table of contents – pages iii

160

Upload: carsyn

Post on 04-Jan-2016

26 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Table of Contents – pages iii. Unit 1: What is Biology? Unit 2: Ecology Unit 3: The Life of a Cell Unit 4: Genetics Unit 5: Change Through Time Unit 6: Viruses, Bacteria, Protists, and Fungi Unit 7: Plants Unit 8: Invertebrates Unit 9: Vertebrates Unit 10: The Human Body. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Table of Contents – pages iii
Page 2: Table of Contents – pages iii

Unit 1: What is Biology?Unit 2: EcologyUnit 3: The Life of a CellUnit 4: GeneticsUnit 5: Change Through TimeUnit 6: Viruses, Bacteria, Protists, and FungiUnit 7: PlantsUnit 8: InvertebratesUnit 9: VertebratesUnit 10: The Human Body

Page 3: Table of Contents – pages iii

Unit 1: What is Biology?

Chapter 1: Biology: The Study of LifeUnit 2: Ecology Chapter 2: Principles of Ecology Chapter 3: Communities and Biomes Chapter 4: Population Biology Chapter 5: Biological Diversity and ConservationUnit 3: The Life of a Cell Chapter 6: The Chemistry of Life Chapter 7: A View of the Cell Chapter 8: Cellular Transport and the Cell Cycle Chapter 9: Energy in a Cell

Page 4: Table of Contents – pages iii

Unit 4: Genetics

Chapter 10: Mendel and Meiosis

Chapter 11: DNA and Genes

Chapter 12: Patterns of Heredity and Human Genetics

Chapter 13: Genetic Technology

Unit 5: Change Through Time Chapter 14: The History of Life Chapter 15: The Theory of Evolution Chapter 16: Primate Evolution Chapter 17: Organizing Life’s Diversity

Page 5: Table of Contents – pages iii

Unit 6: Viruses, Bacteria, Protists, and Fungi

Chapter 18: Viruses and Bacteria

Chapter 19: Protists

Chapter 20: Fungi

Unit 7: Plants

Chapter 21: What Is a Plant?

Chapter 22: The Diversity of Plants

Chapter 23: Plant Structure and Function

Chapter 24: Reproduction in Plants

Page 6: Table of Contents – pages iii

Unit 8: Invertebrates

Chapter 25: What Is an Animal?

Chapter 26: Sponges, Cnidarians, Flatworms, and

Roundworms

Chapter 27: Mollusks and Segmented Worms

Chapter 28: Arthropods

Chapter 29: Echinoderms and Invertebrate

Chordates

Page 7: Table of Contents – pages iii

Unit 9: Vertebrates Chapter 30: Fishes and Amphibians

Chapter 31: Reptiles and Birds

Chapter 32: Mammals

Chapter 33: Animal Behavior

Unit 10: The Human Body

Chapter 34: Protection, Support, and Locomotion

Chapter 35: The Digestive and Endocrine Systems

Chapter 36: The Nervous System

Chapter 37: Respiration, Circulation, and Excretion

Chapter 38: Reproduction and Development

Chapter 39: Immunity from Disease

Page 8: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viruses, Bacteria, Protists, and Fungi

Viruses and Bacteria

Protists

Fungi

Page 9: Table of Contents – pages iii

Chapter 18 Viruses and Bacteria

18.1: Viruses

18.1: Section Check

18.2: Archaebacteria and Eubacteria

18.2: Section Check

Chapter 18 Summary

Chapter 18 Assessment

Page 10: Table of Contents – pages iii

What You’ll Learn

You will identify the structures and characteristics of viruses and bacteria.

You will explain how viruses and bacteria reproduce.

You will recognize the medical and economic importance of viruses and bacteria.

Page 11: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Identify the different kinds of viruses and their structures.

Section Objectives:

• Compare and contrast the replication cycles of viruses.

Page 12: Table of Contents – pages iii

• You’ve probably had the flu—influenza—at some time during your life.

• Viruses are composed of nucleic acids enclosed in a protein coat and are smaller than the smallest bacterium.

What is a virus?What is a virus?

• Nonliving particles called viruses cause influenza.

Page 13: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Most biologists consider viruses to be nonliving because they don’t exhibit all the criteria for life.

• They don’t carry out respiration, grow, or develop. All viruses can do is replicate—make copies of themselves—and they can’t even do that without the help of living cells.

What is a virus?What is a virus?

• A cell in which a virus replicates is called the host cell.

Page 14: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Viruses, such as rabies viruses and polioviruses, were named after the diseases they cause.

• Other viruses were named for the organ or tissue they infect.

What is a virus?What is a virus?

Page 15: Table of Contents – pages iii

What is a virus?What is a virus?• Today, most viruses are given a genus

name ending in the word “virus” and a species name.

• However, sometimes scientists use code numbers to distinguish among similar viruses that infect the same host.

• A virus that infects a bacterium is called a bacteriophage (bak TIHR ee uh fayj), or phage for short.

Page 16: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral StructureViral Structure• A virus has an

inner core of nucleic acid, either RNA or DNA, and an outer protein coat called a capsid.

