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1.
Development of perithecia from single, uninucleate ascospores disclosed a homothallic condition for Chaetomium erraticum. This species was found to produce sessile ascogonial coil initials from uninucleate vegetative cells that become enveloped by hyphae formed at the base of the ascogonium. The ascogonium consists of several cells that are uninucleate or binucleate. A perithecium forms from numerous divisions and enlargement of the surrounding uninucleate cells. Differentiation of the perithecial cells results in the formation of a carbonaceous wall, perithecial hairs, and an ostiole lined with periphyses. A convex hymenial cluster of ascogenous cells forms in the lower half of the centrum from which typical croziers develop. Asci push up into the pseudoparenchyma cells of the centrum. The growth of the ascogenous system is in part responsible for increase in perithecial size. The breakdown of the pseudoparenchyma cells around the developing asci results in the formation of a central cavity in which ascospores are released when the asci deliquesce. No paraphyses are present. The type of development and features of the centrum of C. erraticum and other species of Chaetomium indicate a distinct Xylaria-type centrum.  相似文献   

2.
Ascocarps of Trichometasphaeria turcica Luttrell originated in culture as globose parenchymatous stromata within which ascogonia differentiated. As the ascostroma enlarged, stromal cells immediately above the ascogonium produced hyphal outgrowths whose tips grew downward and intertwined beneath the ascogonium. Intercalary growth of these hyphae formed a pseudoparaphysate centrum. Ascogenous hyphae near the base of the centrum produced bitunicate asci which grew upward among the persistent pseudoparaphyses. The ostiole was a broad pore resulting from dissolution of the peripheral stromal cells above the apex of the single locule. Spiny outgrowths from the peripheral cells surrounded the ostiole. The bitunicate asci and ascostromatic ascocarps place this fungus in the subclass Loculoascomycetidae. The pseudoparaphysate centrum and perithecioid ascostroma are characteristic of the Pleosporales. The apparently insignificant character of a protruding conidial hilum was the only essential feature distinguishing Helminthosporium turcicum Pass., the conidial stage of T. turcica, from H. maydis Nisik. & Miyake, a typical representative of species of Helminthosporium with perfect stages in Cochliobolus.  相似文献   

3.
Ascocarp development in Pycnidiophora dispersa is similar to that in Phaeotrichum. A stroma originates in an intercalary position on a hypha. It increases in size, and the outer cell layer differentiates to form the wall. The ascogenous system forms from a mass of fertile cells in the center of the centrum. These become enlarged and multinucleate and give rise to ascogenous hyphae which form asci at their tips by means of croziers. In time, most of the cells of the centrum become fertile and give rise to ascogenous hyphae. There are no sterile threads in the centrum and no hymenium is present, the asci being scattered throughout the locule. The haploid chromosome number is n = 6.  相似文献   

4.
Perithecia of Gnomonia comari (Ascomycetes) mature within 14 days on cornmeal agar under continuous fluorescent light at 25 C. The perithecium is initiated by a coiled, multicellular ascogonium. Branches from somatic hyphae surround the ascogonium. This hyphal envelope early differentiates into two regions: a centrum of pseudoparenchymatous cells and a peripheral wall of more elongated, flattened cells. The wall produces a long, ostiolate beak by eruption of a column of hyphae from the inner layers at the apex; the cells gradually become thick-walled and brown from the peripheral layers inward. Proliferations from the ascogonial cells near the center of the perithecium form a bowl-shaped mass of ascogenous hyphae which expands centrifugally until it appears in section as a crescentic layer across the middle of the centrum. The centrum pseudoparenchyma above this incipient hymenium disintegrates, and short abortive paraphyses extend upward from the subhymenial pseudoparenchyma into the resulting cavity. The paraphyses disintegrate as the asci develop among them. The hymenium gradually pushes downward into the disintegrating subhymenial pseudoparenchyma until it rests on the perithecial wall. Maturing asci become detached from the hymenium, fill the perithecial cavity, and pass through the ostiole. At the tip of the beak they discharge their ascospores forcibly. Diaporthaceae with abortive paraphyses may occupy an intermediate position in a series leading from forms (Gaeumannomyces graminis) with long delicate paraphyses resembling those in the Sordariaceae to forms (Stegophora ulmea) in which the centrum is entirely pseudoparenchymatous.  相似文献   

