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1.
When budding cells of Candida albicans are starved for 20 min and then diluted into fresh nutrient medium at 37 degrees C, pH 6.7, they form mycelia by two alternative modes. For cells with small buds, the bud expands apically, resulting in a transiently tapered daughter cell. With continued growth, the daughter cell tapers into an elongated mycelium. For cells with large buds, the bud completes expansion in the budding form, the mother cell and then the daughter bud evaginate, and the evaginations grow as mycelia. The present study investigates whether the temporal and spatial changes in the zones of wall expansion during bud growth are involved in the two modes of mycelium formation. Data are presented which demonstrate that the transition circumference which determines the two modes of mycelium formation and the transition circumference at which the active apical expansion zone shuts down are both 7 micron. This exact correlation suggests that starved cells with buds with a circumference of less than 7 micron form mycelia in the tapering mode due to the reactivation of the still present apical expansion zone, and that starved cells with buds with a circumference greater than 7 micron complete bud growth by general expansion due to the absence of the apical expansion zone at the time of starvation.  相似文献   

2.
In Candida albicans, cells actively growing in the budding form cannot be immediately induced to form a mycelium until they enter stationary phase. However, if exponential phase cells are starved for a minimum of 10 to 20 min, they are inducible. Using a video-monitored perfusion chamber, we found that starved cells were able to form mycelia regardless of their position in the budding cycle. When starved exponential cells were released into fresh nutrient medium at high temperature and pH, conditions conducive to mycelium formation, unbudded cells evaginated after an average lag period of 75 min and then grew exclusively in the mycelial form. Depending upon the volume, or maturity, of the bud, budded cells entered two different avenues of outgrowth leading to mycelium formation. If the daughter bud was small, growth resumed by apical elongation of the bud, leading to a 'shmoo' shape which tapered into an apical mycelium. If the daughter bud was large, the cell underwent a sequence of evaginations: first, the mother cell evaginated after an average period of 75 min; then the daughter bud evaginated 40 min later. Both evaginations then grew in the mycelial form. In this latter sequence, the evagination on the mother cell was positioned non-randomly, occurring in the majority of cells adjacent to the bud. All buds undergoing evagination contained a nucleus, but roughly 20% of buds undergoing apical elongation did not.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Candida tropicalis is a dimorphic yeast capable of growing both as a budding yeast and as filamentous hyphae depending upon the source of the carbon used in the culture medium. The organization of F-actin during growth of the yeast form (Y-form) and the hyphal form (H-form) was visualized by rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin by using a conventional fluorescence microscope as well as a laser scanning confocal fluorescence microscope. In single cells without a bud or non-growing hyphae, actin dots were evenly distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Before the growth of the bud or hypha, the actin dots were concentrated at one site. During bud growth, actin dots were located solely in the bud. They filled the small bud and then filled the apical two-thirds of the cytoplasm of the middlesized bud. During growth of the large bud, actin dots which had filled the apical half of the cytoplasm gradually moved to the tip of the bud. In the formation of the septum, actin dots were arranged in two lines at the conjunction of the bud and the mother cell. During hyphal growth, the majority of actin dots were concentrated at the hyphal apex. A line of clustered spots or a band of actin was observed only at the site where the formation of a new septum was imminent. This spatial and temporal organization of actin in both categories of cells was demonstrated to be closely related to the growth and local deposition of new cell wall material by monitoring the mode of growth with Calcofluor staining. Treatment of both forms of cells with cytochalasin A (CA) confirmed the close relationship between actin and new cell wall deposition. CA treatment revealed lightly stained unlocalized actin which was associated with abnormal cell wall deposition as well as changes in morphology. These results suggest that actin is required for proper growth and proper deposition of cell wall material and also for maintaining the morphology of both forms of cells.Abbrevations FM fluorescence microscopy - EM electron microscopy - rh rhodamine - CA cytochalasin A - CD cytochalasin D - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - GA glutaraldehyde  相似文献   

