Ultrastructure of hyphal cells of the dermatophyte Trichophyton tonsurans

Background and Purpose: Trichophyton tonsurans is a widely distributed anthropophilic dermatophyte causing different diseases of skin. In the literature limited data are available about the morphogenesis of vegetative mycelium of T. tonsurans and related anthropophilic dermatophytes. The aim of present study was to describe ultrastructural patterns of development, cellular organellography and septal pore apparatus structure of in vitro growing vegetative mycelium of T. tonsurans. Materials and Methods: Trichophyton tonsurans strain RCPFF 214/898 was grown on solid Czapek’s Agar (CzA) at 28ºС. For investigation of colonies morphology we used methods of light-, scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM). Results: Differences in morphogenesis of aerial and substrate hyphae were revealed. Mitochondrial reticulum and fibrosinous bodies were shown in T. tonsurans for the first time. The septal pore apparatus in hyphal cells of was comprised Woronin bodies and septal pore plugs. Woronin bodies (0.18 µm), located with 1‒4 near the pore, were spherical, membrane-bound, and had a homogeneous, electron-dense content. The cells of aerial and submerged hyphal cells of T. tonsurans contain two nuclei. Conclusion: Mature cells of substrate hyphae appeared more active than comparable cells in the aerial mycelium. During the maturation process, the differences in number and morphology of mitochondria, number of vacuoles, and in the synthesis of different types of storage substances were revealed. Presence of “mitochondrial reticulum” and variable types of storage substances in submerged hyphal cells suggested higher levels of metabolic activity compared to aerial mycelium.

Introduction richophyton tonsurans is a widely distributed anthropophilic dermatophyte causing scalp infection (tinea capitis) with endothrix involvement of hair [1]. The disorder frequently occurs in children [2] and adult women [3], and is often transmitted by physical contact, for example during wrestling [4]. Less often the mycosis affects smooth skin, feet or nails [5]. The species has an evolutionary origin from T. equinum occurring on horse skin. Kandemir et al. [6] noted that the two species are difficult to distinguish, as they possibly were in a stage of incomplete lineage sorting.
Data about morphogenesis of growing dermatophyte hyphal cells and their organellography are limited [7][8][9][10][11][12][13]. For understanding dermatophyte development, feeding, transport in host tissue, and mechanism of response to antifungal stress, data on cellular organellography and patterns of interactions with host cells are required, including in vitro baseline studies of cell behavior and ultrastructure. Structure of septa and septal pore apparatus have great significance to the analysis of cell communication, and ultrastructural data have been applied in fungal diagnostics and phylogeny. Patterns of morphogenesis of vegetative mycelium of T. tonsurans and related anthropophilic dermatophytes have not been investigated. Studies were limited to scanning electron microscopic ultrastructure of microconidia [14] and of walls of hyphal cells and chlamydospore-like cells [15]. The present study focuses on the ultrastructural patterns of hyphal cell morphogenesis, cellular organellography and septal pore apparatus structure of in vitro growing vegetative mycelium of Trichophyton tonsurans.

Results
Colonies were slow-growing, reaching a diameter of 3.5 cm after 15 days of incubation on CzA at 28ºC, were raised at the centre and flat near the margin (Figure 1 a), velvety, white, and had a yellowish-brown reverse.

Aerial hyphae
At low magnification observed with SEM, radial development of the colony is visible (Figure 1  During subsequent growth of the aerial mycelium, the number of mitochondria per cell did not change significantly. Mitochondria were single, rather small (0.3-0.5 µm), polymorphic. The mitochondrial matrix was median electron-dense and contained numerous light cristae with various extensions differing in orientation (Figure 1 g, arrows).
Morphogenesis of aerial cells continued with synthesis of storage lipids and rosettes of glycogen in cytosol and protein globules in vacuoles (Figures 1 h). The lipid inclusions (5-7 per cell section) in the globules were small (0.2-0.3 µm), polymorphic, median electron-dense, localized near interphase nuclei and the cell wall. The rosettes of glycogen (0.10-0.12 µm) having low electron-density often formed small aggregations and occupied a peripheral position in the hyphal cells (Figure 1 h), in close affinity to interphase nucleus and storage lipid inclusions. In mature hyphal cells, storage compounds were the main components of the cytosol, with a dominance of glycogen rosettes. The cytosol had moderate electrondensity and contained numerous free ribosomes. Plasma membranes were flat and in close contact with the thin (0.10-0.13 µm) cell wall. The walls were 2layered ( Figure 1 i), with a thick (0.08-0.11 µm, Figure 1 i, 1), moderately electron-dense internal and a thin (0.02-0.03 µm, Figure 1 i), dark, loose, often interrupted external layer with an irregular contour.

Submerged hyphae
The cells of a submerged mycelium were also oriented randomly and were densely interwoven (Figure 1 k). Density of hyphal cell distribution was increased during colony growth and differentiation. In the central part of hyphal cells one or two (Figures 1 j) interphase nuclei, that were spherical (1.3 µm diam), ellipsoidal (0.6 × 1.0 µm) or slightly irregular in shape (1.5 µm diam), were located. The condensed chromatin was in moderate amount and randomly distributed upon sectioning of the nucleus. The nucleolus was single, large (0.5 µm diam), localized near the nucleolar envelope, electron-dense, compacted, granular, with the irregular contour.
In young hyphal cells, small, variously shaped vacuoles fused with one another, leading to larger vacuoles, in which fibrillar and dark, homogeneous material accumulated, which were fragments of concentrically oriented membranes and dark protein globules (Figure 1 l, arrow). In mature hyphal cells, the formation of the central vacuole coincided with cellular transition to a stage of senescence. During maturation,
Among all types of storage compounds observed, the glycogen rosettes were dominant. Cytosol had high electron-density and contained numerous free ribosomes. The plasma membrane was straight or slightly undulate. Cell walls of hyphae of aerial mycelium differed from those of substrate hyphae. With increasing age of colonies, the frequency of senescent and dead cells in aerial and submerged mycelium progressively increased in a direction from the center to its periphery. Within about 30 days of incubation, living aerial and substrate hyphal cells were practically absent. The final stages of the morphogenesis of cells of a mycelium passed according to identical pattern. Sizes of nucleus and nucleolus decreased about 50%, while the level of vacuolization increased considerably (Figure 2 g) and the amount of storage compounds was reduced. The electron-density of cytosol, as well as the total number of organelles decreased.