Capsid

Nucleic acid

Envelope

Page 17: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral StructureViral Structure• Some relatively

large viruses, such as human flu viruses, may have an additional layer, called an envelope, surrounding their capsids.

Capsid

Nucleic acid

Envelope

Page 18: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral StructureViral Structure• Envelopes are

composed primarily of the same materials found in the plasma membranes of all cells.

Capsid

Nucleic acid

Envelope

Page 19: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Viral nucleic acid is either DNA or RNA and contains instructions for making copies of the virus.

• Some viruses have only four genes, while others have hundreds.

Nucleic acid

Capsid

Viral StructureViral Structure

Page 20: Table of Contents – pages iii

• The tobacco mosaic virus has a long, narrow helical shape.

Nucleic acid

Capsid

Viral StructureViral Structure

Page 21: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral StructureViral Structure• The arrangement of

proteins in the capsid of a virus determines the virus’s shape.

Nucleic acidCapsid

• Polyhedral viruses resemble small crystals.

Page 22: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral StructureViral Structure• The protein

arrangement also plays a role in determining what cell can be infected and how the virus infects the cell.

Nucleic acidCapsid

Page 23: Table of Contents – pages iii

Attachment to a host cellAttachment to a host cell

• Before a virus can replicate, it must enter a host cell.

• A virus recognizes and attaches to a host cell when one of its proteins interlocks with a molecular shape that is the receptor site on the host cell’s plasma membrane.

Page 24: Table of Contents – pages iii

Attachment to a host cellAttachment to a host cell

• A protein in the tail fibers of the bacteriophage T4 recognizes and attaches the T4 to its bacterial host cell.

Capsid

Nucleic acid

Tail

Tail fiber

Page 25: Table of Contents – pages iii

Attachment to a host cellAttachment to a host cell

• In other viruses, the attachment protein is in the capsid or in the envelope.

Capsid

Nucleic acid

Tail

Tail fiber

Page 26: Table of Contents – pages iii

Attachment is a specific processAttachment is a specific process

• Each virus has a specifically shaped attachment protein. Therefore, each virus can usually attach to only a few kinds of cells.

• In general, viruses are species specific, and some also are cell-type specific. For example, polio viruses normally infect only intestinal and nerve cells.

Page 27: Table of Contents – pages iii

Attachment is a specific processAttachment is a specific process

• The species specific characteristic of viruses is significant for controlling the spread of viral diseases.

Page 28: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral Replication CyclesViral Replication Cycles

• Once attached to the plasma membrane of the host cell, the virus enters the cell and takes over its metabolism.

• Only then can the virus replicate.

• Viruses have two ways of getting into host cells.

Page 29: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral Replication CyclesViral Replication Cycles

• The virus may inject its nucleic acid into the host cell like a syringe injects a vaccine into your arm.

• The capsid of the virus stays attached to the outside of the host cell.

• An enveloped virus enters a host cell in a different way.

Page 30: Table of Contents – pages iii

Viral Replication CyclesViral Replication Cycles

• After attachment, the plasma membrane of the host cell surrounds the virus and produces a virus-filled vacuole inside the host cell’s cytoplasm.

• Then, the virus bursts out of the vacuole and releases its nucleic acid into the cell.

Page 31: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lytic cycleLytic cycle

• Once inside the host cell, a virus’s genes are expressed and the substances that are produced take over the host cell’s genetic material.

• The viral genes alter the host cell to make new viruses.

Page 32: Table of Contents – pages iii

Nucleic acid

Bacterial host cell

Bacteriophage Bacterial DNA

B. Entry

The bacteriophage injects its nucleic acid into the bacterial cell.

A. Attachment

C. ReplicationD. Assembly

E. Lysis and Release

The host’s metabolic machinery makes viral nucleic acid and proteins.

New virus particles are assembled.

The host cell breaks open and releases new virus particles.

Lytic cycleLytic cycle

Page 33: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lytic cycleLytic cycle

• The host cell uses its own enzymes, raw materials, and energy to make copies of viral genes that along with viral proteins are assembled into new viruses, which burst from the host cell, killing it.

Page 34: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lytic cycleLytic cycle

• The new viruses can then infect and kill other host cells. This process is called a lytic (LIH tik) cycle. Click image to play movie

Page 35: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lysogenic cycleLysogenic cycle

• Not all viruses kill the cells they infect.

• Some viruses go through a lysogenic cycle, a replication cycle in which the virus’s nucleic acid is integrated into the host cell’s chromosome.

Click image to play movie

Page 36: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lysogenic cycleLysogenic cycle

• A lysongenic cycle begins in the same way as a lytic cycle.

• However, in a lysogenic cycle, instead of immediately taking over the host’s genetic material, the viral DNA is integrated into the host cell’s chromosome.

Page 37: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lysogenic cycleLysogenic cycle

• Viral DNA that is integrated into the host cell’s chromosomes is called a provirus.

• A provirus may not affect the functioning of its host cell, which continues to carry out its own metabolic activity.

• However, every time the host cell reproduces, the provirus is replicated along with the host cell’s chromosome.

Page 38: Table of Contents – pages iii

Lysogenic cycleLysogenic cycle

• Therefore, every cell that originates from an infected host cell has a copy of the provirus.