4.
Filament ring formation in the dimorphic yeast Candida albicans   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
Stationary phase cultures of Candida albicans inoculated into fresh medium at 37 degrees C synchronously from buds at pH 4.5 and mycelia at pH 6.5. During bud formation, a filament ring forms just under the plasma membrane at the mother cell-bud junction at roughly the time of evagination. A filament ring also forms in mycelium-forming cells, but it appears later than in a budding cell and it is positioned along the elongating mycelium, on the average 2 microns from the mother cell-mycelium junction. Sections of filament rings in early and late budding cells and in mycelia appear similar. Each contains approximately 11 to 12 filaments equidistant from one another and closely associated with the plasma membrane. In both budding and mycelium-forming cells, the filament ring disappears when the primary septum grows inward. The close temporal and spatial association of the filament ring and the subsequent chitin-containing septum suggests a role for the filament ring in septum formation. In addition, a close temporal correlation is demonstrated between filament ring formation and the time at which cells become committed to bud formation at pH 4.5 and mycelium formation at pH 6.5. The temporal and spatial differences in filament ring formation between the two growth forms also suggest a simple model for the positioning of the filament ring.  相似文献   

5.
Stationary phase cells of Candida albicans can form either a bud or a hypha, depending upon the pH of the medium into which they are released. At low pH, cells form an ellipsoidal bud and at high pH, cells form an elongated hypha. By staining cells with rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin, we have compared the dynamics of actin localization during the formation of buds and hyphae. Before evagination, actin granules were distributed throughout the cytoplasmic cortex in both budding and hypha-forming cells. Just before evagination, actin granules clustered at the site of evagination, then filled the early evagination in both budding and hypha-forming cells. With continued bud growth, the actin granules then redistributed throughout the cytoplasmic cortex. In marked contrast, with continued hyphal growth, the majority of actin granules clustered at the hyphal apex. This distinct difference in actin granule localization may be related to the distinct differences in the expansion zones of the cell wall recently demonstrated between growing buds and hyphae. The spatial and temporal dynamics of the large neck actin granules and of actin fibres are also described.  相似文献   

6.
Depending upon growth temperature, Candida albicans can exhibit two different morphologies, a budding yeast or a mycelium. By studying the distribution of concanavalin A-ferritin particles on the cell wall surface during bud and germ tube formation, we have elucidated the way cell wall extension occurs. Both processes initially require the localized lysis of the wall in order to allow the incorporation of the newly synthesized material. Later on, the cell wall behaves as an elastic structure, allowing extension by an intosusception process and, as a consequence, cell growth.Abbreviation Con A concanavalin A  相似文献   

7.
When stationary phase cells of the dimorphic yeast Candida albicans are diluted into fresh medium at pH 4.5 (low pH), they synchronously form ellipsoidal buds, but when diluted into the same medium at pH 6.7 (high pH), they synchronously form elongate mycelia. Using a perfusion chamber to monitor single cells, we have compared the rates of volume growth between budding and mycelium-forming cells. Results are presented which demonstrate that: (1) after release from stationary phase into medium of low or high pH, each original sphere grows in volume to the time of initial evagination, but does not grow subsequently; (2) successive budding on the original mother cell occurs without interruption resulting in continuous volume growth; however, an interruption in volume growth of the initial bud (B1) occurs before it in turn evaginates; and (3) the rate of volume growth of the first bud at low pH is identical to the rate of volume growth of the mycelium at high pH even though the surface to volume ratios are quite different. The last result is unexpected and is therefore considered in relation to cell wall deposition.  相似文献   

8.
We examined the relationship between polarized growth and division site selection, two fundamental processes important for proper development of eukaryotes. Diploid Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells exhibit an ellipsoidal shape and a specific division pattern (a bipolar budding pattern). We found that the polarity genes SPA2, PEA2, BUD6, and BNI1 participate in a crucial step of bud morphogenesis, apical growth. Deleting these genes results in round cells and diminishes bud elongation in mutants that exhibit pronounced apical growth. Examination of distribution of the polarized secretion marker Sec4 demonstrates that spa2Delta, pea2Delta, bud6Delta, and bni1Delta mutants fail to concentrate Sec4 at the bud tip during apical growth and at the division site during repolarization just prior to cytokinesis. Moreover, cell surface expansion is not confined to the distal tip of the bud in these mutants. In addition, we found that the p21-activated kinase homologue Ste20 is also important for both apical growth and bipolar bud site selection. We further examined how the duration of polarized growth affects bipolar bud site selection by using mutations in cell cycle regulators that control the timing of growth phases. The grr1Delta mutation enhances apical growth by stabilizing G(1) cyclins and increases the distal-pole budding in diploids. Prolonging polarized growth phases by disrupting the G(2)/M cyclin gene CLB2 enhances the accuracy of bud site selection in wild-type, spa2Delta, and ste20Delta cells, whereas shortening the polarized growth phases by deleting SWE1 decreases the fidelity of bipolar budding. This study reports the identification of components required for apical growth and demonstrates the critical role of polarized growth in bipolar bud site selection. We propose that apical growth and repolarization at the site of cytokinesis are crucial for establishing spatial cues used by diploid yeast cells to position division planes.  相似文献   

