Title: Bacteria and Viruses
1Bacteriaand Viruses
2Prokaryotes or Bacteria
- Prokaryotes were the earliest organisms on Earth
and are thought to have evolved alone for 1.5
billion years. - Today, prokaryotes still dominate the biosphere.
- biomass outweighs all eukaryotes combined by at
least tenfold. - There are more prokaryotes in a handful of
fertile soil or the mouth or skin of a human than
the total number of people who have ever lived.
WOW!!!!! - Prokaryotes thrive in places that are too hot,
cold, acidic, or alkaline for other life forms.
They are the ultimate survivors.
3Bacteria Cont
- Just like the news, we only seem to hear the bad.
This is the minority!!!! - During the 14th century, a bacterial disease
known as bubonic plague, spread across Europe
and killed about 25 of the human population. - Other types of diseases caused by bacteria
include tuberculosis, cholera, many sexually
transmissible diseases, and certain types of food
poisoning - Most bacteria are benign or beneficial.
- Bacteria in our intestines produce important
vitamins. - Prokaryotes recycle carbon and other chemical
elements between organic matter and the soil and
atmosphere. They produce our insulin, and helps
us make various foods and alcohol!!!! BIG
BUSINESS
4Cont
- Prokaryotes often live in close association among
themselves and with eukaryotes in symbiotic
relationships. Like in the case of the
mitochondria and chloroplasts. - About 5,000 species of prokaryotes are known, but
estimates of actual prokaryotic diversity range
from about 400,000 to 4 million species. - Two main branches of prokaryotes are the bacteria
and the archaea. - archaea inhabit extreme environments and differ
from bacteria in many key structural,
biochemical, and physiological characteristics
5Size and Shape
- Most prokaryotes are unicellular, but some
species may aggregate and form colonies that work
together. - most common shapes among prokaryotes are spheres
(cocci), rods (bacilli),and helices or spiral - Most have diameters in the range of 1-5 um,
compared to 10-100 ?m for most eukaryotic cells. - However, the largest prokaryote discovered so far
has a diameter of 0.75 mm. - It is a sulfur-metabolizingmarine bacterium
fromcoastal sediments offNamibia.
6Make Up
- Most bacteria have a cell wall made with
peptidoglycan, polymer of modified sugars
cross-linked by short polypeptides. - Archaea have no cell wall
- The cell walls differ in their make up (Gram
Stain tells the tale)
7Gram Stain Positive Purple and Negative Red.
Neg. More dangerous and resist antibiotics better.
8How antibiotics work.
- Many antibiotics, including penicillins, inhibit
the synthesis of cross-links in peptidoglycans,
preventing the formation of a functional wall,
particularly in gram-positive species. - These drugs are a very selective treatment
because they cripple many species of bacteria
without affecting humans and other eukaryotes,
which do not synthesize peptidoglycans.
9Movement and Protections
- Many prokaryotes secrete another sticky
protective layer, the capsule. It provides
protections and sticks the bacteria to surfaces. - Another way to stick is pili, short hair like
fibers. Aid in conjugations, where bacteria swap
DNA
- half of all prokaryotes are capable of
directional movement.
10Movement Cont Cool
- Flagella, whip, is the most common method of
movement. - The flagella of prokaryotes differ in structure
and function from those of eukaryotes.
Rotation of the filament is driven by the
diffusion of protons into the cell through the
basal apparatus after the protons have been
actively transported by proton pumps in the
plasma membrane
11Controlled Movement????
- many prokaryotes are capable of taxis, movement
toward or away from a stimulus. - With chemotaxis, binding between receptor cells
on the surface and specific substances results in
movement toward the source, chemical in nature.
(positive chemotaxis) or away (negative
chemotaxis). - Other prokaryotes can detect the presence of
light (phototaxis) or magnetic fields.
12Organization
- lack a nucleus enclosed by membranes.