• The lysogenic phase can continue for many years. However, at any time, the provirus can be activated and enter a lytic cycle.

Page 39: Table of Contents – pages iii

LYSOGENIC CYCLE

LYTIC CYCLE The provirus leaves the chromosome.

Viral nucleic acid and proteins are made.

The cell breaks open releasing viruses.

A lysogenic virus injects its nucleic acid into a bacterium.

Bacterial host chromosome

A. Attachment and EntryB. Provirus Formation

Provirus

The viral nucleic acid is calleda provirus when it becomespart of the host’s chromosome.

C. Cell Division

Althoughthe provirusis inactive,it replicatesalong withthe host cell’schromosome.

Lysogenic cycleLysogenic cycle

Page 40: Table of Contents – pages iii

Disease symptoms of provirusesDisease symptoms of proviruses

• Many disease-causing viruses have lysogenic cycles.

• Three examples of these viruses are herpes simplex I, herpes simplex II that causes genital herpes, and the hepatitis B virus that causes hepatitis B.

Page 41: Table of Contents – pages iii

Disease symptoms of provirusesDisease symptoms of proviruses

• Another lysogenic virus is the one that causes chicken pox.

Page 42: Table of Contents – pages iii

Disease symptoms of provirusesDisease symptoms of proviruses

• Having chicken pox, which usually occurs before age ten, gives lifelong protection from another infection by the virus. However, some chicken pox viruses may remain as proviruses in some of your body’s nerve cells.

Page 43: Table of Contents – pages iii

Disease symptoms of provirusesDisease symptoms of proviruses

• Later in your life, these proviruses may enter a lytic cycle and cause a disease called shingles—a painful infection of some nerve cells.

Page 44: Table of Contents – pages iii

Release of virusesRelease of viruses

• Either lysis, the bursting of a cell, or exocytosis, the active transport process by which materials are expelled from a cell, release new viruses from the host cell.

Page 45: Table of Contents – pages iii

Release of virusesRelease of viruses

• In exocytosis, a newly produced virus approaches the inner surface of the host cell’s plasma membrane.

• The plasma membrane surrounds the virus, enclosing it in a vacuole that then fuses with the host cell’s plasma membrane.

• Then, the viruses are released to the outside.

Page 46: Table of Contents – pages iii

RetrovirusesRetroviruses• Many viruses, such as the human

immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes the disease AIDS, are RNA viruses—RNA being their only nucleic acid.

HIV virus

Page 47: Table of Contents – pages iii

RetrovirusesRetroviruses

• The RNA virus with the most complex replication cycle is the retrovirus (reh tro VY rus).

HIV virus

Page 48: Table of Contents – pages iii

RetrovirusesRetroviruses

• Once inside a host cell, the retrovirus makes DNA from its RNA.

• To do this, it uses reverse transcriptase, an enzyme it carries inside its capsid.

Page 49: Table of Contents – pages iii

RetrovirusesRetroviruses

• This enzyme helps produce double-stranded DNA from the viral RNA.

• Then the double-stranded viral DNA is integrated into the host cell’s chromosome and becomes a provirus.

Page 50: Table of Contents – pages iii

RetrovirusesRetroviruses

Retrovirus Cycle

Exiting cell

Reverse transcriptase

Retrovirus

Enteringcell

RNARNA

DNA

DNA is made from the viral RNA.

mRNA

New virus parts

New virus forming

Provirus in host chromosome

Page 51: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Once inside a human host, HIV infects white blood cells.

• Newly made viruses are released into the blood stream by exocytosis and infect other white blood cells.

Normal white blood cells

HIV: An infection of white blood cellsHIV: An infection of white blood cells

Page 52: Table of Contents – pages iii

HIV: An infection of white blood cellsHIV: An infection of white blood cells• Infected host cells still function

normally because the viral genetic material is a provirus that produces only a small number of new viruses at a time.

• Because the infected cells are still able to function normally, an infected person may not appear sick, but they can still transmit the virus in their body fluids.

Page 53: Table of Contents – pages iii

HIV: An infection of white blood cellsHIV: An infection of white blood cells• Most people with an HIV infection

eventually get AIDS because, over time, more white blood cells are infected and produce new viruses.

• Because white blood cells are part of a body’s disease-fighting system, their destruction interferes with the body’s ability to protect itself from organisms that cause disease, a symptom of AIDS.

Page 54: Table of Contents – pages iii

Cancer and VirusesCancer and Viruses

• Some viruses have been linked to certain cancers in humans and animals.

• These viruses disrupt the normal growth and division of cells in a host, causing abnormal growth and creating tumors.

Page 55: Table of Contents – pages iii

Prions and viroidsPrions and viroids

• Researchers have recently discovered some particles that behave somewhat like viruses and cause infectious diseases.

• Prions are composed of proteins but have no nucleic acid to carry genetic information.

Page 56: Table of Contents – pages iii

Prions and viroidsPrions and viroids

• Prions are thought to act by causing other proteins to fold themselves incorrectly, resulting in improper functioning.

• Prions are responsible for many animal diseases, such as mad cow disease and its human equivalent, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.