5.
The vegetative nuclei of Preussia funiculata (Preuss) Fuckel appear to divide in two ways. One is very similar to mitosis in higher plants except that no typical metaphase is present. The other consists of elongated nuclei splitting longitudinally into two halves. Ascocarp development is similar to that found in the Pleosporales. A stroma originates in an intercalary position on a hypha. It increases in size, and the outer cell layers differentiate to form the wall. The ascogenous system arises from multinucleate ascogonial cells scattered throughout the centrum. These give rise to large, lobate, multinucleate cells which in time form asci by means of croziers. The mature centrum contains a distinct hymenium and paraphysoids. The haploid chromosome number appears to be 12.  相似文献   

6.
Centrum development in the sooty mold Ascomycete Limacinula samoensis von Hoehnel emend. Reynolds proceeds in an ascostroma which begins as a small cushion of somatic tissue and enlarges by multiplication of cells in an apical region and by cell enlargement. A two-layered ascocarp wall initially surrounds a pseudoparenchymatous core into which the bitunicate asci protrude. Interascal strands of pseudoparenchymatous tissue disintegrate at maturity of the ascocarp. An apical meristem eventually culminates activity with formation of a short ostiolate neck. Centrum development is homologous to the Dothidea type. The centrum development of other capnodiaceous fungi is reviewed.  相似文献   

7.
Ascocarpic studies of the ontogeny of Lophodermium nitens disclosed a type of development unlike that of all other species of Hypodermataceae occurring on conifer needles. For this reason the centrum of L. nitens is designated as Type III and is compared with Type I (Gordon, 1966). Because L. nitens produces its ascocarp in several tissues of various species of pine, the ontogeny of ascocarps in different locations is discussed and illustrated. The most significant ontogenetic feature of the ascocarp of L. nitens is a layer of hyaline cells in the primordium; this layer is meristematic and gives rise to all subsequent structures of the centrum.  相似文献   

8.
Hanlin , Richabd T. (Georgia Expt. Sta., Experiment.) Morphology of Neuroneetria peziza . Amer. Jour. Bot. 60(1): 56–66. Illus. 1963.—Swollen tips of vegetative hyphae develop into multicellular, multinucleate ascogonia. Hyphae grow up to form a pseudoparenchymatous ascocarp wall. The ascogonia give rise to ascogenous cells from which croziers and asci form. As the ascocarp develops, an apical meristem produces many cells which are pushed downward and form a compact pseudoparenchyma in the centrum. As the asci form, the cells of the pseudoparenchyma elongate, forming central strands. These disintegrate as the asci grow up among them. Mature asci possess a thickened apical cap but no apical ring; the ascospores have longitudinal striations. The chromosome number is n = 5. The pattern of development resembles the Diapor the type of Luttrell but is unique in the formation of strands from the pseudoparenchyma. Other characters, however, indicate a closer affinity to Nectria.  相似文献   

9.
Pododimeria, containing the brown-spored species P. gallica and P. andina, is expanded to include species with hyaline as well as brown ascospores. Two new hyalodidymous taxa, P. juniperi and P. gelatinosa, are added to the genus. Species of Pododimeria occur as ectocommensals on living shoots of Cupressaceae or Podocarpaceae. Although the superficial mycelium may extend into the labyrinthine chambers enclosed by the imbricated scale leaves of the host, it does not penetrate the cuticle. The tiny, black, subglobose, uniloculate ascocarps taper basally to stromatic stipes. The bitunicate asci are interspersed with pseudoparaphyses composed of broad, irregularly shaped cells that readily break apart. The thick, brown to bluish-green ascocarp wall of P. juniperi has a broad equatorial band of prosenchymatous cells. The ascocarp wall of P. gelatinosa is composed uniformly of subhyaline, gelatinous pseudoparenchymatous cells covered by a dark, amorphous crust.  相似文献   