9.
The cell surface topography of the following yeast strains was examined by scanning electron microscopy: Candida slooffii, C. lipolytica, Leucosporidium frigidum, and L. nivalis. Multipolar and lateral budding were observed in the Candida yeasts in contrast to bipolar budding in the Leucosporidium species. The cell surface topography and the morphology of the bud and birth scars in these yeasts differed markedly. Apart from the bud and birth scars, the cells of C. slooffii showed a relatively smooth topography. The bud scars were seen as a circular ridge of wall material surrounding a markedly convex scar plug. Birth scars were raised, rounded structures, which appeared to distend upon cell growth. In contrast, bud scars of C. lipolytica were platelike, lacked a distinct annulus of wall material, and were much less protuberent than those of C. slooffii. Birth scars were a more permanent feature of these cells. The topography of Leucosporidium yeasts was characterized by the presence of numerous protrusions on the cell surface. In some cases, the entire cell surface was covered by these protrusions. There appeared to be some correlations between the age of the cell and the extent of surface protrusions and degree of surface convolution...  相似文献   

10.
Five amino acids are accumulated during vegetative growth of Neurospora crassa, particularly.during the prestationary growth phase. Alanine, glutamine, glutamate, arginine and ornithine.comprised over 80% of the total amino acid pool in the mycelium. Amino acid pools of different amino acid auxotrophs were followed during the partial transformation of a mycelial mat into an aerial mycelium. The mycelial mat under starvation and in direct contact with air rapidly formed aerial mycelium, which produced thereafter a burst of conidia. During this process,glutamine and alanine in the mycelial mat were consumed more rapidly than other amino acids;in the growing aerial mycelium, glutamate and glutamine were particularly accumulated. Of the amino acids that were initially accumulated in the mycelial mat, only a high glutamine pool was required for aerial mycelium growth induced by starvation. This requirement for glutamine could not be satisfied by a mixture of the amino compounds that are synthesized via glutamine amidotransferase reactions. It is proposed that glutamine serves as a nitrogen carrier from the mycelial mat to the growing aerial mycelium.  相似文献   

11.
This article is dealing with the structure and the histochemical changes in the shoot apex of Torreya grandis in the growing seasons. The results of observation are summerized as follows: The vegetative bud in mature plant can be devided into four periods: the resting period, the period of bud expansion, the period of bud scale formation and the period of development of new terminal bud. In tile whole growing cycle, the vegetative apex always maintains a certain kind of zonation: the apical initials, the subapical group, the peripheral tissue zone and the rib meristem. In various periods of development, the composition of different zones is nom all the same. Meanwhile, the distribution and fluctuation of starch in the apex change from zone to zone, and parallel to the change of structure.  相似文献   

12.
In the freshwater coelenterate, hydra, asexual reproduction via budding occurs at the base of the gastric region about two-thirds of the distance from the head to the foot. Developmental gradients of head and foot activation and inhibition originating from these organizing centers have long been assumed to control budding in hydra. Much has been learned over the years about these developmental gradients and axial pattern formation, and in particular, the inhibitory influence of the head on budding is well documented. However, understanding of the role of the foot and potential interactions between the foot, bud, and head patterning systems is lacking. The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of the foot in the initiation of new axis formation during budding by manipulating the foot and monitoring effects on the onset of first bud evagination and the time necessary to reach the 50% budding point. Several experimental situations were examined: the lower peduncle and foot (PF) were injured or removed, a second PF was laterally grafted onto animals either basally (below the budding zone) or apically (above the budding zone), or both the head and PF were removed simultaneously. When the PF was injured or removed, the onset of first bud evagination was delayed and/or the time until the 50% budding point was reached was longer. The effects were more pronounced when the manipulation was performed closer to the anticipated onset of budding. When PF tissue was doubled, precocious bud evagination was induced, regardless of graft location. Removal of the PF at the same time as decapitation reduced the inductive effect of decapitation on bud evagination. These results are discussed in light of potential signals from the foot or interactions between the foot and head patterning systems that might influence bud axis initiation.  相似文献   

