The Architecture of Fungal Cells
Abstract
The Kingdom fungus has a unique structure and organization. Recent advances in electron microscopy and use of specific cytochemical technique enable the ultrastructures to be visualized. The hypha is a tube-like structure with a rigid wall, containing a moving slug of protoplasm. Hypha grows only at the tapered apical tip region, which is called extension zone. Extreme tip area has apical vesicle cluster which is responsible for tip growth. Unique fungal structure, Spitzenk rper, is thought to be a central region of the apical vesicle cluster. Most hyphal structures except the species belong to Zygomycetes have septa. But the septum is not completely blocked and it has different types of opening pores. The simple septal pores with Woronin bodies, which are found in Ascomycetes and Deuteromycetes, can be plugged in two different mechanisms. During normal differentiation the pores become occluded by a gradual deposition of plugged material. Loss of cytoplasm from damaged hyphae can be reduced and blocked by the rapid occlusion of septal pores by Woronin bodies or hexagonal crystal bodies. Septal sealing in Basidiomycetes which have dolipore septum is made by the rapid formation of electron-dense pore plugs. The shape of the fungal cell is the shape of fungal wall. Fungal walls appear to be composed of layers, which are thought to merge into one another to form one structure. The cytoskeleton consists of microtubules and microfilaments with motor proteins, and they seems to act together in the fungal cells.
Keywords
Cytoskeleton Dolipore septum Septal pore Spitzenkorper Woronin body
KJMM
1998 December;3(2):89-94(6). Epub 2016 February 24
Copyright © 1998 by Korean Journal of Medical Mycology
Language
Korean/English
Author
Dong Seok Kim; Department of Dermatology, Catholic University of Taegu-Hyosung School of Medicine, Taegu, Korea
Corresponding
Dong Seok Kim, Department of Dermatology, Catholic University of Taegu-Hyosung School of Medicine, Taegu, Korea.
Publication history
Acknowledgements
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Dong Seok Kim
Department of Dermatology, Catholic University of Taegu-Hyosung School of Medicine, Taegu, Korea
- Download : 314
- Image : 0
- DOC : 0
- XLS : 0
- PDF : 314
Since epub date 2016 February 24