10.
Summary In the alkane yeast Saccharomycopsis lipolytica (formerly: Candida lipolytica) the variability in the ascospore number is caused by the absence of a correlation between the meiotic divisions and spore wall formation. In four spored yeasts, after meiosis II, a spore wall is formed around each of the four nuclei produced by meiosis II. However, in the most frequently occurring two spored asci of S. lipolytica, the two nuclei are already enveloped by the spore wall after meiosis I due to a delay of meiosis II. This division takes place within the spore during the maturation of the ascus. In this case germination of the binucleate ascospore is not preceded by a mitosis. It follows that the cells of the new haploid clones are mononucleate. In the three spored asci, which occur rarely, only one nucleus is surrounded by a spore wall after meiosis I; the other nucleus undergoes meosis II before the onset of spore wall formation. The result is one binucleate and two mononucleate spores. In the one spored asci the two meiotic divisions occur within the young ascospore, i.e. spore wall formation starts immediately after development of the ascus. These cytological observations were substantiated by genetic data, which in addition confirmed the prediction that binucleate spores may be heterokaryotic. This occurs when there is a postreduction of at least one of the genes by which the parents of the cross differ. This also explains the high frequency of prototrophs in the progeny on non-allelic auxotrophs since random spore isolates are made without distinguishing between mono-and binucleate spores. The possibility of analysing offspring of binucleate spores by tetrad analysis is discussed. These findings enable us to understand the life cycle of S. lipolytica in detail and we are now in a position to start concerted breeding for strain improvement especially with respect to single cell protein production.  相似文献   

11.
Perithecium development in Sordaria, the type genus of the Sordariaceae, is similar to that reported in other genera of this family. Features that characterize the Sordariaceae include the differentiation of the hyphal envelope that surrounds the ascogonium into peripheral wall layers and a pseudoparenchymatous centrum. Broad paraphyses composed of delicate, multinucleate cells arise from the cells of the centrum and completely fill the perithecium, crushing the remaining pseudoparenchymatous cells against the perithecial wall. Sordaria fimicola differs from other species of Sordariaceae studied in the aggregation of the ascogenous cells to form a placenta-like mass in the base of the centrum. Consequently, the asci arise in a cluster rather than in a uniform wall layer. Incomplete observations on Gelasinospora longispora indicate that its development is typically sordariaceous.  相似文献   

12.
Early stages of pseudothecium development consist of small pseudoparenchymatous stromata in which ascogonia differentiate. Deeply staining cells in the apical region of the young pseudothecium elongate to form pseudoparaphyses, which grow down to fill the centrum. Ascogenous hyphae grow out from ascogenous cells, located in the basal plectenchyma, and croziers arise and proliferate from the ascogenous hyphae. Bitunicate asci grow up among the pseudoparaphyses and forcibly discharge two-celled hyaline ascospores at maturity. Because centrum development in Didymella bryoniae (Auersw.) Rehm is pseudoparaphysate, the causal agent of gummy stem blight in watermelon is properly placed in the order Pleosporales. The placement of this species in Didymella on the basis of the Ascochyta cucumis Fautr. et Roum. anamorph is supported by centrum structure.  相似文献   

13.
Rosinski , Martin A. (U. Maine, Orono.) Development of the ascocarp of Ceratocystis ulmi. Amer. Jour. Bot. 48(4): 285–293. Illus. 1961.—A study of the development of the perithecium of Ceratocystis ulmi was conducted using classic histological techniques. This study revealed the presence of a singular combination of primitive and advanced characteristics. The perithecium possesses a simple centrum made up only of ascogenous hyphae and small, spherical asci, but croziers are formed prior to ascus formation, and the ascogenous hyphae are arranged in a hymenium. Since development of C. ulmi compares closely with most other accounts of development in other members of the genus Ceratocystis, it appears that Ceratocystis is a good taxon. In addition, because of its intermediate nature and because Ceratocystis is the type genus of the family Ophiostomataceae, this family should be placed in a separate order, the Ophiostomatales.  相似文献   

14.
Ascocarp development in Nectria haematoccocca begins with the formation of deeply staining coils as lateral branches of the vegetative hyphae. As these coils develop into multicellular, multi-nucleate ascogonia, they are surrounded by a pseudoparenchymatous envelope. During ascocarp development an apical meristem produces cells that elongate downward into the centrum, forming long, filamentous, apical paraphyses. When fully developed the cells of the apical paraphyses swell, producing a tissue that is pseudoparenchymatous in appearance. The ascogonium proliferates to form a layer of multinucleate ascogenous cells across the base of the ascocarp. Asci form from the ascogenous cells by means of croziers. The asci grow up among the apical paraphyses, which disintegrate as the ascocarp matures. This pattern is typical of the Nectria-type of development, indicating that this species belongs in the Hypocreales.  相似文献   

