A sensitive method for examining whole-cell biochemical composition in single cells of filamentous fungi using synchrotron FTIR spectromicroscopy
Cell function is related to cell composition. The asexual state of filamentous fungi (molds and mildews) has two main life cycle stages: vegetative hyphae for substrate colonization and nutrient acquisition, and asexual spores for survival and dispersal. Hyphal composition changes over a few tens of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of inorganic biochemistry 2008-03, Vol.102 (3), p.540-546 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cell function is related to cell composition. The asexual state of filamentous fungi (molds and mildews) has two main life cycle stages: vegetative hyphae for substrate colonization and nutrient acquisition, and asexual spores for survival and dispersal. Hyphal composition changes over a few tens of microns during growth and maturation; spores are different from hyphae. Most biochemical analyses are restricted to studying a few components at high spatial resolution (
e.g. histochemistry) or many compounds at low spatial resolution (
e.g. GC–MS). Synchrotron FTIR spectromicroscopy can be used to study fungal cell biology by fingerprinting varieties of carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids at about 6
μm spatial resolution. FTIR can distinguish fungal species and changes during hyphal growth, and reveals that even fungi grown under optimal
vs mildly stressed conditions exhibit dramatic biochemical changes without obvious morphological effects. Here we compare hypha and spore composition of two fungi,
Neurospora and
Rhizopus. There are clear biochemical changes when
Neurospora hyphae commit to spore development, during spore maturation and following germination, many of which are consistent with results from molecular genetics, but have not been shown before at high spatial resolution.
Rhizopus spores develop within a fluid-containing sporangium that becomes dry at maturity.
Rhizopus spores had similar protein content and significantly more carbohydrate than the sporangial fluid, both of which are novel findings. |
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ISSN: | 0162-0134 1873-3344 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2007.10.023 |