Transcript
Page 1: Bacteria and  Archea : The Prokaryotes

Bacteria and Archea:Bacteria and Archea:The ProkaryotesThe Prokaryotes

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Archae & Bacteria

There are almost everywhere !!!

They are the most numerous organisms

that can be found in all habitats

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Prokaryotes

• Appear approximately 3.5 BYA• Were the earliest living organisms• Have specialized into all habitats• Have all types of metabolism

– Origin of aerobic and other types of respiration

– Origin of several types of photosynthesis

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Prokaryotes: Tremendous impact on the Earth

• Very few cause diseases• As fixers and decomposers they are

essential in geo-chemical cycles• Many form symbiotic relationships

with other prokaryotes and eukaryotes

• Mitochondria and chloroplasts may be descended from symbiotic bacteria

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Prokaryotes as compared to eukaryotes:•Typically smaller in size•Lack membrane bound

organelles•Most have cell walls – but

different chemical composition

•Have simpler genomes

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Morphological Diversity of Prokaryotes

• Cells have a diversity of shapes the most common being

– spheres (cocci)– rods (bacilli)– helices (spirilla and spirochetes).

• Prokaryotes are generally single-celled

– some aggregate into two-celled to several celled groups

– Some have specialized functions, heterocysts in Anabaena.

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• Fig 27.3

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Fig. 27-16

UNIVERSALANCESTOR

Eukaryotes

Korarcheotes

Euryarchaeotes

Crenarchaeotes

Nanoarchaeotes

Proteobacteria

Chlamydias

Spirochetes

Cyanobacteria

Gram-positivebacteria

Dom

ainE

ukarya

Dom

ain A

rchaeaD

omain

Bacteria

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Prokaryote Cell walls:

• Cell walls:– Maintain the cell shape.– Protect the cell.– Prevent the cell from bursting in a

hypotonic environment.

• Eubacteria walls contain peptidoglycan

– archae cell walls lack peptidoglycan– Peptidoglycan = Modified sugar

polymers cross-linked by short polypeptides.

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Gram Staining

• Gram stain is used to distinguish two groups of eubacteria by structural differences in their cell walls.

• Gram-positive eubacteria.– Cell walls with large amounts of

peptidoglycan that react with Crystal Violet stain

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Gram-negative eubacteria.

• Have more complex cell walls with less peptidoglycan.

• An outer lipopolysaccharide-containing membrane blocking the stain from the peptidoglycan.

– Stain pink, with safranin

• More likely to be disease causing

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Fig 7.4 Prokaryote cell structure

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• Capsule= a gelatinous secretion which provides cells with additional protection

• Pili = Surface appendages used for adherence to a host (in the case of a pathogen), or for transferring DNA in conjugate.

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Fig 27.6 Pili

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The Motility of Prokaryotes: three mechanisms :

1. Swimming with Flagella: differ from eukaryotic:1.Solid protein2.Rotate like an oar, rather than whip

back and forth 3.The basal apparatus rotation is

powered by the diffusion of protons into the cell.

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Flagella

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Fig 27.7

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2. Filaments– axial filaments are attached to basal

motors at either end of the cell. – rotate the cell like a corkscrew. – more effective in viscous substrates

than flagella.

3. Gliding– Some bacteria move by gliding

through a layer of slimy chemicals secreted by the organism.

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Taxis= Directed Movement towards or away from a stimulus.

• light (phototaxis)• chemical (chemotaxis)• magnetic field (magnetotaxis)• Positive taxis movement toward a

stimulus.• Movement away from a stimulus is

a negative taxis

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Non directional

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Directional

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Chemotaxis Test

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Internal Membranous Organization

• Some prokaryotes have specialized regions of internal membranes

– formed by invaginations of the plasma membranes.

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Fig 27.8 Specialized membranes

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Prokaryotic Genomes

• Genophore = usually one double-stranded, circular DNA molecule

– attached to cell membrane.

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Plasmid

• Smaller independent rings of DNA– “extra genes” -antibiotic resistance or

metabolism of unusual nutrients. – Replicate independently of the

genophore.– Can be transferred between partners

during conjugation – Also found in yeasts, (fungi -

eukaryotes)

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Amount of DNA

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Genetic Recombination

• Transformation = external DNA is incorporated by bacterial cells.

