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1.
The nematophagous fungus Arthrobotrys oligospora captures nematodes using adhesive polymers present on special hyphae (traps) which form a three-dimensional network. To understand further the adhesion mechanisms, A. oligospora surface polymers were visualized by transmission electron microscopy and characterized by chemical methods. Both traps and hyphae were surrounded by a fibrillar layer of extracellular polymers which stained with ruthenium red. The polymer layer was resistant to most of the chemicals and enzymes tested. However, part of the layer was removed by sonication in a Tris-buffer or by extraction in a chaotropic salt solution (LiCl), and the structure of the polymers was modified by treatment with Pronase E. Chemical analysis showed that the crude extracts of surface polymers removed by sonication or LiCl solution contained neutral sugars, uronic acids and proteins. Gel chromatography of the extracts revealed that the major carbohydrate-containing polymer(s) had a molecular mass of at least 100 kDa, containing neutral sugars (75% by weight, including glucose, mannose and galactose), uronic acids (6%) and proteins (19%). There was more polymer in mycelium containing trap-bearing cells than in vegetative hyphae. SDS-PAGE of the extracted polymers showed that the trap-forming cells contained at least one protein, with a molecular mass of approx. 32 kDa, not present on vegetative hyphae. Examining the capture of nematodes by traps of A. oligospora in which the layer of surface polymers was modified, or removed by chemical or enzymic treatments, showed that both proteins and carbohydrate surface polymers were involved in the adhesion process.  相似文献   

2.
Three species of Myzocytium parasitic on nematodes are described as new. In M. papillatum the zoospores encyst directly on the host cuticle before penetration. This species produces smooth, spherical oospores. In M. glutinosporum the biflagellate zoospores do not attack the host directly; after encystment they produce a spherical adhesive bud which allows the spores to adhere to the cuticle of passing nematodes. This species produces echinulate, spherical oospores. In M. anomalum the primary spores are aplanospores. After a dormant phase, and when suitably stimulated, these aplanospores change into biflagellate zoospores and the latter encyst on the host cuticle. No sexual state is known in this species. Persistence is by means of thick-walled, spherical chlamydospores.  相似文献   

3.
《Experimental mycology》1989,13(4):348-355
A panel of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) designated PA1 to PA8 has been raised against cell surface components of zoospores and cysts of the pathogenic fungusPythium aphanidermatum. The antibodies were selected on the basis of binding assays using indirect immunofluorescence. Four binding patterns were observed: PA1 labeled the entire zoospore surface including both flagella, PA2 binding was restricted to the anterior flagellum, PA3–PA6 bound to the adhesive cell coat secreted by zoospores during encystment, and PA7 and PA8 labeled zoospores and the cyst cell wall. Electron microscopic immunogold labeling of zoospores showed that PA2 bound to the mastigonemes on the anterior flagellum. The MAbs were tested for binding to zoospores and cysts of several isolates ofP. aphanidermatum, and to zoospores and cysts of several species ofPythium, Phystophthora, Aphanomyces, andSaprolegnia. The results showed that the antigens recognized by MAbs PA1–PA6 were restricted toP. aphanidermatum, whereas those recognized by PA7 and PA8 occurred on all species tested.  相似文献   

4.
Primary adhesion of zoospores of the green macroalga Enteromorpha to substrata involves a massive release of adhesive glycoproteins from Golgi-derived, membrane-bounded vesicles in the anterior region of the spore, followed by rapid curing. This process is sensitive to low concentrations (5-10 microg x ml(-1)) of the secretion-inhibiting antibiotic, brefeldin A (BFA). The proportion of cells that settled in BFA was reduced by approximately 50%, but the effect was fully reversed by washing in seawater to remove the BFA. Ultrastructural observations showed that BFA caused the breakdown of Golgi stacks in the majority of cells examined. When settled cells were subjected to shear stress, a greater proportion of those settled in the presence of BFA were detached, compared with controls, indicating reduced adhesion strength in the presence of the antibiotic. The most likely reason for this is that strong adhesion to substrata either requires the synthesis of extra adhesive materials beyond those present in the swimming spore, or the secretion of an additional component required for adhesive curing. The novel use of atomic force microscopy in force modulation mode demonstrated that the adhesive secreted by most spores in the presence of BFA did not undergo the rapid curing process typical of control spores. However, some variation between zoospores was observed, with some cells showing no ultrastructural changes and normal adhesive curing. These results are discussed in relation to variations observed in the propensity and competence of spores to settle, which may be reflected in differential requirements for de novo synthesis and secretion of materials needed for full adhesion.  相似文献   