15.
Studies on the morphology of the ascocarps of 39 species of Hypodermataceae revealed several previously unknown cytological features. Two basic and one intermediate type of centrum ontogeny are discussed. Ascal initiation within Type I centrum occurs in the basal cells of the pseudoparaphyses and involves anastomoses, while ascal initiation within Type II occurs in cells of a plectenchymatous centrum, with no visible anastomosing in the ascocarp. There is frequent anastomosing between vegetative hyphae well in advance of initiation of the ascocarp. Ascal initiation in the intermediate type has ontogenetic sequences similar to those in Types I and II.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Hanlin , Richard T. (Georgia Experiment Station, Experiment.) Studies in the genus Nectria. II. Morphology of N. gliocladioides. Amer. Jour. Bot. 48(10): 900–908. Illus. 1961.—Swollen tips of vegetative hyphae develop into multicellular archicarps from which multinucleate ascogonia form. From basal cells of each archicarp arise hyphae which grow up into a prosenchymatous, true perithecial wall; around this wall is formed a thin pseudoparenchymatous stroma of compacted hyphae. The ascogonia give rise to ascogenous cells from which croziers and asci form directly. At the same time, an apical meristem forms cells that grow downward into the centrum. These are pseudoparaphyses. Asci grow up among the pseudoparaphyses, which deliquesce as the ascocarp matures. The ascus tip contains a thick ring with a pore and lateral thickening of the ascus wall. Ascospores are forcibly ejected. The chromosome number is 4. This species conforms to the Nectria Developmental Type of Luttrell.  相似文献   

18.
Thin sections taken from intact ascocarps were examined to trace the developmental sequence of ascocarp formation in Sporormia australis Speg. The ascocarp originated from a uninucleate vegetative hyphal cell which underwent repeated divisions and formed an ascostroma. In the center of the young ascostroma a cavity formed, apparently from cell disintegrations, and enlarged as the ascocarp enlarged. Within the cavity pseudoparaphyses developed from undifferentiated pseudoparenchymatous cells at the apex of the cavity and extended downward. Ascogenous hyphae arose from proliferating uninucleate cells at the base of the cavity. As the ascocarp matured, the pseudoparenchymatous cells differentiated into three layers, none of which were considered homologous to the perithecial wall lining the cavity of pyrenomycetes. The cells of the apex were not differentiated into layers and light microscopy revealed the presence of an ostiole through which bitunicate asci discharged their eight 4-celled ascospores.  相似文献   

19.
Development of a typical pseudoparaphysate centrum in Didymosphaeria sadasivanii Ramachandra-Reddy indicates that this ascomycete is properly placed in the Pleosporaceae despite the fact that forcible discharge of ascospores from bitunicate asci has not been demonstrated. The relatively thin-walled asci releasing ascospores within the ascocarp in D. sadasivanii, as in Cochliobolus spp., probably were derived by reduction from the bitunicate type. Ascocarps matured on malt agar slants but developed more rapidly and normally on autoclaved alfalfa stems inoculated in medicine bottles and transferred to moist filter paper in large petri dishes when covered by mycelium.  相似文献   

20.
Morphology, development and nuclear behavior of the ascogenous stroma and asci in the infection spots have been described inTaphrina maculans Butler. The fungus forms subcuticular and intercellular mycelium in the leaf tissues and the ascogenous layers originate through division of the subcuticular hyphal cells in the infection sites. Germination of ascogenous cells starts with their elongation in the uppermost layer forming asci and ascospores without formation of stalk cells. Meiosis of the fusion (diploid) nucleus occurs in the young ascus as in otherTaphrina species devoid of stalk cells. The haploid chromosome complement in this species consists of 3 chromosomes (n=3). All the cells in the stromatic layer are potential ascogenous cells and ascus formation continues, until all of them are exhausted in the infection spot. Eight ascospores are normally formed in each ascus, but multi-plication of ascospores may occurin situ later. Three morphologically distinct types of ascus opening are encountered, which are apparently not correlated with prevalent environment. Multiplication of ascospores after their discharge from mature asci occurs by budding proceded by a mitotic division of the spore nucleus. Blastospores (budded cells) germinate into short hyphae and binucleate condition of cells originates by mitotic division of the nucleus. Occurrence of giant cells containing 2 nuclei is often observed. Possible origin of Uredinales fromTaphrina-like ancestors has been indicated due to their close resemblance.  相似文献   

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