Page 57: Table of Contents – pages iii

Prions and viroidsPrions and viroids

• Viroids are composed of a single circular strand of RNA with no protein coat.

• Viroids have been shown to cause infectious diseases in several plants.

• The amount of viroid RNA is much less than the amount found in viruses.

Page 58: Table of Contents – pages iii

Plant virusesPlant viruses• The first virus to be identified was a

plant virus, called tobacco mosaic virus, that causes disease in tobacco plants.

Tobacco mosaic virus causes yellow spots on tobacco leaves, making them unmarketable.

Page 59: Table of Contents – pages iii

Plant virusesPlant viruses

• Viruses cause as many as 1000 plant diseases and are named according to their host plant.

• Viruses can cause stunted growth and yield losses in their host plants.

Page 60: Table of Contents – pages iii

Plant virusesPlant viruses

• Plant viruses require wounds or insect bites to enter and infect a host, and do not use surface recognition.

• They do not undergo lytic or lysogenic phases.

Page 61: Table of Contents – pages iii

Plant virusesPlant viruses• Not all viral plant diseases are fatal or

even harmful.

• Some mosaic viruses cause striking patterns of color in the flowers of plants.

Rembrandt tulips

Page 62: Table of Contents – pages iii

Origin of VirusesOrigin of Viruses

• For replication, viruses need host cells; therefore, scientists suggest that viruses might have originated from their host cells.

• Some scientists suggest that viruses are nucleic acids that break free from their host cells while maintaining an ability to replicate parasitically within the host cells.

Page 63: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 1Which of the following is NOT a reason that viruses are considered to be nonliving?(TX Obj 3; 4C)

D. Viruses don’t develop.C. Viruses don’t grow.B. Viruses don’t respire.A. Viruses don’t replicate.

The answer is A.

Page 64: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 2

Which is NOT a component of a virus? (TX Obj 3; 4C)

D. phageC. DNA B. capsid A. RNA

The answer is D.

Page 65: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 3

Which of the following is NOT determined by the arrangement of proteins in the capsid of a virus? (TX Obj 3; 4C)

D. how the virus infects a cell

C. whether or not the virus will have an envelope around it

B. what cell can be infected by the virus

A. shape

Page 66: Table of Contents – pages iii

The answer is C.

Page 67: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 4What two ways do viruses have of getting into host cells? (TX Obj 3; 4C)

Answer

The virus can inject its nucleic acid into the host cell, or attach to the host cell’s membrane and become surrounded by the membrane and placed in a vacuole. The virus then bursts out of the vacuole and releases its nucleic acid into the cell.

Page 68: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 5In the lytic cycle, after the host’s metabolic machinery makes viral nucleic acid and proteins the next phase is _______. (TX Obj 3; 4C)

D. attachment

C. assembly

B. replication

A. lysis and release

Page 69: Table of Contents – pages iii

The answer is C. In the assembly phase, the new virus particles are assembled.

Page 70: Table of Contents – pages iii

Section Objectives

• Explain the characteristics and adaptations of bacteria.

• Compare the types of prokaryotes.

• Evaluate the economic importance of bacteria.

Page 71: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Recall that prokaryotes are unicellular organisms that do not have a nucleus or membrane-bound organelles.

Diversity of ProkaryotesDiversity of Prokaryotes

• They are classified in two kingdoms—archaebacteria and eubacteria.

• Many biochemical differences exist between these two types of prokaryotes.

Page 72: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Because they are so different, many scientists propose that archaebacteria and eubacteria arose from a common ancestor several billion years ago.

Diversity of ProkaryotesDiversity of Prokaryotes

Page 73: Table of Contents – pages iii

• There are three types of archaebacteria that live mainly in extreme habitats where there is usually no free oxygen available.

Archaebacteria: The extremistsArchaebacteria: The extremists

• One type of archaebacterium lives in oxygen-free environments and produces methane gas.

Page 74: Table of Contents – pages iii

• These methane-producing archaebacteria live in marshes, lake sediments, and the digestive tracts of some mammals, such as cows.

Archaebacteria: The extremistsArchaebacteria: The extremists

Page 75: Table of Contents – pages iii

Archaebacteria: The extremistsArchaebacteria: The extremists

• They also are found at sewage disposal plants, where they play a role in the breakdown of sewage.

Page 76: Table of Contents – pages iii

• A second type of archaebacterium lives only in water with high concentrations of salt.

Archaebacteria: The extremistsArchaebacteria: The extremists

Dead Sea

Page 77: Table of Contents – pages iii

• A third type lives in the hot, acidic waters of sulfur springs.

Archaebacteria: The extremistsArchaebacteria: The extremists

Page 78: Table of Contents – pages iii

• This type of anaerobic archaebacterium also thrives near cracks deep in the ocean floor, where it is the autotrophic producer for a unique animal community’s food chain.

Archaebacteria: The extremistsArchaebacteria: The extremists

Page 79: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Eubacteria, the other kingdom of prokaryotes, includes those prokaryotes that live in places more hospitable than archaebacteria inhabit and that vary in nutritional needs.

