Principles of Epidemiology and Microbiology

Lesson 2: Public Health Microbiology

Section IV: Fungi

 

2-19

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2-19. CLASSIFICATION OF FUNGI

 

Fungi are usually classified according to biological taxonomy based upon the type of hypha, spore, and reproduction. There are four classes of fungi, whose characteristics are shown in Table 2-5 and figure 2-10.

a. Class Phycomycetes. The algal fungi: bread molds and leaf molds. The only known mycosis (fungal disease) caused by fungi of this class is mucormycosIs, a very rare fungal growth of the upper respiratory tract, bronchial mucosa, and lungs. It occurs largely as a complication of a chronic, debilitating disease, such as uncontrolled diabetes.

 

b. Class Ascomycetes. The sac fungi: yeasts, mildews, and cheese molds. Fungi of this class are implicated in only three fungus diseases, all of which are rare.

 

c. Class Basidiomycetes. Mushrooms, toadstools, rusts, and smuts. The only pathogens in this class are the mushrooms of the genus Amanita, which cause severe systemic poisoning (sometimes death) when eaten.

 

d. Class Deuteromyceters. Fungi imperfecti: a heterogeneous collection of fungi without sexual reproduction. Most of the pathogens encountered in medical mycology belong to this class.

 

Taxonomic class of Fungi

Hypha

Type of Reproduction

 

Characteristic

spore

Origin of

Spore

Examples of Fungi

Pathogenicity

Phycomycetes

Asptate

Asexually

 

 

Sexually

Sporangio-

spore

 

Zygospore

or

oospore

 

Sporangio

phore

 

Fussion of

nuclei

 

Nuisance fungi

including

general

Absidia,

Muclor, and

Rhizopus

Very rare

Mucormycosis

Ascomycetes

 

 

 

 

 

Septate

Asexually

 

 

 

 

Sexually

Blastospore

 

Conidium

 

 

Ascospore

 

Budding

 

Conidio-

phore

 

Ascus

Allescheria

Aspergillus

Piedraia

 

 

Saccharomyces

(perfect yeast)

 

Rare

Maduromcosis

Aspergillosis

Black Piedra

Basidiomycetes

Septate

Sexually

 

Basidio-

spore

 

Basidium

Mushrooms,

smuts and

rusts

 

Rare

Mushroom

poisoning

Deutero-

mycetes

{fungi

imperfecti)

Septate

Asexually

Thallospore

 

 

Conidium

Thallus

(hypha)

 

 

Conidio-

phore

Most

saprophytes

and pathogens

encountered

in medical

mycology

(Imperfect

mold and

yeast)

 

Most Mycoses

encountered

in medical

mycology

 

Table 2-5. Characteristics of Fungi.

 

 

Figure 2-10. Structural components of fungi.

 

 

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