J 2006

The cytoskeleton in the unique cell reproduction by conidiogenesis of the long-neck yeast Fellomyces (Sterigmatomyces) fuzhouensis.

GABRIEL, Miroslav, Marie KOPECKÁ, Masashi YAMAGUCHI, Augustin SVOBODA, Kanji TAKEO et. al.

Basic information

Original name

The cytoskeleton in the unique cell reproduction by conidiogenesis of the long-neck yeast Fellomyces (Sterigmatomyces) fuzhouensis.

Authors

GABRIEL, Miroslav (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Marie KOPECKÁ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Masashi YAMAGUCHI (392 Japan), Augustin SVOBODA (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Kanji TAKEO (392 Japan), Soichi YOSHIDA (392 Japan), Misako OHKUSU (392 Japan), Takashi SUGITA (392 Japan) and Takashi NAKASE (392 Japan)

Edition

Protoplasma, An International Journal of Cell Biology. 6. Wien, Austria, Springer Wien, 2006, 0033-183X

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

30000 3. Medical and Health Sciences

Country of publisher

Austria

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 1.333

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14110/06:00016055

Organization unit

Faculty of Medicine

UT WoS

000242015400004

Keywords in English

Basidiomycetes; Fellomyces fuzhouensis; Conidiogenesis; Cytoskeleton; Immunofluorescence; Electron Microscopy

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 17/3/2011 14:25, prof. MUDr. Marie Kopecká, CSc.

Abstract

V originále

The morphology of conidiogenesis and associated changes in microtubules, actin distribution and ultrastructure were studied in the basidiomycetous yeast Fellomyces fuzhouensis by phase-contrast, fluorescence, and electron microscopy. Asexual reproduction by conidiogenesis in the long-neck yeast F. fuzhouensis has unique features distinguishing it from known asexual forms of reproduction in the budding and fission yeasts. Fellomyces fuzhouensis develops a unique long and narrow neck during conidiogenesis, through which the nucleus must migrate into the conidium for eccentric mitosis. This is followed by eccentric cytokinesis. We found neither an actin cytokinetic ring nor a septum in the long neck, from which cytoplasm retracted back to mother cell after cytokinesis. Both the conidium and mother were separated from the empty neck by the development of a new lateral wall (initiated as a wall plug). The cytoskeleton is clearly involved in all these processes.

Links

GA310/00/0391, research and development project
Name: Cytoskelet u lidských patogenních kvasinkových mikroorganismů.
Investor: Czech Science Foundation, Cytoskeleton in human pathogenic yeast microorganisms
GA310/03/1195, research and development project
Name: Cytoskelet jako terčová struktura pro studium účinku antifungálních látek u patogenních kvasinek
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
GA310/06/0605, research and development project
Name: Lidské patogenní houby : cytoskelet jako potenciální terč inhibice morfogeneze.
Investor: Czech Science Foundation, Human pathogenic fungi: the cytoskeleton as a potential target of inhibition of