- lack the other internal compartments bounded by
membranes that are characteristic of eukaryotes. - used infolded regions of the plasma membrane to
perform many metabolic functions, including
cellular respiration and photosynthesis.
13Cont..
- prokaryotes have only about one-thousandth as
much DNA as a eukaryote concentrated as a snarl
of fibers in the nucleoid region. - double-stranded DNA molecule in the form of a
ring. also have smaller rings of DNA, plasmids,
that consist of only a few genes - They can live without plasmids but plasmids
provide the cell genes for resistance to
antibiotics, for metabolism of unusual nutrients,
and other special contingencies. - Plasmids replicate independently of the
chromosome and can be transferred between
partners during conjugation.
14Reproduction
- reproduce only asexually via binary fission,
synthesizing DNA almost continuously - lacking meiosis and sex as seen in eukarotes,
prokaryotes have several mechanisms to combine
genes between individuals. - In transformation, a cell can absorb and
integrate fragments of DNA from their
environment. - This allows considerable genetic transfer between
prokaryotes, even across species lines. - In conjugation, one cell directly transfers genes
to another cell. - In transduction, viruses transfer genes between
prokaryotes.
15Growth
- The word growth as applied to prokaryotes refers
to multiplication of cells and population
increases, rather than enlargement of individual
cells. - Conditions for optimal growth vary according to
species. - Variables include temperature, pH, salt
concentrations, nutrient sources, among others. - Grown exponentially, with generation time ranging
from 1-3 hours down to 20 min. - growth in the laboratory and in nature is usually
checked at some point. - The cells may exhaust some nutrient.
- Alternatively, the colony poisons itself with an
accumulation of metabolic waste.
16The endospore survival trick This is why anthrax
is a good bioweapon.
- Some bacteria form resistant cells, endospores.
- In an endospore, a cell replicates its chromosome
and surrounds one chromosome with a durable wall - endospore is resistant to all sort of trauma.
- Endospores can survive lack of nutrients and
water, extreme heat or cold, and most poisons. - Sterilization in an autoclave kills even
endospores by heating them to 120oC. - Endospores may be dormant for centuries or more.
- When the environment becomes more hospitable, the
endospore absorbs water and resumes growth.
17Anthrax Endospore
18How They Get Energy
- Species that use light energy are phototrophs.
- Species that obtain energy from chemicals in
their environment are chemotrophs. - Organisms that need only CO2 as a carbon source
are autotrophs. - Organisms that require at least one organic
nutrient as a carbon source are heterotrophs.
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20Nitrogen Cycle and Oxygen Use
- Prokaryotes are responsible for the key steps in
the cycling of nitrogen through ecosystems - During nitrogen fixation, they convert N2 to
NH4, making atmospheric nitrogen available to
other organisms for incorporation into organic
molecules - oxygen has a positive impact on the growth of
some prokaryotes and a negative impact on the
growth of others. - Obligate aerobes require O2 for cellular
respiration. - Facultative anerobes will use O2 if present but
can also grow by fermentation in an anaerobic
environment. - Obligate anaerobes are poisoned by O2 and use
either fermentation or anaerobic respiration.
21Archaea Extremophiles
- Archaea have at least as much in common with
eukaryotes as with bacteria - ability to live where no other life can
- archaea can be classified into methanogens,
extreme halophiles, and extreme thermophilies. - Methanogens obtain energy by using CO2 to oxidize
H2 replacing methane as a waste. - are strict anaerobes, that live in swamps and
marshes where other microbes have consumed all
the oxygen. - important decomposers in sewage treatment.
- Others live in the anaerobic guts of herbivorous
animals, playing an important role in their
nutrition. - may contribute to the greenhouse effect, by
producing methane.
22Halophiles Love salt
- Extreme halophiles live in such saline places as
the Great Salt Lake and the Dead Sea. - Some just tolerate elevated salinity others
require an extremely salty environment to grow. - Colonies of halophiles form a purple-red scum
from bacteriorhodopsin, a photosynthetic
pigment very similar to the visual pigment in
the human retina.