5.
Living Xiphinema americanum (Xa) and X. rivesi (Xr) extracted from soil samples and stored for 1-5 days at 4 or 20 C contained aseptate fungal hyphae. The fungi directly penetrated the nematode''s cuticle from spores encysted near the head. Penetration through the stoma, vulva, or anus was rare. Catenaria anguillulae (Cat), Lagenidium caudatura (Lag), Aphanomyces sp. (Aph), and Leptolegnia sp. (Lep) were isolated into pure culture from infected nematodes. The pathogenicity of these zoosporic fungi was determined by incubating mixed freshly extracted Xa and Xr in 2% soil extract (pH = 6.7, conductivity = 48 μmhos, 20 ± 2 C) containing zoospores obtained from single-spore isolates. After 4 days, Cat, Lag, Aph, and Lep had infected 78, 18, 13, and 22%, respectively, of the nematodes. Both Xa and Xr were infected by every fungus; however, the relative susceptibility of Xa and Xr to these fungi was not determined. All noninoculated control nematodes remained uninfected and alive. In a second experiment, parasitism of Xa and Xr by Aph and Lep was increased when nematodes were incubated in 2% soil extract for 4 days before exposure to zoospores. In a third experiment, parasitism of Xa and Xr by Cat was greater in diluted saturation soil extract (conductivity = 100-400 μmhos) than in undiluted saturation extract (conductivity = 780 μmhos). Cat produced small zoospores (4-μm-d), bulbous infection hyphae, and assimilative hyphae of varying diameters in nematodes, whereas Lag, Aph, and Lep produced large zoospores (8-μm-d) and tubular, uniform infection and assimilative hyphae in nematodes.  相似文献   

6.
Pythium monospermum,, P. aphanidermatum, and Phytophthora palmivora were found to be capable of destroying certain nonstylet-bearing nematodes through endozoic parasitism by hyphae from ingested zoospores. Hyphae of P. monospermum parasitized nematode eggs but could not capture or otherwise prey upon living nematodes. We suggest that endoparasitism of free-living nematodes may be common among Oomycetes in nature.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Newly settled zoospores of bothLaminaria saccharina andNereocystis luetkeana are surrounded by adhesive plaques. At this stage cell wall deposition has not occurred and similar structures cannot be detected in the cytoplasm. In free swimming zoospores, however, plaques are observed exclusively in small vesicles within the cytoplasm. Enzymatic extractions and cytochemical tests indicate that plaques are glycoproteid in nature. Studies on the influence of several enzymes on the attachment of zoospores show that plaques are involved in the adhesion of zoospores to the substratum.Project supported by NRC grant #A2288. Nereocystis data are part of a Ph.D. dissertation presented by this author to the University of British Columbia.  相似文献   

8.
Significantly higher numbers of zoospores of the fouling, green alga Enteromorpha adhered to silicone elastomers cured by dibutyltin dilaurate (DBTDL) than to identical polymers cured by dibutyltin diacetate (DBTDA). Enhanced zoospore adhesion was shown to be due to the presence of DBTDL and the effect was concentration‐dependent. Further experiments revealed that enhanced zoospore adhesion also occurred to glass coverslips coated with lauric acid (C12) and other saturated fatty acids. The possibility that fatty acids may act as chemical cues (chemoattractants), guiding motile zoospores to the substratum for settlement in the natural environment is discussed. Settlement of other fouling organisms to DBTDL‐cured silicone elastomers is currently being investigated.  相似文献   

