Michael P. Williams's research while affiliated with California Institute of Technology and other places

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Publications (3)


Colony morphology of Knufia obscura FJI-L2-BK-P2. Colonies after incubation at 25 °C on PDA medium (14 days after inoculation; A,B) and on OMA medium (21 days after inoculation; C,D). (A) and (C) are front side of the plates whereas (B) and (D) are back side of the plates.
Microscopic features shown by DIC microscopy for Knufia obscura FJI-L2-BK-P2. (A,B). Mature hyphae with multicellular globose apex containing large pear shaped chlamydospores. (C,D) Conidia and conidiophores (arrows). Image (A) and (C) are at ×400 total magnification and image (B) and (D) are taken at ×1000 total magnification.
Bright field (A,B) and phase contrast microscopy (C) provides evidences for presence of microsclerotia in Knufia obscura FJI-L2-BK-P2: (A,B) Extensive hyphal branching and hyphae intermingle to form dense microsclerotia type network. (C) Closely attached multi-celled chlamydospores intermingled form microsclerotia indicated by using phase contrast microscopy. Images (A) and (B) are at ×200 and image (C) is at ×1000 total magnification.
Bright field microscopy revealed chlamydospore featured mature microsclerotia. (A) Microsclerotium forms a dense clump of biomass (encircled). (B) Microsclerotia containing intermingled arthroconidia and chlamydospores. (C,D) Arthroconidia released (arrow). (E) Germinating conidia (arrow). (F,G) Arthroconidia. Images (A) and (C) are taken at ×200, (B), (D) and (E) are taken at ×400 and image (F) is taken at ×1000 total magnification.
SEM images. (A–C) Arthroconidia (encircled). (D,E) Microsclerotia. (F) Chlamydospore/chlamydospore like propagules. (G) Microsclerotia network creates dense surface layer over the fungal colony. (H) Microsclerotia.

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Genomic and morphological characterization of Knufia obscura isolated from the Mars 2020 spacecraft assembly facility
  • Article
  • Full-text available

May 2024

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73 Reads

Scientific Reports

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Marcus de Melo Teixeira

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Nitin K. Singh

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[...]

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Members of the family Trichomeriaceae, belonging to the Chaetothyriales order and the Ascomycota phylum, are known for their capability to inhabit hostile environments characterized by extreme temperatures, oligotrophic conditions, drought, or presence of toxic compounds. The genus Knufia encompasses many polyextremophilic species. In this report, the genomic and morphological features of the strain FJI-L2-BK-P2 presented, which was isolated from the Mars 2020 mission spacecraft assembly facility located at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. The identification is based on sequence alignment for marker genes, multi-locus sequence analysis, and whole genome sequence phylogeny. The morphological features were studied using a diverse range of microscopic techniques (bright field, phase contrast, differential interference contrast and scanning electron microscopy). The phylogenetic marker genes of the strain FJI-L2-BK-P2 exhibited highest similarities with type strain of Knufia obscura (CBS 148926T) that was isolated from the gas tank of a car in Italy. To validate the species identity, whole genomes of both strains (FJI-L2-BK-P2 and CBS 148926T) were sequenced, annotated, and strain FJI-L2-BK-P2 was confirmed as K. obscura. The morphological analysis and description of the genomic characteristics of K. obscura FJI-L2-BK-P2 may contribute to refining the taxonomy of Knufia species. Key morphological features are reported in this K. obscura strain, resembling microsclerotia and chlamydospore-like propagules. These features known to be characteristic features in black fungi which could potentially facilitate their adaptation to harsh environments.

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Genomic and morphological characterization of Knufia obscura isolated from the Mars 2020 spacecraft assembly facility

September 2023

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124 Reads

Members of the family Trichomeriaceae, belonging to the Chaetothyriales order and the Ascomycota phylum, are known for their capability to inhabit hostile environments characterized by extreme temperatures, nutrient scarcity (oligotrophic conditions), presence of toxic compounds, or drought conditions. Within this family, the genus Knufia encompasses the vast majority of polyextremophilic species. In this report, the genomic and morphological features of the strain FJI-L2-BK-P2, identified as Knufia obscura, are presented. The identification is based on multi-locus sequence analysis and whole genome sequence phylogeny. The strain FJI-L2-BK-P2 was isolated from the Mars 2020 mission spacecraft assembly facility located at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Additionally, the type strain of K. obscura (CBS 148926T), originally isolated from a car's gas tank in Italy, has been sequenced and annotated. The morphological analysis and description of the genomic characteristics of K. obscura FJI-L2-BK-P2 may contribute to refining the taxonomy of Knufia species. Key morphological features are reported in this K. obscura strain, resembling microsclerotia and chlamydospore-like propagules. These features, known to be significant in black fungi, could potentially facilitate their adaptation to harsh environments.


