Title: FUNGI AND OTHER ORGANISMS (PLANT)
1MYCOLOGY (MIC 206)
- FUNGI AND OTHER ORGANISMS (PLANT)
2FUNGI AND PLANTS
- Fungi can be
- Facultative symbionts can live freely or within
plants - Obligate symbionts can only grow in association
with plants. - Hyphae of symbiotic fungi can penetrate plant
cells, some grow through tissues without entering
or penetrating plants cells. - Two way of parasitic relationships of fungi with
plants - Biotrophic
- Necrotrophic
3Biotrophic vs Necrotrophic
- Some fungi have phases where they became
biotrophic or necrotrophic. - Fungi can penetrate plant tissues through
- aerial surfaces (stems, leaves, flowers, fruits).
- root surfaces (root epidermis).
- wounds (normal process where internal tissues are
exposed due to breakage of plants surfaces (e.g.
when fruits and leaves are formed).
4MOA of Plant Pathogen
- Examples of fungi penetrating plant tissues
- Aerial surfaces
- Examples are Cladosporium (leaf), Rhizopus
- stolonifer (fruit), Colleototrichum (fruit
and leaf), - Armillaria mellea (wood/ bark).
- Root surfaces
- Fusarium spp. (root), Sclerotinia sclerotonum
(root). - Wounds
- Sclerotinia fructigena (wasps or birds break
- epidermis of fruit and introduce conidia of
fungus). - Other internal tissues
- Armillaria mellea (tree pathogen and able to
enter - living trees but can live as saprotrops
when trees - die).
5BIOTROPHIC ASSOCIATIONS
6Biotrophic Associations
- From the Greek
- bios life,
- trophy feeding.
- Live within the plant and obtain nourishment
without causing cell death to plants. - Long-term feeding relationship with the living
cells of their hosts, rather than killing the
host cells as part of the infection process.
7Characteristics of Biotrophic Associations
- Characteristics
- Do not kill hosts so either parasitic or
saprophytic. - Tissues that are invaded remain alive.
- Symbiotic because two organisms live together.
- A relationship between Fungus Root
Mycorrhiza.
8Construction of Haustaria
- Biotrophic fungi frequently produce haustaria.
- Haustoria specialized hyphae that penetrate the
cells of other organisms that obtains food from a
host. - Fungi grow between the host cells and invade only
a few of the cells to produce nutrient-absorbing
structures termed haustoria.
9MOA of Haustaria
- Fungal haustoria will be produced from spores
that germinate on the surface of plants, on
leaves or stems. - The germinating spores may produce a penetration
peg known as an appressorium and penetrate the
plants cell wall. - After penetration, the hyphal tip forms an
invagination within the cell that becomes the
haustorium. - Haustorium is a structure of an extended
extracellular mycelium, or filaments, of the
fungus.
10Magnaporthe oryzae Rice Blasts Diseases
appressorium
penetration of leaf
penetration peg
11CLASSIFICATION OF BIOTROPHICS ASSOCIATION
12BIOTROPHIC ASSOCIATIONS - RUST FUNGI
13The Rust Fungi
- The infection behaviour of rust fungi is broadly
similar to that of the powdery mildews. - Involving nutrient absorption by haustoria to
support abundant sporulation for epidemic spread.
Close-up of lower surface of the leaf, showing
cup-shaped pustules of aeciospores.
Small lesions on the upper surface of a barberry
leaf, with spermogonia in their centres.
14Penetration and Colonization by Rust Fungi
15Growth of barley rust germ tubes on a barley leaf
replica
16Growth of barley rust germ tubes on a barley leaf
replica
17Bean Rust Uromyces appendiculatus
18Bean Rust Uromyces appendiculatus
19Bean Rust Uromyces appendiculatus
20Black Rot of Grape - Phyllosticta ampelicida
21Phyllosticta ampelicida germinated conidia and
melanized appressoria
22BIOTROPHIC ASSOCIATIONS POWDERY MILDEW FUNGI
23The Powdery Mildew Fungi (Ascomycota)
- The Powdery Mildew Fungi (Ascomycota)
- Powdery mildews produce mycelium (fungal threads)
that grow only on the surface of the plant. - They never invade the tissues themselves.
- The fungi feed by sending haustoria, into the
epidermal (top) cells of the plant. - Typical forms many powdery mildews, where the
fungus forms a powdery coating of white spores on
the leaf surface.
24Powdery Mildew Fungi
- Other common examples in Britain are powdery
mildew of hawthorn (Podosphaera oxyacanthae),
gooseberry (Sphaerotheca morsuvae), and cereals
and grasses (Erysiphe graminis).
Powdery mildew of roses, caused by the fungus
Sphaerotheca pannosa.
Localised lesions of Erysiphe graminis on wheat
leaves.
25NECROTROPHIC ASSOCIATIONS
26Necrotrophic Associations
- Term necro relating to death.
- Necrotrophic Kill cells and absorb nutrients
from dead cells. - How?
- ? Frequently secrete enzymes that degrade plant
- components or toxins that kill the
plants tissue. - Subsequently live on nutrients from the tissue
they have killed.
27Characteristics of Necrotrophic Associations
- Characteristics
- Kills host cells.
- Can be recognised by patches of dead, blackened
tissue. - Produce toxins which kill plant cells and their
enzymes to degrade plant constituents so that
fungus can use them as food. - Can change to saprophytic or biotrophic in later
stages. - Show low specificity to host plants.
- They are easy to culture in the absence of their
hosts. - They can survive in the absence of their hosts by
production of spores or sclerotia in the dead
tissue.
28Necrotrophic Associations (cont)
- Examples
- Botrytis cinerea cause grey moulds in young
plants or grapes when conditions are cold and
damp. - Grey mould rot causes damage on stored carrot,
parsnip, mangel, beet, endive, chicory, turnip,
and many others.
29Necrotrophic Associations (cont)
- Examples
- Phytophthora spp. Cause black pod disease in
cocoa plant and brown rot disease on orange
fruit.