1 / 33

Phylum Oomycota Pythiales Peronosporales

Phylum Oomycota Pythiales Peronosporales. General Mycology Pl P 421/521 Lecture 22. Classification. Order Pythiales Families Pythiaceae (9 genera, 230 species) Pythiogetonaceae (2 genera, 8 species) Order Peronosporales Families Peronosporaceae (8 genera, 600 species)

raine
Télécharger la présentation

Phylum Oomycota Pythiales Peronosporales

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Phylum OomycotaPythiales Peronosporales General Mycology Pl P 421/521 Lecture 22

  2. Classification • Order Pythiales • Families • Pythiaceae (9 genera, 230 species) • Pythiogetonaceae (2 genera, 8 species) • Order Peronosporales • Families • Peronosporaceae (8 genera, 600 species) • Albuginaceae (1 genus, 45 species)

  3. Advanced characters • Mostly parasitic with intracellular haustoria • Narrow diameter hyphae • Trend towards terrestrial habitats • Loss of primary zoospore stage • Trend towards loss of secondary zoospore stage • Inability to synthesize sterols

  4. Sexual reproduction • One oospore/oogonium • Oospores formed in host tissue • Unifactorial mating system • A1 and A2 mating types • Selfing may occur • Relative sexuality • Bisexual strains

  5. Asexual reproduction • Zoosporangia variable in shape and size • Sporangiophore type delimits families: • Pythiaceae—indeterminate sporangiophores • Peronosporaceae—determinate sporangiophores • Albuginaceae—club-shaped sporangiophores, catenate sporangia

  6. http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/zoospore.htm#Germination%20of%20sporangiahttp://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/zoospore.htm#Germination%20of%20sporangia

  7. Zoospore ultrastructure

  8. http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/zoospore.htm

  9. Zoospore taxis Zoospore settles and orients on host surface Adhesion and encystment with release of adhesins and cell wall formation Germination with a fixed orientation from predetermined point adhesins Modified from: http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/zoospore.htm

  10. Left: zoospores of Phytophthora palmivora accumulating at the mouth of a capillary filled with a fluorescently tagged amino acid (dansyl-asparagine) [supplied by MJ Carlile, from JN Cameron & MJ Carlile, unpubl.]. Right: zoospores of Pythium aphanidermatum accumulated and encysted at the mouth of a capillary containing malt-extract agar. http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/zoospore.htm

  11. Pythium Pringsheim 1858 • Type species P. monospermum • 127 species • First invaders of plant tissue, not good competitors with other organisms • Major components of damping-off disease of seedlings, collar rot of apples, foliar and stem blights, snow rot of winter wheat • Sporangia of various shapes, sizes • Zoospores cleaved out and released from vesicle • Oogonia fertilized by one to many antheridia • Oogonial wall smooth or with spiny or blunt projections • Chlamydospores present in some species

  12. Pythium Zoosporangia (above) Oogonium/oospore (right) Photos by D. J. S. Barr

  13. vesicles zoosporangia From Webster, 1980.

  14. Zoospore cleavage and release in Pythium From Webster, 1980.

  15. Phytophthora de Bary 1892 • Type species P. infestans (Montagne) de Bary • 65 species • Wide range of diseases • Sporangia ovoid, obpyriform to lemon-shaped • Sporangia papillate, semipapillate or nonpapillate • Zoospores cleaved out inside zoosporangium • Oogonium fertilized by one antheridium

  16. Diseases caused by Phytophthora species • P. infestans—late blight of potato, tomato • P. cinnamomi—root rot of avocado, eucalyptus and > 1000 hosts • P. cactorum—fruit rots (>154 host genera) • P. ramorum—Sudden Oak Death

  17. Identification—Waterhouse’s groups • Papillate, narrow exit pore, not proliferating, deciduous, homothallic, paragynous • Zoosporangia as in I; heterothallic, amphigynous • Semipapillate, narrow exit pore, not proliferating; deciduous or not, homothallic, mostly paragynous • Zoosporangia as in III, usually deciduous; heterothallic, amphigynous • Nonpapillate, broad exit pore, not deciduous, homothallic, paragynous • Zoosporangia as in V; heterothallic, amphigynous

  18. Sporangia, sporangiophores and zoospores in Phytophthora From Webster, 1980.

  19. From Webster, 1980.

  20. Family Peronosporaceae • Obligate biotrophs of vascular plants • “downy mildews” • Sporangiophores aerial, determinate, up to 750 microns tall • Sporangia deciduous, released by drying • Sporangia germinate directly or indirectly

  21. Sexual reproduction • Oogonia larger, antheridia paragynous, broader relative to Pythiaceae • Formed inside host tissue • Periplasm forms thick, sculptured wall

  22. Basidiophora • Short, stout sporangiophores • No branching • Sterigmata at apex • Sporangial germination indirect

  23. Sclerospora • Bulbous sporangiophores with short terminal branches • Most species with indirect germination • Restricted to monocots • Forms digitate haustoria

  24. Plasmopara • Random branching of sporangiophores, branches at ~ 90 degrees • Sporangiophores stiff and erect, with short terminal branches • Sporangial germination indirect

  25. Peronospora • Elongated, curved, dichotomously branched sporangiophores • Sporangia germinate directly From Webster, 1980

  26. Peronospora Sporangiophores and direct germination of sporangia From BioImages

  27. Pseudoperonospora • Sporangiophores similar to Peronospora except branching more delicate and not dichotomous • Sporangia germinate indirectly

  28. Bremia • Dichotomously branched sporangiophores with enlarged tips bearing ring of sterimata • Sporangia germinate indirectly From Webster, 1980

  29. Family Albuginaceae • One genus, Albugo • “white rusts” • Sporangia formed in basipetal succession, dispersed by wind • Germinate to form 8 zoospores • Oogonia develop in host, oospores develop thin vesicle similar to Pythium sporangium

  30. Albugo haustoria Release of zoospores Club-shaped sporangiophores and chains of sporangia From Webster, 1980

  31. Albugo oospores From Webster, 1980

  32. White rust

More Related