9.
《Mycoscience》2002,43(2):119-125
Haptoglossa spp. (Lagenidiales, Oomycetes) have been known to parasitize microscopic animals by means of a “gun” cell that shoots an infection cell, named the sporidium, into the body of the animal. A thallus grown from the sporidium changes into a zoosporangium at maturation to produce a number of zoospores that encyst after a swarming period, and the resulting cysts germinate to produce gun cells. In Haptoglossa zoospora, endoparasitic in nematodes, the cysts of primary zoospores that swam for about 5min did not develop gun cells but produced secondary zoospores that swam for about 3h. After encystment of the secondary zoospores, each secondary cyst germinated to produce a gun cell. In the present study, the secondary zoospores of the genus Haptoglossa could be recorded with a videocassette recorder for the first time. The videocassette recording also revealed the infection of a nematodes by H. zoospora and H. heterospora to be composed of two steps of injection of a sporidium by the gun cell, in which the gun cell came in contact with the cuticle of a nematode and produced a spherical adhesorium on the tip of the cell in 0.07–0.1 s in both species. The adhesorium was ~2 μm in H. zoospora and ~4 μm in H. heterospora. When the adhesorium inflated to full size, it shot the sporidium into the nematode's body in 0.5–0.65 s and in 0.2–0.5 (or rarely 1.0) s in H. zoospora and H. heterospora, respectively. After shooting, the empty gun cell with an empty cyst case was separated from the cuticle immediately in both species.  相似文献   

10.
Stanley MS  Callow ME  Callow JA 《Planta》1999,210(1):61-71
Zoospores of Enteromorpha compressa (L.) Grev. secrete an adhesive cell coat which is involved in their attachment to various substrata. Two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), designated Ent 1 and Ent 6, were raised against settled zoospores displaying secreted adhesive. Both antibodies labelled specifically the anterior region of the cell containing putative adhesive vesicles. During settlement the antigens recognised by both mAbs were secreted but whereas Ent 6 recognised a fibrillar material released within a few minutes of settlement, Ent 1 recognised components which were associated predominantly with the developing cell wall at later time points. Both mAbs also labelled a Golgi-rich region of settled spores, suggesting that these antigens are also synthesised after settlement. Both mAbs labelled the cell walls of vegetative tissue. Competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay indicated that the two antibodies recognise separate, but overlapping epitopes. In spore settlement assays the Ent 6 immunoglobulin strongly reduced initial adhesion at low concentration whereas the inhibitory effects of Ent 1 occurred at later time points. On analysis by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, (SDS-PAGE) both MAbs recognised a major buffer- and SDS-soluble, polydisperse 110-kDa antigen. The 110-kDa component was present in extracts of zoospores and sporulating tissue, but absent, in soluble form, from vegetative tissue. Deglycosylation of zoospore extract with anhydrous HF and peptide N-glycosidase digestion, showed that the major 110-kDa antigen is an N-linked glycan, and that the epitope is borne by the protein component. Time-course experiments showed that the Ent 6 antigen became progressively insoluble after zoospore attachment. Taken together, the data indicate that the two antibodies recognise separate but closely related antigens which have distinctive roles in adhesion and cell wall development. Received: 8 February 1999 / Accepted: 26 July 1999  相似文献   

11.
Zoospores of Phytophthora palmivora adhered to a plastic film surface were examined by electron microscopy. Three stages of adhesion were compared: (1) non-adhesive, unencysted zoospores, (2) adhered incipient cysts, and (3) adhered mature cysts. Thin sections of incipient cysts revealed cells attached to the film surface through the partially discharged contents of the so-called peripheral vesicles; this seems to be the first step in cell adhesion. In mature cysts, the adhesive appeared to have been compacted into an electron-dense deposit binding the cyst wall to the plastic surface. The adhesion zone was also examined in face view after lysing attached incipient cysts with sodium dodecyl sulphate. Cyst wall microfibrils were seen together with an amorphous substance (presumably the adhesive material). The microfibrils were in various stages of formation. Seemingly, adhesion and microfibril formation take place concurrently. The possibility was considered that the material contained in the peripheral vesicles serves in both cell adhesion and microfibril elaboration.  相似文献   