• Conjugation = transfer of genes from one bacterium to another.

• Transduction = transfer of genes between bacteria via viruses.

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Conjugation

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Fig. 27-13

F plasmid

F+ cell

F– cell

Matingbridge

Bacterial chromosome

Bacterialchromosome

(a) Conjugation and transfer of an F plasmid

F+ cell

F+ cell

F– cell

(b) Conjugation and transfer of part of an Hfr bacterial chromosome

F factor

Hfr cell A+A+

A+

A+

A+A– A– A–

A– A+

RecombinantF– bacterium

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Examples of Conjugation

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Why is antibiotic resistance increasing ?

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Gene Expression

• Prokaryotic and eukaryotic DNA replication and translation are similar

– Same genetic code

• Bacterial ribosomes smaller and have different protein and RNA content

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Cell Growth

• They divide by Binary Fission.– Genophore attached to plasma

membrane– Copies as membrane elongates– New wall forms in between

• Mitochondria, chloroplasts divide by binary fission too

• No Mitosis, nor Meiosis.• All haploid

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Binary Fission

Fig. 12.10

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• Endospore = Resistant cells– Genophore

surrounded by a thick wall.

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Anthrax sp. endospore

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Major Modes of Nutrition

• Energy source (make ATP) – from light (phototrophs),– use chemicals in the environment

(chemotrophs).

• Carbon source – autotrophs utilize CO2 directly

– heterotrophs require at least one organic nutrient as a carbon source.

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Major Modes of Nutrition:

• Photoautotrophs• Chemoautotrophs• Photoheterotrophs• Chemoheterotrophs

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Table 27-1

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Nutritional Diversity Among Chemoheterotrophs

• Saprobes are decomposers that absorb nutrients from dead organic matter.

• Parasites are cells that absorb nutrients from body fluids of living hosts

• compounds that cannot be used as a carbon source by bacteria/fungi are termed non-biodegradable

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Nitrogen Metabolism In amino acids, nucleotides

• Nitrogen fixing bacteria (N2 ->NH3)– In soil, and some plant root nodules

• Nitrifying bacteria convert NH3 -> NO2 – In soil, or biotower in treatment plant

• Denitrifying bacteria N02 -(Nitrite) or N03 (Nitrate) to atmospheric N2

– In soil, counter-act fertilizers

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The nitrogen fixing Cyanobacteria are very self-sufficient, they need only light energy, C02, N2, water and a few minerals to grow

.

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Oxygen metabolism

• Obligate aerobes• Facultative anaerobes • Obligate anaerobes

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Three Domains Fig 27.2

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Domain Bacteria (Eubacteria)

• a very diverse assemblage of organisms.

• forms which exhibit every known mode of nutrition and energy metabolism.

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Domain Archaea (Archaebacteria)

• Cell walls lack peptidoglycan.• Plasma membranes have a

unique lipid composition.• RNA polymerase and ribosomal

protein are more like those of eukaryotes than of eubacteria

• Common ancestor with Eukaryotes after split from Bacteria.

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Domain Archaea (Archaebacteria)

• Methanogens. – Use H2 to reduce C02 to CH4 and

are strict anaerobes– In Digester at treatment plant

• Extreme Halophiles – inhabit high salinity ( 15-20%)

environments (e.g. Dead Sea).

• Extreme Thermophiles – Live in habitats of 60 - 80C.

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Hot springs Salt ponds

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Bacteria and Disease:

• Pathogenic= invade, attack host• Opportunistic = Normal inhabitants

of the body that become pathogenic

• Defense: greatly reduced mortality due to bacterial diseases

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• Growth and invasion of tissues• Production of a toxin

– Exotoxin =Proteins secreted by bacterial cells.

– Endotoxin = Toxic component of outer membranes of some gram-negative bacteria

Cause disease by

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Non-Life Bio-particles

• Virus: need a living cell to reproduce

• Viroids: naked RNA

• Prions: rogue free proteins

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Viral cycleFig 18.3

Herpes

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Prions Fig. 18.10


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