Association of bacteria with sporangium formation and breakdown of sporangia in Phytophthora spp

1974 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 139 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Broadbent ◽  
KF Baker

Leachates from different soils extracted at similar moisture potentials varied in their ability to induce sporangium formation, zoospore release and sporangium breakdown in Phytophthora spp. Sporangium production by P. cinnamomi did not occur in soil leachates heated at 40–50°C for 10 min or in soils treated with steam-air at 60° for 30 min. No evidence was obtained that Pseudomonas or Chromobacterium spp. were involved in the induction of sporangium formation. Chemotaxis of bacteria to sporangia occurred at zoospore release. Where sporangial breakdown occurred, the chemotaxis persisted for a longer period as the cytoplasm was withdrawn from the sporangial wall to be released eventually, without zoospore formation, through the papilla. The bacteria were oriented at right angles to the sporangial wall. Electron micrographs showed that in the vicinity of a bacterium, the outer, thin, electron-dense layer of the sporangial wall had disappeared and the cytoplasm of the sporangium had withdrawn from the cell wall.

1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 439-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larry R. Hoffman ◽  
Cecilia S. Hofmann

Quadriflagellate zoospores and conditions for their induction are described for an algal isolate tentatively identified as Cylindrocapsa geminella Wolle. Previous to this report, only biflagellate zoospores were known for Cylindrocapsa while quadriflagellate zoospores were thought to characterize the closely related Cylindrocapsopsis; this distinction is no longer valid. In our isolate, a vegetative cell may differentiate directly into a single zoospore or, more commonly, zoosporogenesis is preceded by division of a vegetative cell into two, four, or eight daughter cells, each of which becomes a zoospore. Variation in zoospore arrangement depends on the number and nature of the division sequences. Ultimately, zoospores are released from the more-or-less dissociated parental cell wall in one or more vesicles. Each primary vesicle contains one, two, four, or occasionally eight zoospores; zoospore release follows the gradual distention and dissolution of the enclosing vesicle. Light microscopic observations suggest that the zoospore-containing vesicles arise from altered cell wall material. Zoospore germlings and variations in the appearance of vegetative filaments are aiso described and attention is called to the nature of the cell wall, which is quite unlike that of most other filamentous green algae.


1978 ◽  
Vol 56 (22) ◽  
pp. 2865-2872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ichiko Tsuneda ◽  
Lorene L. Kennedy

Germination of basidiospores in Fomes fomentarius (Fries) Kickx is bipolar with germ tubes emerging at both ends. Ungerminated spores are smooth with a thick cell wall consisting of two layers: an outer thin, electron-dense layer and an inner thick, electron-light layer. During the early stage of germination, two additional cell wall layers are formed: a very thin, electron-dense layer and a relatively thick, electron-light layer. Germ tube walls originate from these newly formed, inner layers. Ungerminated spores are uninucleate and contain numerous lipid bodies, ribosomes, and cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum. Germinated spores have distinct mitochondria and an invaginated plasma membrane and are usually devoid of endoplasmic reticulum.


2001 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ki Woo Kim ◽  
Eun Woo Park ◽  
Young Ho Kim ◽  
Kyung-Ku Ahn ◽  
Pan Gi Kim ◽  
...  

Apple fruit tissues infected with Botryosphaeria dothidea were examined by transmission electron microscopy using susceptible cv. Fuji and resistant cv. Jonathan. Immature (green) and mature (red) fruits of cv. Fuji with restricted or expanding lesions were also examined to reveal subcellular characteristics related with latent and restricted disease development. In infected susceptible mature fruits, cytoplasmic degeneration and organelle disruption commonly occurred, accompanying cell wall dissolution around invading hyphae. Cell wall dissolution around invading hyphae in subepidermis was rare in immature, red halo-symptomed cv. Fuji and resistant cv. Jonathan fruits. In infected immature fruits of cv. Fuji, presumably at the latent state of disease development, cellular degeneration was less severe, and invading hyphae contained prominent microbody-lipid globule complexes or the deposition of thin electron-dense outer layer around cell wall of intercellular hyphae. Both mature fruits with red halos and resistant apple fruits formed cell wall protuberances at the outside of cell walls. In addition, electron-dense extramural layers were formed in the resistant apple fruits. Aberrant hyphal structures such as intrahyphal hyphae were found only in resistant fruit tissues, indicating the physiologically altered fungal growth. These ultrastructural changes of host tissues and fungal hyphae may reflect the pathogenesis of apple white rot under varying conditions of apple fruits.