12.
During encystment,Phytophthora cinnamomi zoospores bind firmly to the host surface. We have developed a microassay to study adhesion of the zoospores to solid surfaces, both biological and non-biological. The results show that timing of the acquisition of adhesiveness during encystment correlates closely with the secretion of high molecular weight glycoproteins. The adhesive phase is short lived, occurring between 1 and 4 min after induction of encystment. During this period, cells that come into contact with a variety of surfaces (glass, plastic, and onion epidermis) become firmly attached, while cells that come into contact with one of these substrata after this period are unable to bind. Our results also show that EGTA inhibits cyst adhesion, while addition of calcium promotes cyst adhesion, especially of cysts more than 4 min old. To help identify the cyst surface component involved in adhesion we tested a number of lectins for their ability to block cyst adhesion. Soybean agglutinin andHelix pomatia agglutinin, lectins which bind to the secreted high molecular weight glycoproteins, both inhibit adhesion in the presence and absence of the hapten sugar, indicating that inhibition was non-specific. Wheatgerm agglutinin, a lectin which does not bind to the cyst surface, also blocked adhesion non-specifically.  相似文献   

13.
Vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-cadherin), a divergent member of the type II classical cadherin family of cell adhesion proteins, mediates homophilic adhesion in the vascular endothelium. Previous investigations with a bacterially produced protein suggested that VE-cadherin forms cell surface trimers that bind between apposed cells to form hexamers. Here we report studies of mammalian-produced VE-cadherin ectodomains suggesting that, like other classical cadherins, VE-cadherin forms adhesive trans dimers between monomers located on opposing cell surfaces. Trimerization of the bacterially produced protein appears to be an artifact that arises from a lack of glycosylation. We also present the 2.1-Å-resolution crystal structure of the VE-cadherin EC1-2 adhesive region, which reveals homodimerization via the strand-swap mechanism common to classical cadherins. In common with type II cadherins, strand-swap binding involves two tryptophan anchor residues, but the adhesive interface resembles type I cadherins in that VE-cadherin does not form a large nonswapped hydrophobic surface. Thus, VE-cadherin is an outlier among classical cadherins, with characteristics of both type I and type II subfamilies.  相似文献   

14.
The resistance of charged polymers to biofouling was investigated by subjecting cationic (PDMAEMA), anionic (PSPMA), neutral (PHEMA-co-PEG10MA), and zwitterionic (PSBMA) brushes to assays testing protein adsorption; attachment of the marine bacterium Cobetia marina; settlement and adhesion strength of zoospores of the green alga Ulva linza; settlement of barnacle (Balanus amphitrite and B. improvisus) cypris larvae; and field immersion tests. Several results go beyond the expected dependence on direct electrostatic attraction; PSPMA showed good resistance towards attachment of C. marina, low settlement and adhesion of U. linza zoospores, and significantly lower biofouling than on PHEMA-co-PEG10MA or PSBMA after a field test for one week. PDMAEMA showed potential as a contact-active anti-algal coating due to its capacity to damage attached spores. However, after field testing for eight weeks, there were no significant differences in biofouling coverage among the surfaces. While charged polymers are unsuitable as antifouling coatings in the natural environment, they provide valuable insights into fouling processes, and are relevant for studies due to charging of nominally neutral surfaces.  相似文献   

