Title: Prokaryote%20diversity
1Prokaryote diversity
- Level 1 Biological Diversity
- Jim Provan
Campbell Chapter 27
2Prokaryotes are (almost) everywhere
- Prokaryotes dominate the biosphere
- Collective mass of prokaryotes outweighs
eukaryotes tenfold - More prokaryotes in the average human mouth than
all the humans that ever lived - Prokaryote diversity
- About 5,000 species known
- Actual numbers believed to be 400,000 to 4 million
3The three domains of life
Domain Bacteria
Domain Archaea
Domain Eukarya
4Diversity of prokaryotic cell shapes
5Prokaryote cell walls
6Prokaryote cell walls
- Present in nearly all prokaryotes
- Provides physical protection
- Prevents cells from bursting in hypotonic
environment - Reason prokaryotes were sometimes grouped with
plants in early classification systems - Cell wall contains peptidoglycan, rather than
cellulose - Gram-negative bacteria generally more pathogenic
than gram-positive bacteria - Lipopolysaccharides can be toxic
- Outer membrane less permeable to antibiotics
- Antibiotics inhibit cross-linking of peptidoglycan
7Prokaryote organisation
- Prokaryotes have smaller, simpler genomes than
eukaryotes - On average, about one-thousandth as much DNA
- Concentrated in twisted nucleoid region
- Single, circular chromosome
- Also have accessory DNA plasmids
- General mechanism of DNA replication and protein
translation is largely the same as in eukaryotes - No organelles, but some have specialised
membranes which carry out similar functions
8Prokaryote organisation
9Prokaryote reproduction
- Prokaryotes reproduce only asexually by binary
fission - DNA synthesis is almost continuous
- No mitosis or meiosis
- Gene transfer is possible
- Transformation take up of genes from
surroundings - Conjugation direct transfer of genes between
cells - Transduction gene transfer by viruses
- Mutation is the major source of genetic variation
- Growth is actually increase in numbers, which
effectively proceeds geometrically
10Prokaryote metabolic diversity
Photoautotroph Light CO2 Cyanobacteria, plants,
protists
Chemoautotroph Inorganic compounds CO2 Some
prokaryotes (Sulfolobus)
Photoheterotroph Light Organic compounds Some
prokaryotes
11A survey of prokaryote diversity
DOMAIN EUKARYA
12The three domains of life
13Domain Archaea
- Inhabit most extreme environments
- Methanogens - strict anaerobes which use H2 to
reduce CO2 to methane (CH4) - Extreme halophiles - live in saline environments
five to ten times saltier than sea water - Extreme thermophiles - live in very hot
environments such as sulphur springs of deep-sea
hydrothermal vents
14Domain Bacteria Proteobacteria
15Domain Bacteria others
16Ecological impact of prokaryotes
- Prokaryotes are crucial components of ecosystems
- Decomposition of waste products
- Recycling of elements from inorganic sources
(soil, air etc.) - Many prokaryotes are symbiotic
- Rhizobium N2 fixation
- Bioluminescence
17Some prokaryotes are pathogenic
- Pathogenic prokaryotes cause half of all human
disease - Some pathogens are opportunistic they cause
illness when the hosts defences are weakened - Mostly produce toxins
- Exotoxins secreted by prokaryotes e.g. in food or
water - Endotoxins are components of bacterial membranes
18Humans use prokaryotes
- Used as model systems to study genetics e.g.
Escherichia coli - Used in bioremediation
- Sewage treatment
- Decomposition of oil spills by soil bacteria
- Metabolic factories
- Organic solvents
- Antibiotic production
- Food industry