Eubacteria: The heterotrophsEubacteria: The heterotrophs

• The heterotrophic eubacteria live almost everywhere and use organic molecules as their food source.

Page 80: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Some bacterial heterotrophs are parasites, obtaining their nutrients from living organisms.

Eubacteria: The heterotrophsEubacteria: The heterotrophs

• Others are saprophytes—organisms that feed on dead organisms or organic wastes.

Page 81: Table of Contents – pages iii

• A second type of eubacterium is the photosynthetic autotroph.

Eubacteria: Photosynthetic autotrophsEubacteria: Photosynthetic autotrophs

• These eubacteria live in places with sunlight because they need light to make the organic molecules that are their food.

Page 82: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Cyanobacteria are photosynthetic autotrophs.

Eubacteria: Photosynthetic autotrophsEubacteria: Photosynthetic autotrophs

• Most cyanobacteria are blue-green and some are red or yellow in color.

Cyanobacteria

Page 83: Table of Contents – pages iii

Eubacteria: Photosynthetic autotrophsEubacteria: Photosynthetic autotrophs• Cyanobacteria commonly live in ponds,

streams, and moist areas of land.

• They are composed of chains of independent cells.

Cyanobacteria

Page 84: Table of Contents – pages iii

• A third type of eubacterium is the chemosynthetic autotroph.

Eubacteria: Chemosynthetic autotrophsEubacteria: Chemosynthetic autotrophs

• Unlike the photosynthetic bacteria, the chemosynthetic bacteria do not obtain the energy they need to make food from sunlight.

Page 85: Table of Contents – pages iii

Eubacteria: Chemosynthetic autotrophsEubacteria: Chemosynthetic autotrophs

• Instead, they break down and release the energy of inorganic compounds containing

sulfur and nitrogen in the process called chemosynthesis.

Page 86: Table of Contents – pages iii

What is bacterium?What is bacterium?

• A bacterium consists of a very small cell.

• Although tiny, a bacterial cell has all the structures necessary to carry out its life functions.

Page 87: Table of Contents – pages iii

The structure of bacteriaThe structure of bacteria

• Prokaryotic cells have ribosomes, but their ribosomes are smaller than those of eukaryotes.

• They also have genes that are located for the most part in a single circular chromosome, rather than in paired chromosomes.

Page 88: Table of Contents – pages iii

The structure of bacteriaThe structure of bacteria Ribosome

Cytoplasm

Chromosome

Gelatinlikecapsule

Cell Wall

Cell Membrane

Flagellum

Page 89: Table of Contents – pages iii

A Typical Bacterial CellA Typical Bacterial Cell• A typical bacterium, such as Escherichia coli

would have some or all of the structures shown in this diagram of a bacterial cell.

Capsule Cell Wall

Chromosome

Flagellum

PlasmidPilus

Plasma membrane

Page 90: Table of Contents – pages iii

The structure of bacteriaThe structure of bacteria

• A bacterial cell remains intact as long as its cell wall is intact.

• If the cell wall is damaged, water will enter the cell by osmosis, causing the

cell to burst.

• Scientists used a bacterium’s need for an intact cell wall to develop a weapon against bacteria that cause disease.

Page 91: Table of Contents – pages iii

The structure of bacteriaThe structure of bacteria

• In 1928, Sir Alexander Fleming accidentally discovered penicillin, the first antibiotic—a substance that destroys bacteria—used in humans.

Page 92: Table of Contents – pages iii

The structure of bacteriaThe structure of bacteria

• Later, biologists discovered that penicillin can interfere with the ability of some bacteria to make cell walls.

• When such bacteria grow in penicillin, holes develop in their cell walls, water enters their cells, and they rupture and die.

Page 93: Table of Contents – pages iii

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria

• One trait that helps categorize bacteria is how they react to Gram stain.

• Gram staining is a technique that distinguishes two groups of bacteria because the stain reflects a basic difference in the composition of bacterial cell walls.

Page 94: Table of Contents – pages iii

• After staining, Gram-positive bacteria are purple and Gram-negative bacteria are pink.

Gram-positive bacteria Gram-negative bacteria

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria

Page 95: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Gram-positive bacteria are affected by different antibiotics than those that affect Gram-negative bacteria.

Gram-positive bacteria Gram-negative bacteria

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria

Page 96: Table of Contents – pages iii

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria• Bacterial cell walls also give bacteria

different shapes.

• Shape is another way to categorize bacteria.

Page 97: Table of Contents – pages iii

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria• The three most common shapes are spheres,

called coccus; rods, called bacillus; and spirals, called spirillum.

Page 98: Table of Contents – pages iii

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria

• In addition to having one of these shapes, bacterial cells often grow in characteristic patterns that provide another way of categorizing them.

Page 99: Table of Contents – pages iii

Identifying bacteriaIdentifying bacteria

• Diplo–is a prefix that refers to a paired arrangement of cell growth.

• The prefix staphylo–describes an arrangement of cells that resemble grapes.

• Strepto–is a prefix that refers to an arrangement of chains of cells.

Page 100: Table of Contents – pages iii

Reproduction by binary fissionReproduction by binary fission

• Bacteria reproduce asexually by a process known as binary fission.

