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Bacterial Diversity

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... Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria: ex. Thiobacillus, Beggiatoa. Hydrogen-Oxidizing Bacteria: ... Oxidize H2S as an e- donor, but sulfur produced resides outside the cell. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bacterial Diversity


1
Chapter 12
  • Bacterial Diversity

2
Phylum 1 Proteobacteria
  • Gram-negative.
  • Show extreme metabolic diversity.
  • Represent the majority of known gram-negative
    bacteria of medical, industrial, and agricultural
    significance.
  • Ex. Escherichia, Neisseria, Nitrosomonas,
    Acetobacter

3
Purple Phototrophic Bacteria
  • Ex. Rhodospirillum
  • Carry out anoxygenic photosynthesis.
  • Contain bacteriochlorophylls and carotenoid
  • Include the purple sulfur bacteria, which utilize
    H2S as the e- donor for CO2 reduction, and the
    purple nonsulfur bacteria, which are actually
    able to use sulfide as an e- donor for the
    reduction of CO2, but it is toxic at levels
    tolerable by the purple sulfur bacteria.

4
Examples of Proteobacteria
  • Nitrifying Bacateria Nitrosomonas, Nitrobacter.
  • Sulfur- and Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria ex.
    Thiobacillus, Beggiatoa
  • Hydrogen-Oxidizing Bacteria ex. Alcaligenes
  • Methanotrophs and Methylotrophs Methylomonas,
    Methylobacter
  • Pseudomonas and the Pseudomonads some are
    pathogenic, ex. Pseudomonas aeruginosa UTIs and
    URIs.

5
Examples of Proteobacteria (cont.)
  • Free-Living Aerobic Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria
    Azotobacter, Azomonas.
  • Neisseria, Chromobacterium, and Relatives
    Neisseria coccobacilli, ex. Neisseria
    gonorrhoeae ? gonorrhea.
  • Enteric Bacteria Escherichia, Salmonella,
    Proteus, Enterobacter all are gram-neg.,
    nonsporulating rods, nonmotile or motile by
    peritrichous flagella, facultative aerobes,
    relatively simple nutritional requirements, many
    are pathogenic to humans, animals, or plants, or
    are of industrial importance.

6
Examples of Proteobacteria (cont.)
  • Rickettsias most are obligate intracellular
    parasites, cause for ex. spotted fever, typhus, Q
    fever.
  • Gliding Myxobacteria exhibit gliding motility,
    some form multicellular fruiting bodies.

7
Phylum 2 Gram-Positive Bacteria
  • 2 major phylogenetic subdivisions low GC and
    high GC.
  • Low GC, no endospores ex. Staphylococcus,
    Micrococcus, Streptococcus, Lactobacillus
  • Low GC, endospore-forming ex. Bacillus,
    Clostridium (C. botulinum, C. tetani).
  • Low GC, cell wall-less ex. Mycoplasma.
  • High GC ex. Corynebacterium, Propionibacterium,
    Mycobacterium
  • High GC, filamentous Streptomyces ? antibiotics.

8
Phylum 3 Cyanobacteria and Prochlorophytes
  • Cyanobacteria Oxygenic phototrophs,
    morphologically diverse, contain only chlorophyll
    a (green) and phycobilins (blue) thus their
    blue-green color.
  • Some contain gas vesicles or heterocysts.
  • Many contain cyanophycin (made of Asp and Arg)
    N storage molecule.
  • Prochlorophytes contain chlorophyll a and b,
    but not phycobilins, have a shared common
    ancester of green plant chloroplasts and
    cyanobacteria.

9
Phylum 4 Chlamydia
  • Obligate intracellular parasites.
  • Ex. Chlamydia pneumoniae ? respiratory syndromes,
    Chlamydia tranchomatis ? STD
  • Chlamydias are small (1µm they were suspected of
    being viruses) and have the simplest biochemical
    capacities of all known cellular organisms.

10
Phylum 5 Planctomyces/Pirellula
  • Planctomyces stalked bacteria that lack PG
  • Have internal compartments for metabolic
    functions, etc. that closely resemble those of
    the euk. cell.

11
Phylum 6 The Verrucomicrobia
  • Form cytoplasmic appendages called prostheca.

12
Phylum 7 The Flavobacteria
  • Genera Bacteroides, Flavobacterium.
  • Bacteroides Anaerobic, found in the intestinal
    tract of humans and other animals and are the
    numerically dominant bacteria in the human large
    intestine (1010 1011 cells/g of human feces).
    Some species are pathogenic and are the most
    important anaerobes assoc. with human infections.
  • Flavobacterium primarily aquatic, rarely
    pathogenic.

13
Phylum 8 The Cytophaga Group
  • Obligately aerobic.
  • Probably account for much of the cellulose
    digestion that occurs by prok. in oxic
    environments in nature.
  • Cytophaga spp. some are pathogenic to fish.
  • Flexibacter spp. none identified as pathogens.

14
Phylum 9 Green Sulfur Bacteria
  • Oxidize H2S as an e- donor, but sulfur produced
    resides outside the cell.
  • Most assimilate a few organic compounds in the
    light what is this called?
  • Autotrophy by reverse citric acid cycle.
  • Some form tight 2-membered mutually beneficial
    assoc. with a chemoorganotrophic bacterium called
    consortia.
  • Contain various pigments.

15
Phylum 10 The Spirochetes
  • Gram neg., motile, tightly coiled.
  • Treponema commensals or parasites of humans and
    animals, ex. Treponema pallidum ? syphilis.
  • Leptospira some are parasitic to humans and
    animals.
  • Borrelia most are animal or human pathogens,
    ex. Borrelia burgdorferi ? Lyme disease.

16
Phylum 11 Deinococci
  • Ex. Deinococcus radiodurans structurally
    complex CW, aerobic chemoorganotroph, highly
    resistant to radiation (more so than endospores)
    and desiccation, have powerful DNA repair
    machinery.
  • Thermus aquaticus thermophilic chemoorganotroph
    that produces the Taq polymerase, which is heat
    stable and used for PCR.

17
Phylum 12 The Green Nonsulfur Bacteria
  • Ex. Chloroflexus filamentous, form thick
    microbial mats in neutral to alkaline hot
    springs, may have first evolved a photosynthetic
    rxn. Center, is the most phylogenetically ancient
    of anoxygenic phototrophs.
  • Some have interesting membrane lipids and lack PG.

18
Phylum 13 and 14 Deeply Branching
Hyperthermophilic Bacteria
  • Hyperthermophiles (optimal growth at temps. above
    80C).
  • Ex. Thermodesulfobacterium most thermophilic of
    all sulfate-reducing Bacteria, contain
    ether-linked lipids.
  • Ex. Aquifex most thermophilic of all known
    Bacteria. (grow up to 95C, optimum 85C).

19
Phylum 15 and 16 Nitrospira and Deferribacter
  • Not much is known about these phyla they have
    been identified by rRNA sequencing and are either
    chemolithotrophs or chemoorganotrophs and are
    mesophiles to thermophiles.
  • Some Nitrospira ox. nitrite to nitrate.
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