13.
In the filamentous ascomycete Ashbya gossypii polarity establishment at sites of germ tube and lateral branch emergence depends on homologues of Saccharomyces cerevisiae factors controlling bud site selection and bud emergence. Maintenance of polar growth involves homologues of well-known polarity factors of budding yeast. To achieve the much higher rates of sustained polar surface expansion of hyphae compared to mainly non-polarly growing yeast buds five important alterations had to evolve. Permanent presence of the polarity machinery at a confined area in the rapidly expanding hyphal tip, increased cytoplasmic space with a much enlarged ER surface for generating secretory vesicles, efficient directed transport of secretory vesicles to and accumulation at the tip, increased capacity of the exocytosis system to process these vesicles, and an efficient endocytosis system for membrane and polarity factor recycling adjacent to the zone of exocytosis. Morphological, cell biological, and molecular aspects of this evolution are discussed based on experiments performed within the past 10 y.  相似文献   

14.
In tip-growing plant cells such as pollen tubes and root hairs, surface expansion is confined to the cell apex. Vesicles containing pectic cell wall material are delivered to this apical region to provide the material necessarily to build the expanding cell wall. Quantification of wall expansion reveals that the surface expansion rates are not highest at the pole but instead in an annular region around the pole. These findings raise the question of the precise localization of exocytosis events in these cells. Recently, we used spatio-temporal image correlation spectroscopy (STICS) in combination with high temporal resolution confocal imaging to characterize the intracellular movement of vesicles in growing pollen tubes. These observations, together with the analysis of FRAP (fluorescence recovery after photobleaching) experiments, indicate that exocytosis is likely to occur predominantly in the same annular region where wall expansion rates are greatest. Therefore, tip growth in plant cells does not seem to happen exactly at the tip.Key words: tip growth, pollen tube, exocytosis, cell wall, expansion, root hair, plant cell growth, allometric growth, cytomechanics, cell mechanics, vesicle transport  相似文献   

15.
The biochemical consequences of inositol limitation in an inositol auxotroph of Neurospora crassa have been examined as a means of disclosing the cellular role of inositol. The cellular levels of inositol in the inl mutant were proportional to the concentration of inositol in the growth medium whereas inositol phosphate levels remained relatively constant at about 0.1 mumol/g (dry weight). After 72 h of growth, about 57-fold more protein per milligram (dry weight) was released by the mutant grown on limiting inositol than by the inositol-supplemented control. When the inositol-limited growth medium was osmotically buffered with 1% NaCl, 3% NaCl, or 6% sorbitol, there was about 33, 74, or 54%, respectively, less protein released by the mutant. These results are consistent with cell lysis occurring in the mutant grown on limiting inositol because of a structurally weakened cell wall and membrane deterioration. When sufficient inositol for normal mycelial growth was supplied to an inositol-deficient mycelium, there was within 2 h a rapid incorporation of inositol to 85% of control levels. This incorporation occurred without significant growth by any area of the mycelium. About 10 to 15% of the total cell inositol was translocated forward from the older mycelial areas to the growing tips; only 2 to 5% of the total cell inositol was translocated backward toward the older mycelial areas. Possible mechanisms of translocation are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The yeast cell contains a nucleus whose rigid centrosome carries a band of Feulgen-positive chromatin (centrochromatin) on its surface. The first step in budding is the formation of the bud by an extension of the centrosome over which the cell wall persists. Next the nuclear vacuole extends a process into the bud which contains the chromosomes. Finally the centrochromatin divides directly and the cells separate; a plug either of centrosome or cytoplasm sealing the bud pore. The cytoplasm, the centrosome, the centrochromatin and the nuclear wall are autonomous non genic organelles which never originate de novo.Copulation is the reverse of budding. The centrosomes fuse first; the cytoplasms mix; the nuclear vacuoles fuse by processes which travel along the fused centrosomes; and finally the centrochromatins fuse to form a single band.Figures 1–12. Drawings of budding yeast cells fixed in Schaudinn's fluid and stained with iron alum hemotoxylin, mounted in balsam. The cell wall is not visible due to the clearing action of the balsam. Except for Figure 5, the chromosomes and the nucleolus in the nuclear vacuole have been completely destained. The bud scar described by Barton is shown clearly at the end of the cell distal from the centrosome. The nuclear vacuole is usually forced into the extrusion formed by the bud scar. Since the cell wall is not visible, the plug of material connecting bud and mother cell as shown in Figure 12, fits into the cell wall and probably corresponds to the plug in the bud scar described by Barton. The details of the budding process are described in the text.Figures 13–18. Copulating yeast cells stained with Barrett's hemotoxylin and aceto-orcein and mounted in the stain. Chromosomes are visible in the nuclear vacuoles. The centrosome is usually visible and often appears to have a core which stains differentially. Except in Figure 16, the centrochromatin is visible as darkly stained material; in some cases surrounded by a clear zone. The “thick waisted” form of the cells identifies them as derived from recent copulations and distinguishes them from budding cells. The process of copulation is discussed in the text.  相似文献   

