Term
4 bad fungal effects of humans? |
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Definition
- mycosis - fungus invades the human tissue
- mycotoxicosis - human gets sick off of eating the metabolites of a fungus
- mycetismus - human gets sick from eating a fungus
- mycoallergies - sensitivity of the immune system to fungal spores or metabolites
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Term
Mycoses characterized by 4 locations |
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Definition
- superficial mycoses - infection on the shaft of the hair or the dead outer layer of the skin
- cutaneous mycoses - infection on the skin hair or nails
- subcutaneous mycoses - localized infection in the tissues of a human
- systemic mycoses - deep infection (dimorphic fungal pathogens)
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Term
where is the organizing center of the hypha and what is it called? |
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Definition
it is at the tip, it is called Spitzenkorper! |
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Term
even though fungi and animals are both heterotrophic, there is a major difference in how they acquire nutrients? |
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Definition
animals ingest then digest, while fungi digest then ingest. |
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Term
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Definition
- they have aggregations of vesicles at growing points that contain chitin and PM materials.
- vesicles also contain exoenzymes to digest outside material
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Term
what do fungi store their food as when times are good? |
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Definition
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Term
difference between fungi physiology and animals?
9! |
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Definition
- chitin biosynthesis for CW
- 1,3 - Beta glucans in CW
- Mannoproteins in CW
- ergosterol instead of cholesterol in PM
- lysine biosynthesis is different
- tubulin protein different for MT's
- elongation factors
- small nuclei with little repetitive DNA
- no dissolution of nuclear envelope in mitosis
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Term
how does the lack of chlorophyll profoundly affect the lifestyle of fungi? |
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Definition
- not dependent on light; grow in the dark
- can grow in all directions
- can invade the interior of substrates
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Term
saprophytes?
mutualists
commensals
parasites |
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Definition
- live on dead organic material, recycle nutrients
- +/+ - both organisms benefit (lichens, mycchorizae)
- +/o neither is harmed, one benefits, gain in environmental position
- +/- harm the host/benefit (host diatoms to humans)
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Term
why are fungi important to humans? they cause? |
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Definition
- disease in humans
- food contamination/rot
- ruin crops
- used in making foods (CitA, cheese), antibiotics, steroids
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Term
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Definition
- penicillin, sir alexander fleming
- one gene, one enzyme using neurospora, beadle and tatutm
- lee harwell, mitosis gene in S. cerevisiae
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Term
what makes fungi so successful in the natural environment? |
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Definition
- spores
- (sexual and asexual)
- spread over a wide area
- can remain dormant
- genetic plasticity
- adaptive to environment
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Term
plasmogeny
karyogamy
gametangia
homothallic
heterothallic
sporangia
conidia |
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Definition
- protoplasm fusion
- nuclear fusion
- sex organs
- self-fertile
- self-sterile
- asexual spores borne internally
- asexual spores borne externally
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Term
6 cycles of alternation of generations |
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Definition
- haploid cycle
- diploid cycle
- dikaryotic cycle
- haploid-diploid cycle
- haploid-dikaryotic cycle
- haploid w/ restricted dikaryon
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Term
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Definition
- anamorph = asexual state
- teleomorph = sexual state
- many fungi have both states, but most have one or the other
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Term
5 major phyla of fungi, + one imperfecti |
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Definition
- chytridiomycota
- basidiomycota
- glomeromycota
- zygomycota
- ascomycota
- deuteromycetes
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Term
chytridiomycota features? |
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Definition
- sexual and asexual spores motile with posterior flagella
- frog chytrid
- account for the dying off of frogs
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Term
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Definition
- zygospores - thick walled sexual spores used for resting
- asexual spores are borne internally in a sporangium
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Term
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Definition
- ascus - sexual spores borne internally in a sac
- asexual spores borne externally as conidia
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Term
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Definition
- reproduction unclear, but form endomycorrhizae
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Term
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Definition
- cleist-othecium
- apo-thecium
- peri-thecium
- Locule
all contain asci
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Term
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Definition
- sexual spores borne externally on a club shaped structure called a basidium
- usually no asexual spores
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Term
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Definition
- no known sexual state
- usually reproduce asexually via conidia
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Term
what was the saccardo scheme and how did it classify fungi. what was wrong with it? |
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Definition
classified organism by spore groups.
it separated orgs taht were related and grouped unrelated organisms |
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Term
3 "form classes" in deuteromycetes: way in which conidiophores are borne |
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Definition
- blastomycetes - yeast forms
- coelomycetes - asexual spores borne in or on a specialized spore structure (pycnidia or acervuli)
- hyphomycetes - asexual spores not associated with pycnidia or acervuli
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Term
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Definition
- cryptococcales - budding yeats with ascomycetous affinities (candida)
- sporobolomycetales - ballistosporic yeats form conidia taht are forcibly discharged - basidiomycetous affinities (bullera)
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Term
2 types of yeast reproduction
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Definition
- budding - small outgrowth is formed on the parental cell
- fission - splitting of a cell into two daughter cells
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Term
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Definition
- Sphaeropsidales - produce conidia in pycnidia
- melanconiales - produce acervuli (dense mats of hyphae embedded in host tissue and bearing conidiophores)
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Term
3 orders of hyphomycetes? |
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Definition
- hyphomycetales - conidiophores scattered, mostly single
- stillbellas - synnemata or coremia (conidiophores apressed
- tuberculariales - sporodochia
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Term
2 families of hyphomycetales? |
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Definition
- moniliaceae - hyaline or brightly colored hyphae and/or spores
- dematiaceae - dark colored hyphae and/or spores
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Term
two general methods of asexual conidiogenous in the hyphomycetes? |
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Definition
- blastic - budded conidiation involves blowing out and de novo growth of part of the hypha
- thallic - conversion of a part of the hypha into a conidium.
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Term
if both walls are used in blastic conidiation it is called? one wall? |
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Definition
- holoblastic
- enteroblastic
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Term
Since deuteromycetes only reproduce asexually, can they evolve? through what? |
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Definition
- parasexual cycle - formation of transient diploid, crossing over can take place, unstable diploid breaks apart into haploid.
- new combination results!
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Term
problems with development of antifungal drugs? |
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Definition
- in vitro activity and in vivo activity are not strongly correlated
- drug cant get to the spot of infection in a large enough concentration without being toxic to the rest of the body
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