1967 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 587-591
Author(s):  
J. T. FINCH ◽  
A. KLUG ◽  
M.V. NERMUT

Electron micrographs of negatively stained preparations of cell walls of Bacillus polymyxa have been investigated by optical diffraction and optical filtering techniques. Images of single layers of the cell wall, from which the ‘noise’ has been filtered optically, show hollow, square-shaped morphological units arranged on a square lattice of side 100 Å. Single-layer images showing the same pattern have been filtered from moiré patterns arising from two overlapping single layers. The morphological units are composed of four smaller subunits. The optical diffraction patterns from regions of two overlapping layers show extra reflexions which are attributed to multiple electron scattering.


1966 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Jane Carson ◽  
R. G. Eagon

Electron micrographs of thin sections of normal cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa showed the cell walls to be convoluted and to be composed of two distinct layers. Electron micrographs of thin sections of lysozyme-treated cells of P. aeruginosa showed (a) that the cell walls lost much of their convoluted nature; (b) that the layers of the cell walls became diffuse and less distinct; and (c) that the cell walls became separated from the protoplasts over extensive cellular areas. These results suggest that the peptidoglycan component of the unaltered cell walls of P. aeruginosa is sensitive to lysozyme. Furthermore, it appears that the peptidoglycan component is not solely responsible for the rigidity of the cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria.


1968 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanford L. Palay ◽  
Constantino Sotelo ◽  
Alan Peters ◽  
Paula M. Orkand

Axon hillocks and initial segments have been recognized and studied in electron micrographs of a wide variety of neurons. In all multipolar neurons the fine structure of the initial segment has the same pattern, whether or not the axon is ensheathed in myelin. The internal structure of the initial segment is characterized by three special features: (a) a dense layer of finely granular material undercoating the plasma membrane, (b) scattered clusters of ribosomes, and (c) fascicles of microtubules. A similar undercoating occurs beneath the plasma membrane of myelinated axons at nodes of Ranvier. The ribosomes are not organized into Nissl bodies and are too sparsely distributed to produce basophilia. They vanish at the end of the initial segment. Fascicles of microtubules occur only in the axon hillock and initial segment and nowhere else in the neuron. Therefore, they are the principal identifying mark. Some speculations are presented on the relation between these special structural features and the special function of the initial segment.


2001 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 349-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Bobin-Dubreux ◽  
Marie-Elisabeth Reverdy ◽  
Chantal Nervi ◽  
Martine Rougier ◽  
Anne Bolmström ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT A Staphylococcus aureus strain with low-level heteroresistance to vancomycin (designated MER) but susceptible to methicillin was isolated from an outpatient with conjunctivitis who did not receive any glycopeptide antibiotics. Incubation of the parent strain, MER, with increasing concentrations of vancomycin led to rapid selection of a stable progeny homogeneously resistant to vancomycin. Electron micrographs of strain MER showed enhanced cell wall thickness and abnormal septations typically seen with methicillin-resistantS. aureus having intermediate susceptibility to vancomycin.


Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. L. Widmer

Phytophthora species produce sporangia that either germinate directly or release zoospores, depending upon environmental conditions. Previous Phytophthora spp. inoculation trials have used both sporangia and zoospores as the inoculum type. However, it is unknown what impact propagule type has on disease. Rhododendron leaf disks were inoculated with P. ramorum zoospores (75, 500, or 2,400 per disk), sporangia (75 per disk), or sporangia plus trifluoperazine hydrochloride (TFP) (75 per disk), a chemical that inhibits zoospore formation. Combining results from two different isolates, the highest concentration of zoospores (2,400 per disk) induced a significantly higher percentage of necrotic leaf disk area (96.6%) than sporangia (87.6%) and 500 zoospores per disk (88.7%). The sporangia plus TFP treatment had the lowest necrosis at 47.5%. Rooted rhododendron cuttings had a higher percentage of necrotic leaves per plant when inoculated with zoospores (3,000 or 50,000 per ml) or cysts (50,000 per ml) than with sporangia (3,000 per ml) with or without TFP. The percentage of necrotic leaf area was significantly higher when cysts or zoospores were inoculated at 50,000 per ml than sporangia without TFP and zoospores at 3,000 per ml. All treatments were significantly higher in the percentage of necrotic leaf area than the leaves treated with sporangia plus TFP. This demonstrates that the full inoculum potential may not be achieved when sporangia are used as the inoculum propagule.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Radwa A. Hanafy ◽  
Vikram B. Lanjekar ◽  
Prashant K. Dhakephalkar ◽  
Tony M. Callaghan ◽  
Sumit S. Dagar ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTWe isolated and characterized sixty-five anaerobic gut fungi (AGF, Neocallimastigomycota) strains from fecal samples of five wild (W), one zoo-housed (Z), and three domesticated (D) herbivores in the US states of Texas (TX) and Oklahoma (OK), Wales (WA), and the Indian states of Kerala (KE) and Haryana (HA). Phylogenetic assessment based on D1-D2 region of the large rRNA subunit (LSU) identified seven distinct lineages, with strains recovered from Axis Deer (W-TX) clustering within theOrpinomyces-Neocallimastix-Pecoramyces-Feramycesclade; Boer Goat-domesticated Goat strains (W-TX, D-KE) clustering within theOontomyces-Anaeromyces-Liebetanzomycesclade; and domesticated Goat and Sheep strains (D-HA) as well as Nilgiri Tahr strains (W-KE) forming two distinct clades associated with genusBuwchfawromyces. The remaining three lineages, represented by strains recovered from Mouflon-Boer Goat (W-TX), White Tailed Deer (W-OK), and Zebra-Horse (Z-OK, and D-WA), displayed no specific suprageneric affiliation. All strains displayed monocentric thalli and produced mono/uniflagellate zoospores with the exception of Axis Deer strains, which produced polyflagellate zoospores. Isolates displayed multiple interesting microscopic features including sporangia with tightly constricted necks and fine septa at the base (Axis Deer), papillated and pseudo-intercalary sporangia (White-Tailed Deer), swollen sporangiophores and zoospores with long flagella (Mouflon-Boer Goat), zoospore release through an apical pore followed by either sporangial wall collapse (Axis Deer and Boer Goat-domesticated Goat) or sporangial wall remaining intact after discharge (Zebra-Horse), multi-sporangiated thalli with branched sporangiophores (Zebra-Horse), and short sporangiophores with subsporangial swellings (Nilgiri Tahr). Internal transcribed spacer-1 region (ITS-1) sequence analysis indicated that Zebra-Horse strains are representatives of the AL1 lineage, frequently encountered in culture-independent surveys of the alimentary tract and fecal samples from hindgut fermenters. The other six lineages, five of which were isolated from wild herbivores, have not been previously encountered in such surveys. Our results significantly expand the genus level diversity within the Neocallimastigomycota, and strongly suggest that wild herbivores represent a yet-untapped reservoir of AGF diversity. We propose the creation of seven novel genera and eight novel Neocallimastigomycota species to accommodate these strains, for which we propose the namesAgriosomyces longus(Mouflon and wild Boer Goat),Aklioshbomyces papillarum(White tailed Deer),Capellomyces foraminis(wild Boar Goat) andC. elongatus(domesticated Goat),Ghazallomyces constrictus(Axis Deer),Joblinomyces apicalis(domesticated Goat and Sheep),Khoyollomyces ramosus(Zebra-Horse), andTahromyces munnarensis(Nilgiri Tahr). The type species are strains Axs-31, WT-2, MS-4, BGB-11, GFKJa1916, GFH683, ZS-33, and TDFKJa193, respectively.


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