Abstract

Over 100 years ago, Reinhardt suggested that hyphal tip growth is comparable to ameboid movement inside a tube; the apical cytoplasm being protruded like a pseudopodium with the wall assembled on its surface. There are increasing data from hyphae which are explicable by this model. Fungi produce pseudopodia-like structures and their cytoplasm contains all of the major components implicated in pseudopodium production in animal cells. Most of these components are concentrated in hyphal tips and tip growth involves actin, a major component of pseudopodia. Together these data indicate that the essence of the ameboid model is still tenable. However, detailed mechanisms of tip growth remain too poorly known to provide definitive proof of the model and the behavior of the trailing cytoplasm indicates differences which are probably a response to the walled lifestyle.

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