17.
Temperature-sensitive yeast mutants defective in gene CDC24 continued to grow (i.e., increase in cell mass and cell volume) at restrictive temperature (36 degrees C) but were unable to form buds. Staining with the fluorescent dye Calcofluor showed that the mutants were also unable to form normal bud scars (the discrete chitin rings formed in the cell wall at budding sites) at 36 degrees C; instead, large amounts of chitin were deposited randomly over the surfaces of the growing unbudded cells. Labeling of cell-wall mannan with fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated concanavalin A suggested that mannan incorporation was also delocalized in mutant cells grown at 36 degrees C. Although the mutants have well-defined execution points just before bud emergence, inactivation of the CDC24 gene product in budded cells led both to selective growth of mother cells rather than of buds and to delocalized chitin deposition, indicating that the CDC24 gene product functions in the normal localization of growth in budded as well as in unbudded cells. Growth of the mutant strains at temperatures less than 36 degrees C revealed allele-specific differences in behavior. Two strains produced buds of abnormal shape during growth at 33 degrees C. Moreover, these same strains displayed abnormal localization of budding sites when growth at 24 degrees C (the normal permissive temperature for the mutants); in each case, the abnormal pattern of budding sites segregated with the temperature sensitivity in crosses. Thus, the CDC24 gene product seems to be involved in selection of the budding site, formation of the chitin ring at that site, the subsequent localization of new cell wall growth to the budding site and the growing bud, and the balance between tip growth and uniform growth of the bud that leads to the normal cell shape.  相似文献   

18.
香榧营养苗端的结构及淀粉动态的研究   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
香榧(Torreya grandis Fort ex Lindl)成熟植株营养芽的季节生长可分四个时期,休眠期,叶扩展期,芽鳞形成期和新的顶芽形成期,在整个生长周期中,苗端始终保持一定的分区形式,但各区繁简在不同发育阶段不尽相同,淀粉在苗端的分布及消长也具有分区特性,与细胞组织学分区完全一致。  相似文献   

19.
By computer-enhanced videomicroscopy, we mapped the trajectory of external and internal cell surface markers in growing fungal hyphae to determine the pattern of cell wall expansion during apical growth. Carbon particles (India ink) were chosen as external markers for tip expansion of Rhizoctonia solani hyphae. Irregularities in the growing apical walls of R. solani served as internal markers. Marker movement was traced in captured frames from the videotaped sequences. External and internal markers both followed orthogonal trajectories; i.e., they moved perpendicular to the cell surface regardless of their initial position in the hyphal apex. We found no evidence that the tip rotates during elongation. The discovery that the cell wall of a growing hypha expands orthogonally has major repercussions on two fronts: 1) It supports the long-held view that turgor pressure is the main force driving cell wall expansion. 2) It provides crucial information to complete the mathematical derivation of a three-dimensional model of hyphal morphogenesis based on the vesicle supply center concept. In three dimensions, the vesicle gradient generated by the vesicle supply center is insufficient to explain shape; it is also necessary to know the manner in which the existing surface is displaced during wall expansion.  相似文献   

20.
A mathematical model for the growth and morphogenesis in colonies of mycelial fungi is given. The model consists of partial differential equations for accumulation of hyphae by apical growth, uptake of nutrient, and redistribution of a derived metabolite within the mycelium. Mechanisms for nutrient absorption and for metabolite translocation are discussed. An explanation for growth in the form of concentric mycelial rings is offered, based on the hypothesis that repeated metabolite buildup and depletion gives rise to different local branching rates, and thus distinct bands of hyphal densities.  相似文献   

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