• To reproduce in this way, a bacterium first copies its chromosome. Then the original chromosome and the copy become attached to the cell’s plasma membrane for a while.

Page 101: Table of Contents – pages iii

Reproduction by binary fissionReproduction by binary fission• The cell grows larger, and eventually the two chromosomes separate and move to opposite ends of the cell.

Page 102: Table of Contents – pages iii

Reproduction by binary fissionReproduction by binary fission• Then, a partition forms between the

chromosomes. This partition separates the cell into two similar cells.

Page 103: Table of Contents – pages iii

Reproduction by binary fissionReproduction by binary fission• Because each new cell has either the

original or the copy of the chromosome, the resulting cells are genetically identical.

Page 104: Table of Contents – pages iii

Reproduction by binary fissionReproduction by binary fission

• Under ideal conditions, some bacteria can reproduce every 20 minutes, producing enormous numbers of bacteria quickly.

• But bacteria don’t always have ideal growing conditions. They run out of nutrients and water, they poison themselves with their own wastes, and predators eat them.

Page 105: Table of Contents – pages iii

Sexual reproductionSexual reproduction

• In addition to binary fission, some bacteria have a form of sexual reproduction

called conjugation.

• During conjugation (kahn juh GAY shun), one bacterium transfers all or part of its chromosome to another cell through or on a bridgelike structure called a pilus that connects the two cells.

Page 106: Table of Contents – pages iii

Sexual reproductionSexual reproduction

• Conjugation results in a bacterium with a new genetic composition.

• This bacterium can then undergo binary fission, producing more cells with the same genetic makeup.

Page 107: Table of Contents – pages iii

Adaptations in BacteriaAdaptations in Bacteria• Based on fossil evidence, some scientists

propose that anaerobic bacteria were probably among the first photosynthetic organisms, producing not only their own food but also

oxygen.

• As the concentration of oxygen increased in Earth’s atmosphere, some bacteria probably adapted over time to use oxygen for respiration.

Page 108: Table of Contents – pages iii

Diversity of metabolismDiversity of metabolism

• Modern bacteria have diverse types of respiration.

• Many bacteria require oxygen for respiration. These bacteria are called obligate aerobes.

• There are other bacteria, called obligate anaerobes, that are killed by oxygen.

Page 109: Table of Contents – pages iii

Diversity of metabolismDiversity of metabolism

• There are still other bacteria that can live either with or without oxygen, releasing the energy in food aerobically by cellular respiration or anaerobically by fermentation.

Page 110: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• Some bacteria, when faced with unfavorable environmental conditions, produce endospores.

• An endospore is a tiny structure that contains a bacterium’s DNA and a small amount of its cytoplasm, encased by a tough outer covering that resists drying out, temperature extremes, and harsh chemicals.

Page 111: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• When environmental conditions improve, the endospore germinates, or produces a cell that begins to grow and reproduce.

• Some endospores have germinated after thousands of years in the resting state.

• As an endospore, the bacterium rests and does not reproduce.

Page 112: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• Endospores can survive a temperature of 100˚C, which is the boiling point of water.

Page 113: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism• To kill endospores, items must be

sterilized—heated under high pressure in either a pressure cooker or an autoclave.

Page 114: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• This is because the endospores of the bacterium called Clostridium botulinum easily get into foods being canned.

• Canned food must be sterilized and acidified.

Page 115: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• Bacteria grow in the anaerobic environment of the can and produce a powerful deadly poison, called a toxin, as they grow.

• If the endospores of C. botulinum get into improperly sterilized canned food, they germinate.

• This deadly toxin saturates the food and, if eaten, causes the disease called

botulism.

Page 116: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• B. anthracis causes anthrax, a disease that commonly infects cattle and sheep, but can also infect humans.

• A different bacterium, Bacillus anthracis, lives in the soil.

• Most human anthrax infections are fairly harmless and occur on the skin as a result of handling animals.

Page 117: Table of Contents – pages iii

A survival mechanismA survival mechanism

• This infection is more serious than a skin infection and often fatal.

• The bacterial spores can become airborne, however, and if inhaled in large amounts, can germinate in a person’s lungs, causing an infection.

Page 118: Table of Contents – pages iii

The Importance of BacteriaThe Importance of Bacteria

• Bacteria help to fertilize fields, to recycle nutrients on Earth, and to produce foods and medicines.

• Disease-causing bacteria are few compared with the number of harmless and beneficial bacteria on Earth.

Page 119: Table of Contents – pages iii

Nitrogen fixationNitrogen fixation

• Yet few organisms, including most plants, can directly use nitrogen from the air.

• All organisms need nitrogen because the element is a component of their proteins, DNA, RNA, and ATP.

Page 120: Table of Contents – pages iii

Nitrogen fixationNitrogen fixation

• Other bacteria then convert the ammonia into nitrite (NO2

–) and nitrate (NO3–),which plants

can use.

• Several species of bacteria have enzymes that convert N2 into ammonia (NH3) in a process known as nitrogen fixation.

• Bacteria are the only organisms that can perform these chemical changes.