Septal pore apparatus
Cells of aerial and submerged hyphae were separated from each other by single-layered, wedgeshaped septa (Figures 2 h, j, k), with thickness of 0.12 µm on average. In the central part of septa, a pore of 0.07 µm wide was observed. Typically, 1-4 spherical Woronin bodies (0.18 µm; Figures 2 h, j) were present. Contents of Woronin bodies were homogeneously electron-dense, while towards the periphery they were surrounded by a high electronic-dense, three-layered membrane. In young hyphal cells, Woronin bodies were sometimes located in cytosol near the cell wall  (Figure 2 k), which was generally present inside the septal pores of senescent cells of vegetative mycelium.

Discussion
Our data show that mature aerial and submerged hyphal cells of T. tonsurans are similar in number (2 nuclei) and size with respect to the interphase nuclei. In comparison, the hyphal cells of T. violaceum are generally multinucleate [7,8]. The two nuclei were typical for the hyphal cells of T. rubrum [9]. Nuclei of T. tonsurans submerged hyphal cells were typical variable in shape. During the maturation process, the number of mitochondria increased in hyphal cells of both aerial and submerged mycelium. In hyphal cells of submerged mycelium, mitochondria united together with formation of one giant organelle, termed "mitochondrial reticulum". This organelle has not been reported for dermatophytes. Main differences between the two hyphal types were revealed in the presence of this mitochondrial reticulum, in the number of vacuoles, and in the synthesis of storage compounds in the form of lipid inclusions, rosettes of glycogen, fibrosinous bodies and dark protein globules in vacuoles. In comparison, rosettes of glycogen and lipid inclusions were revealed in hyphal cells T. rubrum [9,11], rosettes of glycogen, lipid inclusions and dark protein globules in T. violaceum [10] and only lipid inclusions in Trichophyton interdigitale [13].
Submerged mycelium of T. tonsurans, in contrast to aerial hyphae, contain very limited storage compounds such as fibrosinous bodies, which present the polysaccharide storage type [16]. Previously, these bodies were described in the paraphysis-like cells of Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae [17], pedicel cells of the uredium of Melampsora lini [18], conidia and sometimes in the conidiogenous cells of five species of the powdery mildews Erysiphe communis, Microshaera alphitoides, Sphaerotheca pannosa, S. fulgineae, and S. mors-uvae [16], hyphal cells of submerged mycelium of Aspergillus versicolor [19] and A. candidus [20], in in vitro growing strains [21], and in the yeast cells of Cryptococcus neoformans in human brain [22].
In general, mature cells of growing submerged mycelium had a more active appearance in comparison to aerial hyphae. Possibly this difference is explained by the different roles of submerged and aerial hyphae, i.e. in feeding and sporulation, respectively. Judging from TEM data, the in vitro grown hyphal cells of aerial and submerged mycelium of T. tonsurans differ from each other in the early patterns of morphogenesis. This was also observed in the dermatophytes T. rubrum [9], T. violaceum [10] and T. interdigitale [13].
Trichophyton, in contrast to the genus Aspergillus where Woronin bodies of analyzed members were found to be rather homogeneous in the size and structure [19,20,23], was characterized by presence of Woronin bodies with more variable number and morphology. In T. tonsurans, typically 1-4 (0.18 µm), homogeneously electron-dense Woronin bodies were present, in T. interdigitale 3-5 (0.08 µm) crystalline bodies with moderate electron density [13], and in T. rubrum 1-7 (0.17 µm) homogeneously electron-dense bodies [9]. In investigated species of dermatophytes, Woronin bodies were surrounded by a highly electronicdense, three-layered membrane. In comparison, in the septal pore apparatus of Scedosporium apiospermum and S. boydii, crystalline satellites [24] were not surrounded by a membrane.
The ultrastructure of the septal pore apparatus generally is highly conserved between members of a single genus, and is usually applied as a character set at the ordinal level [1,24]. Only in the basidiomycetous yeast genus Trichosporon diverse types of septal pore apparatus are known [25]. Anthropophilic dermatophytes are known to be phylogenetically close, and the genus Trichophyton has recently been revised with rearrangement of remote species into Arthroderma [1]. The revealed differences between the investigated species of Trichophyton are thus far unexplained. Note that electron-dense plugs with the same morphology as in T. tonsurans were revealed in the septal pore of old hyphal cells another species of dermatophytes [7][8][9][10][11][12][13].

Conclusion
The hyphal cells of T. tonsurans contain two nuclei, with variable shape in submerged hyphal cells, which may be related with high metabolic activity. Mature cells of substrate hyphae appeared more active than comparable cells in the aerial mycelium. During the maturation process, the differences in number and morphology of mitochondria, number of vacuoles, and in synthesis of different types of storage substances were revealed. Presence of "mitochondrial reticulum" and variable types of storage substances in the hyphal cells of submerged mycelium suggested about higher levels of metabolic activity in comparison with the aerial mycelium. The septal pore apparatus of T. tonsurans hyphal cells typical contains 1-4 small (0.18 µm) dark Woronin bodies.