fungi Flashcards
label the structures on the diagram below of fungi
describe the structure and poroperties of fungi
- Eukaryotic
- Grow at 25ºC (some at 37º)
- Non-photosynthetic
- Cell walls contain chitin and other polysaccharides
- Heterotrophic nutrition- uses exoenzymes to digest outside and then absorbs nutrients
- Can reproduce sexually and asexually
- Tolerate high osmolality and low pH
- Resistant to antibacterial drugs
describe mould hyphal growth
Mould form large colonies. They can produce asexual spores in different ways. Sexual spore- ascospores, basidiospores, zygospores are also important in taxonomy.
describe yeast growth
Yeast divide asexually by budding but can also have sexual reproduction.
what are the common morphological forms of fungi
Yeasts- oval/spherical appearance
Moulds- filamentous fungi- hyphal forms
Dimorphic fungi- will grow in yeast or hyphal forms dependant of the temperature of growth.
how do fungi reproduce
- many can reproduce both sexually and asexually
- sporulation bodies can be used for identification in clinical samples
- spores are relativelty resistant and can survive and spread infection (survive disinfection)
there are 2 main types of asexual spores
condida formed on condiophores
sporangiospores formed on sporangiophores
what media is required for fungal culture and why
sabouraud dextrose media
- has a slightly acidic pH (5.6)
- inhibitory antibiotics are often added to prevent bacterial contamination
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What are the growth times and temperatures for different fungal groups?
Fungi are cultured at both 25 and 37°C this helps describe if they are dimorphic or not.
How are fungi differentiated?
colonial characteristics- size appearance after set time, colour both sides, surface elevation depressions, other patterns.
Examination of spore structures- from culture, from clinical sample
Features of vegetative hyphae- presence or absence of septa, hyaline (colourless) or dematiaceous (pigmented), hyphal structures- spiral, racket space.
describe ringworm
- circular skin lesions caused by dermatophytes
- colonize and invade skin, hair and nails
- spores shed from infected animals remain infective for many months
- transmitted by contact or contaminated surfaces
describe malassezia pachydermatis
- yeast (unicellular, peanut shaped cells)
- commensal on skin
- associated with canine skin and ear infections
- opportunisitc pathogens
describe aspergillus
- filamentous mould with septated hyaline hyphae and condida formed on condiophores
- ubiquitous
- rapidly growing pigmented colonies
- respiratory pathogen, acquired by inhalation of spores
- invasive
in dogs: sinonasal aspergillosis invades nasal mucosa and turbinate bones. needs to be removed