Page 121: Table of Contents – pages iii

Nitrogen fixationNitrogen fixation

• Farmers grow legume crops after the harvesting of crops such as corn, which depletes the soil of nitrogen.

• Some nitrogen-fixing bacteria live symbiotically within the roots of some trees and legumes.

Page 122: Table of Contents – pages iii

Recycling of nutrientsRecycling of nutrients

• This food is passed from one heterotroph to the next in food chains and webs.

• Autotrophic bacteria and also plants and algae, which are at the bottom of the food chains, use the nutrients in the food they make.

• In the process of making food, many autotrophs replenish the supply of oxygen in the atmosphere.

Page 123: Table of Contents – pages iii

Food and medicinesFood and medicines• Some foods that you eat—mellow Swiss

cheese, crispy pickles, tangy yogurt—would not exist without bacteria.

Page 124: Table of Contents – pages iii

Food and medicinesFood and medicines

• Specific bacteria are used to make different foods, such as vinegar, cheeses, and sauerkraut.

• Bacteria also inhabit your intestines and produce vitamins and enzymes that help digest food.

Page 125: Table of Contents – pages iii

Food and medicinesFood and medicines

• Streptomycin, erythromycin, bacitracin, and neomycin are some of these antibiotics.

• In addition to food, some bacteria produce important antibiotics that destroy other

types of bacteria.

Page 126: Table of Contents – pages iii

Bacteria cause diseaseBacteria cause disease

• Bacteria also cause many human diseases.

• Bacteria cause diseases in plants and animals, causing crops and livestock losses that impact humans indirectly.

• Disease-causing bacteria can enter human bodies through openings, such as the mouth.

Page 127: Table of Contents – pages iii

Bacteria cause diseaseBacteria cause disease

• The growth of the bacteria can interfere with the normal function of body tissue, or it can release a toxin that directly attacks the host.

• Bacterial diseases harm people in two ways.

Page 128: Table of Contents – pages iii

Bacteria cause diseaseBacteria cause diseaseDiseases Caused by Bacteria

Disease Transmission Symptoms Treatment

Strep throat

(Streptococcus)

Inhale or ingest throughmouth

Fever, sore throat,swollen neck glands

Antibiotic

Tuberculosis Inhale Fatigue, fever, nightsweats, cough, weight loss, chest pain

Antibiotic

Tetanus Puncturewound

Stiff jaw, musclespasms, paralysis

Open and clean wound,antibiotic; give antitoxin

Lyme disease Bite ofinfected tick

Rash at site of bite,chills, body aches,joint swelling

Antibiotic

Dentalcavities (caries)

Bacteriain mouth

Destruction of toothenamel, toothache

Remove and fill thedestroyed area of tooth

Diptheria Inhale orclose contact

Sore throat, fever,heart or breathingfailure

Vaccination to prevent, antibiotics

Page 129: Table of Contents – pages iii

Bacteria cause diseaseBacteria cause disease

• In the last 100 years, human life expectancy has increased to about 75 years.

• In the past, bacterial illnesses had a greater effect on human populations than they do now.

Page 130: Table of Contents – pages iii

Bacteria cause diseaseBacteria cause disease

• This increase is due to many factors, including better public health systems, improved water and sewage treatment, better nutrition, and better medical care.

• These improvements, along with antibiotics, have reduced the death rates from bacterial diseases to low levels.

Page 131: Table of Contents – pages iii

Which of the following best describes archaebacteria? (TX Obj 3; 4D)

Question 1

D. parasitic heterotrophs

C. chemosynthetic autotrophs

B. photosynthetic autotrophs

A. anaerobic autotrophs

The answer is A.

Page 132: Table of Contents – pages iii

What part of a bacterial cell is most affected by penicillin? (TX Obj 3; 4D)

Question 2

D. cell wall

C. flagellum

B. plasmid

A. pilus

Page 133: Table of Contents – pages iii

The answer is D, cell wall.

Cell Wall

Page 134: Table of Contents – pages iii

Which of the following is not a way to identify bacteria? (TX Obj 3; 4D)

Question 3

D. lack of a plasma membrane

C. characteristic growth patterns

B. shape

A. the way in which their cell walls reflect Gram stain

The answer is D.

Page 135: Table of Contents – pages iii

Given their rapid reproductive rates, why aren’t there more bacteria than there actually are?(TX Obj 3; 4D)

Question 4

AnswerBacteria don’t always have ideal growing conditions. They run out of nutrients and water, they poison themselves with their own wastes, and predators eat them.

Page 136: Table of Contents – pages iii

What is a pilus used for in a bacterium?(TX Obj 3; 4D)

Question 5

Page 137: Table of Contents – pages iii

A pilus helps a bacterium stick to a surface. It is also a bridge through or on which two bacteria can exchange DNA.

Capsule Cell Wall

Chromosome

Flagellum

PlasmidPilus

Plasma membrane

Page 138: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Viruses are nonliving particles that have a nucleic acid core and a protein-containing capsid.

Viruses

• To replicate, a virus must first recognize a host cell, then attach to it, and finally enter the host cell and take over its metabolism.