Figure 1. Colony and cell morphology of A. pasadenensis. Colony surface of A. pasadenensis after 8 days of incubation at room temperature (25 • C) on (A) PDA medium and (B) OMA medium. (C, D): Round, immersed, brown to black conidiomata on an aged PDA plate. (E, F): Early age liberated conidia that are germinating. (G): Conidiogenous cells, encircled (H, I): Late-stage elongated conidiophore (arrow) and conidia. (J): Conidiomata. (K): Conidia and red markups showing CATs. (L, M): Arthroconidia.
Figure 4. Colony and cell morphology of P. melaninifex. Colony morphology on day 21 of incubation at room temperature (25 • C) on (A) PDA medium and (B) OMA medium. (C): Blastic proliferation of hyphae. (D): Arthroconidia form readily and branch at roughly uniform angles. (E, F): Hyphael anastomosis in young vegetative hyphae. (G): Mature hyphae. (H): Arthroconidia and dumbbellshaped hyphae. (I): Conidia on the top left corner; germinated conidia with long tube formation in the center of the image and a clump of arthroconidia in the lower center of the image, image is taken at 100x. (J): Hyphael anastomosis. (K): Arthroconidia radiating out from the arthroconidial node (arrow), arthroconidial blunt ends are encircled. (L): L (x) and L (y) shows hyphael anastomosis; L (z) represents arthroconidial breaks.
Figure 7. Colony and cell morphology of F. radiotolerans. Colony surface of F. radiotolerans after 14 days of incubation at room temperature (25 • C) on (A) PDA medium and (B) OMA medium. (C): Bush form vegetative morphology of young vegetative hyphae. (D): Highly branched mature hyphae showing dark brown nodes of conidiomata. (E-F): Vegetative hyphae are smooth-walled, septate with chlamydoconidium-like cells. (G): Chlamydoconidium-like cells. (H): DIC microscopy showing mature bulbous swollen chlamydoconidium-like cells containing endoconidium-like round structures. (I): Chains and aggregated form of chlamydoconidium-like cells. (J): Chlamydoconidium-like cells also exist solitary (K): Germinating new hyphae emerging out from a chlamydoconidium-like cell. (L): Hatched chlamydoconidium-like cell giving rise to multiple hyphal outgrowths. (M): clumping/anastomosis of chlamydoconidium-like cells. (N-O): Rupture/shrinkage of chlamydoconidiumlike cells. (P): Formation of new young hyphae coming out from chlamydoconidium-like cells.
Description and Genome Characterization of Three Novel Fungal Strains Isolated from Mars 2020 Mission-Associated Spacecraft Assembly Facility Surfaces—Recommendations for Two New Genera and One Species

December 2022

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285 Reads

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6 Citations

Journal of Fungi

National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) spacecraft assembly facilities are monitored for the presence of any bacteria or fungi that might conceivably survive a transfer to an extraterrestrial environment. Fungi present a broad and diverse range of phenotypic and functional traits to adapt to extreme conditions, hence the detection of fungi and subsequent eradication of them are needed to prevent forward contamination for future NASA missions. During the construction and assembly for the Mars 2020 mission, three fungal strains with unique morphological and phylogenetic properties were isolated from spacecraft assembly facilities. The reconstruction of phylogenetic trees based on several gene loci (ITS, LSU, SSU, RPB, TUB, TEF1) using multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) and whole genome sequencing (WGS) analyses supported the hypothesis that these were novel species. Here we report the genus or species-level classification of these three novel strains via a polyphasic approach using phylogenetic analysis, colony and cell morphology, and comparative anal- ysis of WGS. The strain FJI-L9-BK-P1 isolated from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory Spacecraft Assembly Facility (JPL-SAF) exhibited a putative phylogenetic relationship with the strain Aaosphaeria arxii CBS175.79 but showed distinct morphology and microscopic features. Another JPL-SAF strain, FJII-L3-CM-DR1, was phylogenetically distinct from members of the family Trichomeriaceae and exhibited morphologically different features from the genera Lithohypha and Strelitziana. The strain FKI-L1-BK- DR1 isolated from the Kennedy Space Center facility was identified as a member of Dothideomycetes incertae sedis and is closely related to the family Kirschsteiniotheliaceae according to a phylogenetic analysis. The polyphasic taxonomic approach supported the recommendation for establishing two novel genera and one novel species. The names Aaosphaeria pasadenensis (FJI-L9-BK-P1 = NRRL 64424 = DSM 114621), Pasadenomyces melaninifex (FJII-L3-CM-DR1 = NRRL 64433 = DSM 114623), and Floridaphiala radiotolerans (FKI-L1-BK-DR1 = NRRL 64434 = DSM 114624) are proposed as type species. Furthermore, resistance to ultraviolet-C and presence of specific biosynthetic gene cluster(s) coding for metabolically active compounds are unique to these strains.

Citations (1)


... Hyphae and conidiophores are septate. Mature hyphae exhibit swollen structure and often appear like arthroconidia prior to separation, as recently seen in genus Pasadenomyces ( Fig. 2A,B, swollen forms, Figs. 3 and 4F,G) 28 . Conidiophores are smooth walled (Fig. 2C) unlike the regular hyphae and seem to originate from mature hyphae ( Fig. 2A). ...

Reference:

Genomic and morphological characterization of Knufia obscura isolated from the Mars 2020 spacecraft assembly facility
Description and Genome Characterization of Three Novel Fungal Strains Isolated from Mars 2020 Mission-Associated Spacecraft Assembly Facility Surfaces—Recommendations for Two New Genera and One Species

Journal of Fungi