturer name: Dr. Ahmed M. Albarraq Lecture Date: Oct.-2013
Lecture Title: Fungi and their pathogenesis
Lecture Title: Fungi and their pathogenesis
Chapter 21: Kingdom Fungi Notes
KINGDOM FUNGI.
Kingdom: Fungi.
Lecturer name: Dr. Ahmed M. Albarraq Lecture Date: Oct.-2018
& Eukaryotic Microbes NB Questions
Presentation transcript:

Fungi CLS 212: Medical Microbiology

Mycology: the study of fungi Characteristics of fungi: 1.All fungi are Eukaryotic organisms

General Characteristics of Fungi The study of fungi is called: Mycology. 1.All fungi are Eukaryotic organisms living everywhere on earth. 2.Fungi are Heterotrophic i.e. depend on other organism for food and are different from plants which are “Autotrophic”.  Heterotrophic organisms are 3 kinds: A) Saprophytic: the fungus is living on dead organic matter. B) Symbiotic: the fungus is living together with other organism. C) Parasitic: the fungus is living in an organism and it is harmful to it e.g. Candida albican. 3. Beneficial fungi are important in the production of cheeses and antibiotics e.g. Penicillin.

4. Fungi also live on unlikely materials. Affect plastic and leather and spoil some food like jams, pickels,.. 5.They are not plants. 6. Most of Fungi are microscopic but some can be seen by naked eye. General Characteristics of fungi PLANTFUNGUS PIGMENTSChlorophyll for photosynthesis No pigments CELL WALLContain CelluloseContain Chitin

The biggest living microorganism in the world is a fungus called: Armillaria ostoyae of the species Armillaria mellea Armillaria mellea

Characteristics of fungi : …………continued 7. Do not contain chlorophyll (Non photosynthetic) 8. Release digestive enzymes to break down organic material or their host 9. Lack true roots, stems, & leaves 10. Grow as microscopic tubes or filaments called hyphae that contain cytoplasm & nuclei 11. Hyphal networks are called mycelium 12. Some are edible 13. Fungicide – chemicals used to kill fungi

Classification of Fungi Classification of fungi change periodically. The kingdom Fungi is divided into 5 phyla depending on the mode of sexual reproduction. e.g. Microsporum canis 1.Kingdom: Fungi 2.Phylum: Ascomycota 3.Class: Euascomycetes 4.Order: Onygenales 5.Family: Arthrodermataceae 6.Genus: Microsporum 7.Species: canis Binomial system: is the informal system of naming organisms, Latin and it has 2 parts (Binomial= two-named) genus and species. e.g. Homo Sapien

Structure of Fungi Fungi can be Unicellular = Yeasts Multicellular = Molds

Yeasts Yeasts are single-celled fungi (unicellular) that can only be seen under microscope. Shape of Yeasts a)True yeasts: Cell retain individually. b)Psuedohyphae: Elongated yeast cells attach to each other side by side forming a structure that looks like hyphae. Reproduction of Yeasts Usually yeasts reproduce by Budding but some by spore formation. True Yeasts Psuedohyphae

Yeasts Examples of Yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae live on the skin of grapes and other fruits are responsible for the fermentation process of these fruits. This fungi is also used as “Baker’s Yeast” in baking and bread production. Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans are human pathogens.

Molds Molds are multicellular fungi which are more complex than yeasts. The fungus form microscopic tubes or filaments called hyphae that contain cytoplasm & nuclei. hypha (single), hyphae (plural)= septum. A network of hyphae is called mycelium. Hyphae can be: Septate hyphae Non-septate hyphae Aspergillus

Molds Reproduction of Molds Molds reproduce by spore formation, either sexually or asexually. Uses of Molds Penicillium used to produce the antibiotic penicillin. Some molds are used to produce enzymes and organic acids. For the production of different cheeses e.g. Blue cheese, Roquefort,..