15.
The conidia of the endoparasitic fungus Meria coniospora (Deuteromycetes) had different patterns of adhesion to the cuticles of the several nematode species tested; adhesion in some species was only to the head and tail regions, on others over the entire cuticle, whereas on others there was a complete lack of adhesion. After adhesion, the fungus usually infected the nematode. However, adhesion to third-stage larvae of five animal parasitic nematodes, all of which carry the cast cuticle from the previous molt, did not result in infection. M. coniospora infected animal parasitic nematodes when this protective sheath was removed. Seven preparations of sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid) gave three types of response in adhesion-infection of nematodes: (i) a significant reduction in conidial adhesions; (ii) no interference with adhesion, but a 10-day delay in infection; and (iii) a delay in infection by 2 to 3 days. The current results support previous findings indicating involvement of sialic acids localized on nematode cuticles in recognition of prey by M. coniospora.  相似文献   

16.
Vreeland  V.  Grotkopp  E.  Espinosa  S.  Quiroz  D.  Laetsch  W. M.  West  J. 《Hydrobiologia》1993,260(1):485-491
As a first step in understanding the mechanism of algal adhesion, we describe the adhesive process during early development in Fucus gardneri zygotes. These brown algal embryos adhere to the intertidal substrate shortly after fertilization. Zygotes adhered nonspecifically to hydrophilic and hydrophobic substrates and microspheres. Initial binding of microspheres to the zygote surface coincided with initial zygote adhesion to the substrate. Binding of monodisperse dyed microspheres was used for adhesive localization and quantitation. The timing and extent of adhesive development were variable in populations of synchronously-fertilized zygotes. Small adhesive patches first appeared at 3–6 h, indicating secretion of adhesive components from cytoplasmic vesicles. The zygote hemisphere toward the substrate became sticky by 7–8 h. The entire surface was sticky after rhizoid germination at 12 h. Localization of adhesive at both the outer wall surface and along strands attached to the wall implicates cell wall polymers as a glue component. Loss of microspheres from the rhizoid surface in high salt or chelators indicates that initial adhesive attachment to the wall is noncovalent. Formation of adhesive aggregates in medium showed that the mechanism of adhesive formation includes two separable processes, secretion of adhesive components and extracellular interactions between adhesive components and the wall.  相似文献   

17.
Lecophagus vermicola sp. nov. is described and illustrated as a predacious (carnivorous) hyphomycete living in bark fissures of living trees of Platanus and other angiosperm and gymnosperm trees, recorded in Hungary, Luxembourg and France. The fungus captures nematodes unlike other Lecophagus species, which are predators of rotifers and tardigrades. The morphology of the sessile, adhesive knobs differ from all previously described species of the genus which form adhesive pegs. Molecular data confirms that the new species belongs to the Lecophagus clade but without matching existing sequences. The fungus captures victims with adhesive knobs and colonizes its prey with a mycelium of rather broad hyphae on which, again, adhesive knobs are formed which penetrate the cuticule of the victim. Clusters of colonized nematodes form a network utilized to capture more prey. The fungus lives in the xeric, ephemerally aquatic habitat of bark fissures of standing, living or dead, corticated trunks and branches. The genus Haptocara is compared, which has similar adhesive knobs capturing nematodes and similar broad hyphae, but for which no molecular data was available.  相似文献   

18.