Page 139: Table of Contents – pages iii

• During a lytic cycle, a virus replicates and kills the host cell. In a lysogenic cycle, a virus’s DNA is integrated into a chromosome of the host cell, but the host cell does not die.

Viruses

• Retroviruses contain RNA. Reverse transcriptase is an enzyme that helps convert viral RNA to DNA, which is then integrated into the host cell’s chromosome.

Page 140: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Prions and viroids are virus-like particles. Prions are composed of only a protein, while a viroid is a singular strand of RNA.

Viruses

• Viruses probably originated from their host cells.

Page 141: Table of Contents – pages iii

• There are two kingdoms of prokaryotes: archaebacteria and eubacteria. Archaebacteria inhabit extreme environments. Eubacteria live almost everywhere else. They probably arose separately from a common ancestor billions of years ago.

Archaebacteria and Eubacteria

Page 142: Table of Contents – pages iii

• Bacteria are varied. Some are heterotrophs, some are photosynthetic autotrophs, and others are chemosynthetic autotrophs. Bacteria can be obligate aerobes, obligate anaerobes, or both aerobic and anaerobic.

Archaebacteria and Eubacteria

Page 143: Table of Contents – pages iii

Archaebacteria and Eubacteria

• Bacteria usually reproduce by binary fission. Some have a type of sexual reproduction called conjugation. Some bacteria form endospores that enable them to survive when conditions are unfavorable.

Page 144: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 1With lysogenic viruses, what two phases of the lytic cycle are replaced by the lysogenic cycle?(TX Obj 3; 4C)

D. attachment and entry

C. assembly and lysis and release

B. replication and assemble

A. entry and replication

Page 145: Table of Contents – pages iii

The answer is D.

LYSOGENIC CYCLE

LYTIC CYCLE

A. Attachment and Entry

Page 146: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 2Explain why you can be infected with a virus but may have no symptoms of disease for years after the initial infection. (TX Obj 3; 4C)

AnswerThe virus enters a lysogenic phase remaining inactive but replicating along with the host cell’s chromosomes. Eventually, the virus enters a lytic phase where it destroys its host cells and causes symptoms of disease.

Page 147: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 3What is the difference between lysis and exocytosis with respect to host cells that contain viruses? (TX Obj 3; 4C)

AnswerLysis, the bursting of the host cell, is caused when viruses break out of it. In exocytosis, the virus is enclosed in a vacuole that then fuses with the host cell’s plasma membrane. The virus is then released to the outside.

Page 148: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 4

What is the importance of reverse transcriptase to a retrovirus? (TX Obj 3; 4C)

Answer

The enzyme reverse transcriptase allows the retrovirus to make DNA from its RNA so the DNA may attach to the chromosomes of the host cell and divide with the host cell.

Page 149: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 5Particles that are composed of proteins but have no nucleic acid to carry genetic information are _______. (TX Obj 3; 4C)

D. retroviruses C. viroids

B. prionsA. proviruses

The answer is B.

Page 150: Table of Contents – pages iii

During ______, a bacterium transfers all or part of its chromosome to another bacterium.(TX Obj 3; 4D)

D. chemosynthesisC. conjugation

B. attachment A. binary fission

The answer is C.

Question 6

Page 151: Table of Contents – pages iii

What causes botulism? (TX Obj 3; 4D)

Answer

Endospores of C. botulinum bacteria get into an anaerobic environment like improperly canned food, germinate, and produce a toxin as they grow. This toxin is then ingested by humans and causes poisoning called botulism.

Question 7

Page 152: Table of Contents – pages iii

What causes anthrax?(TX Obj 3; 4D)

Question 8

Page 153: Table of Contents – pages iii

Endospores of B. anthracis bacteria produce endospores that can become airborne, and if inhaled in large amounts, can germinate in a person’s lungs causing a deadly infection that damages lung tissue and the circulatory system.

Page 154: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 9

Describe the process in which bacteria make nitrogen in the air accessible for use by plants.(TX Obj 3; 4D)

Page 155: Table of Contents – pages iii

Several species of bacteria have enzymes that convert nitrogen gas into ammonia. Other bacteria then convert the ammonia into nitrite and nitrate that plants can use.

Answer

Page 156: Table of Contents – pages iii

Question 10

What are the two ways in which bacterial diseases harm people? (TX Obj 3; 4D)

Answer

The growth of the bacteria can interfere with the normal function of body tissue, or the bacteria can release a toxin that directly attacks the host.

Page 157: Table of Contents – pages iii

Photo CreditsPhoto Credits

• Scott Ransom

• Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, GA.  

• Carolina Biological Supply Company

• USDA  

• Lappa/Marquart  

Page 158: Table of Contents – pages iii

Photo CreditsPhoto Credits

• Diamar  

• NOAA  

• Wards Natural Science Est.

• Platinum  

• PhotoDisc

• Alton Biggs  

Page 159: Table of Contents – pages iii

To advance to the next item or next page click on any of the following keys: mouse, space bar, enter, down or forward arrow.

Click on this icon to return to the table of contents

Click on this icon to return to the previous slide

Click on this icon to move to the next slide

Click on this icon to open the resources file.

Page 160: Table of Contents – pages iii

End of Chapter 18 Show