Fungi can be: 1. Monomorphic Fungi that has only one shape or morphology. e.g. Cladosporium bantianum Aspergillus fumigatus 2. Dimorphic (Diphasic) Fungi which can have two different morphologies depending on the environmental factors e.g. Temperature.  Many dimorphic fungi are pathogenic but not all the pathogenic fungi are dimorphic. e.g. Histoplasma Blastomyces

Reproduction of Fungi Fungi can reproduce by two different ways: 1.Asexual reproduction. 2.Sexual reproduction.

I- Asexual Reproduction Multiplying “multiple copies of the same organism” only by Mitosis. 1. Somatic: in yeasts reproduce by Budding in molds reproduce by Hyphae Fragmentation 2. Spore Formation: the end product is spore. Types of Spore Formation: a. Sporangiospores in sporangium. b. Chlamydospores in or on hyphae thick walled, resistant spore, terminal. c. Conidia on hypha or on conidiophores. Budding in yeast

 Conidia have many types: Blastospore Arthospore Aleuriospore Examples of asexual reproduction in fungi:

II- Sexual Reproduction Sexual Reproduction happen by 3 stages: 1. fusion 2. mitosis 3.miosis Types of Sexual Spores: 1.Oospore 2.Zygospore 3.Ascospore 4.Basidoispore zygospore AscospreBasidiospore

Deuteromycetes A phylum of fungi that are without a sexual stage in their life cycle, reproducing only by asexual spores. Also called imperfecti because their life cycles are imperfect.

Diseases Caused by Fungi 1.Superficial mycosis: Piedra. 2.Coetaneous mycosis: Dermatophytes. 3.Subcutaneous mycosis. 4.Systemic mycosis. 5.Opportunistic mycosis: Candidosis.

Piedra Superficial Mycosis: Piedra Chronic. Superficial. Effect: Hair shaft only, producing nodules in scalp but it may affect: - Beard hair. - Mustache hair. Types of Piedra Black Piedra White Piedra

Black Piedra Hard, firm nodules. Black or dark brown. Etiological Agent: Piedraia hortae. Mold, ”Ascomycete” which produce ascospores. Very slow growing in culture.

White Piedra Soft, less firm nodules. Brown cream in color. Etiological agent: Trichosporon beigelii. Imperfect yeast cells. Produce cream and beige colonies. Grows fast in culture, very common in KSA. Treatment 1- Cream: 2% salicylic acid 3% sulfur ointment 2- Shampoo: Nizoral which contain ketoconazole. 3- Shave or Cut the hair: then clean the scalp with mild fungicidal.

Dermatophytes Coetaneous Mycosis: Dermatophytes Skin infection. Affect all keratinized tissue: Hair, Nail, Skin, and stratum cornium. Common in children especially school age (2-12years). Symptoms: Skin lesions called Tinea (or Ring worm). The lesion is scaly and cause itching. The margins are red or gray containing active fungus. In the beginning it is mild then it cause toxic reaction of the skin. Transmission of infection: 1-By using personal stuff (e.g. Clothes). 2-House pets (cats and dogs). 3-Common in livestock animals (horses, sheep, and cows). 4-From the soil.

The Clinical Types of Dermatophytes Tinea exists in any part of the body depending on the location it is given a different name: Athlete's foot or Tinea pedis Ringworm of the body or Tinea corpora Scalp ringworm or Tinea capitis Ringworm of the nail, Onychomycosis, or Tinea unguium

Opportunistic Mycosis: Candidosis It is any infection caused by species of the fungus Candida. It is usually opportunistic but there are some forms are not. 1- Oral Thrush Infection of the mouth surface by candida Very common in: AIDS patients, young babies, new born, and children. Also it can occur in adults and very old people. Lesion: White patches in the tongue and oral surfaces.

2- Diaper or Napkin rash Common in: Babies who their mothers do not change their diaper frequently. Symptoms: Red area in groin area. It may spread by the baby himself from the groin area to the face part. It usually goes away by correct conditions. 3- Vaginitis Infection of vaginal mucosa by candida. Symptoms: itching, white or yellowish discharges from vaginal surface or pus. 60% of the vaginal discharge is caused by candida. It is very common in KSA. It is more in pregnant and diabetic ladies.