The attachment of motile spores of the green alga Enteromorpha to the substratum is an active process involving an irreversible commitment to adhesion and the secretion of an adhesive. This paper provides an overview of the spore adhesion processes and outlines the results of an experimental approach towards the molecular characterisation of the adhesive, based on the use of monoclonal antibody (mAb) technology. Hybridomas were produced to settled spores displaying secreted adhesive. Candidates producing mAbs to putative adhesive were selected using a range of criteria based on cellular localisation, time of secretion and functional inhibition of adhesion. MAb Ent 6 immunolabelled fibrillar material which was secreted during the early stages of adhesion and low (nM) concentrations of this mAb, or its F(ab)2 fragments, strongly inhibited the attachment of zoospores. A related antibody (Ent 1) also labelled the spore adhesive apparatus, but the antigen appeared to be secreted later during the adhesion process and was predominantly associated with the developing cell wall. Ent 1 also inhibited settlement in spore adhesion assays but the effect was most pronounced at later time points which suggests that this antigen does not have a role in the earliest stages of adhesion. Immunolocalisation showed that both antigens were absent from the cytoplasm or organelles of vegetative tissue but labelled the vegetative cell wall, suggesting a relationship between cell wall components and materials involved in primary adhesion. Both mAbs labelled the Golgi region of settled spores, suggesting continued synthesis of both antigens after adhesion. Both mAbs recognised a 110 kDa N‐linked polydisperse and heterogeneous glycoprotein in extracts of swimming spores under denaturing conditions. In native form the antigens behaved as high molecular weight aggregates (Mr>1.3 × 106). The antigens became progressively insoluble after zoospore attachment. Taken together, the data suggest that the two antibodies recognise closely related, polydisperse, self‐aggregating cell wall glycoproteins in which there is some structural variation to suit alternative roles in primary adhesion and cell wall formation. The two mAbs Ent 1 and Ent 6 partially discriminate between these structural and functional variants. A model for zoospore adhesion is discussed in which adhesion is viewed as an extension of cell wall synthesis, with cross‐links between glycoproteins and other cell wall matrix components providing a strong physical continuum between the cell and the adhesive at the substratum interface.  相似文献   

19.
Microbes attach to surfaces and form dense communities known as biofilms, which are central to how microbes live and influence humans. The key defining feature of biofilms is adhesion, whereby cells attach to one another and to surfaces, via attachment factors and extracellular polymers. While adhesion is known to be important for the initial stages of biofilm formation, its function within biofilm communities has not been studied. Here we utilise an individual-based model of microbial groups to study the evolution of adhesion. While adhering to a surface can enable cells to remain in a biofilm, consideration of within-biofilm competition reveals a potential cost to adhesion: immobility. Highly adhesive cells that are resistant to movement face being buried and starved at the base of the biofilm. However, we find that when growth occurs at the base of a biofilm, adhesion allows cells to capture substratum territory and force less adhesive, competing cells out of the system. This process may be particularly important when cells grow on a host epithelial surface. We test the predictions of our model using the enteric pathogen Vibrio cholerae, which produces an extracellular matrix important for biofilm formation. Flow cell experiments indicate that matrix-secreting cells are highly adhesive and form expanding clusters that remove non-secreting cells from the population, as predicted by our simulations. Our study shows how simple physical properties, such as adhesion, can be critical to understanding evolution and competition within microbial communities.  相似文献   

20.
The adhesion of conidia of the fungus Dilophospora alopecuri to the surface of the second stage dauer larva (DL2) of the nematode Anguina agrostis (syn. A. funesta) was examined using both light and electron optics. The process of attachment does not lead to any apparent damage to the epicuticle of the nematode. Photographs of sections cut tangentially through the setulose appendages of the conidia show that a mucilagenous fibrillar material appears to be exuded from the highly convoluted surface of these appendages. This material adheres to the surface of the nematode cuticle and is deposited in the transverse annulations. The adhesion of these spores to DL2 of A. agrostis was examined in 4822 nematodes from four galls. The mean percentage of DL2 with spores adhering was 64% and ranged from 43 to 85%. This adhesion was compared with that of Corynebacterium rathayi from bacterial galls and was found to coincide. Thus, bacteria adhere to nematodes with D. alopecuri conidia attached and these conidia adhere to nematodes with C rathayi attached. Furthermore, DL2 that are free from conidial adhesion appear to be free from bacterial adhesion and, in most instances, DL2 that remain from from bacterial adhesion remain free from conidial adhesion. These observations draw attention to the potential of D. alopecuri as an agent for the biological control of annual ryegrass toxicity. Conidial adhesion to A. agrostis differs from bacterial adhesion to this nematode in that no visible damage to the cuticle takes place. The concept that adhesion of microorganisms to nematodes occurs in two phases, one involving site recognition and the other, if it occurs, involving physiological interaction and morphological change is discussed.  相似文献   

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