Growth Kinetics and Morphology of Colonies of the Filamentous Form of Candida albicans
- 1 September 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Microbiology
- Vol. 128 (9) , 2187-2194
- https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-128-9-2187
Abstract
The growth and development of mycelia of the dimorphic fungus C. albicans in serum-containing medium is described. Initially, colonies are undifferentiated (all hyphae in the mycelium having approximately the same diameter, extension rate, apical and intercalary compartment lenghts) whereas older mycelia differentiate at the colony margin to produce leading hyphae that are wider, faster growing and have longer apical and intercalary compartment lenghts than the branches they subtend. Early colony development exhibits unusual features; germ tube extension is linear (not exponential as in other fungi) and there is a prolonged delay between septation and the onset of branch formation. The subsequent patterns of growth and branching are similar in all other respects to those of other mycelial moulds. Mycelia have septa that delimit single nuclei within compartments. The septa do not prevent cytoplasmic flow and consequently allow the peripheral growth zone to span several compartments. Evidently, filamentous growth of C. albicans in this medium is best described as truly mycelial.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The regulation of nuclear migration and division during synchronous bud formation in released stationary phase cultures of the yeast Candida albicansExperimental Cell Research, 1980
- Chitin Synthesis in Candida albicans : Comparison of Yeast and Hyphal FormsJournal of Bacteriology, 1978
- The growth and oxygen uptake of synchronously dividing cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiaeExperimental Cell Research, 1964