23Some Like It Hot!!!
- Extreme thermophiles thrive in hot environments.
- The optimum temperatures for most thermophiles
are 60oC-80oC. - Sulfolobus oxidizes sulfur in hot sulfur springs
in Yellowstone National Park. - Another sulfur-metabolizing thermophile lives at
105oC water near deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
24Comparison
25Are Bacteria Good or Bad?
- If it were not for decomposers, especially
prokaryotes, carbon, nitrogen, and other elements
essential for life would become locked in the
organic molecules of corpses and waste products. - Humans also use bacteria as metabolic factories
for commercial products. - The chemical industry produces acetone, butanol,
and other products from bacteria. - The pharmaceutical industry cultures bacteria to
produce vitamins, Insulin, and antibiotics. - The food industry used bacteria to convert milk
to yogurt and various kinds of cheese. BEER,WINE
LICQUOR, all from bacteria. Some people love
bacteria!!!!
26Cont
- Soil bacteria, called pseudomonads, have been
developed to decompose petroleum products at the
site of oil spills or to decompose pesticides
- More than half of our antibiotics (such as
streptomycin and tetracycline) come from the soil
bacteria Streptomyces.
27Some Cause Disease Pathogens
- pneumonia caused by Haemophilus influenzae
bacteria - Exotoxins are proteins secreted by prokaryotes.
- Exotoxins can produce disease symptoms even if
the prokaryote is not present. - Clostridium botulinum, which grows anaerobically
in improperly canned foods, produces an exotoxin
that causes botulism. - An exotoxin produced by Vibrio cholerae causes
cholera, a serious disease characterized by
severe diarrhea. - Even strains of E. coli can be a source of
exotoxins, causing travelers diarrhea.
28More Bad Guys
- Salmonella typhi causes typhoid fever.
- Other Salmonella species, including some that are
common in poultry, cause food poisoning - Bacteria Evolve Quickly We are responsible for
super bacteria like MRSA. - Yersinia pestis- Plague Killed 25 of World
- Treponema pallidum- Syphilis
- Rickettsia rickettsii- Rocky Mountain spotted
fever (spread by ticks - Ect..
29Virus
- ? Are viruses alive. This question is till argued
today. DISCUSS - What is it A virus is simply segments of DNA or
RNA depending on the virus wrapped in a protein
coat. - Viral genomes may consist of double-stranded DNA,
single-stranded DNA, double-stranded RNA, or
single-stranded RNA, depending on the specific
type of virus, smallest viruses have only four
genes, while the largest have several hundred - Size they are smaller then prokaryotes ranging
in size from 20 to 250nm.Most can only be seen
with an electron microscope.
30Cont.
- What do they do Viruses are pathogens, or agents
that cause disease. They replicate by hijacking a
cells production machinery. - Are they Alive They do not grow, do not maintain
an internal environment or homeostasis, they can
not reproduce on their own, and can not carry out
any form of metabolism like the Krebs or Calvin
cycle. They Just exist. Based on the
characteristics we, biologists, set for something
to be living they are not alive. - Discovery 1st discovered in 1935 by Wendell
Stanley while trying to discover the causes of
tobacco mosaic disease, which stunts the growth
of tobacco plants. Through several procedures
that we don not have time to discuss scientists
discovered tobacco mosaic virus. Virus is Latin
for poison
31Look
32Cont
- Structure The protein coat of a virus is called
a capsid. It contains either DNA or RNA. Aids is
an RNA virus. Many viruses like the flu,
influenza, have a membrane around the capsid
called an envelope made of lipids or
glycoprotein, proteins attached carbohydrate
molecules that come from the host cell. - Shape Have a variety of shapes Spherical,
helical, and polyhedral, 20 triangular faces and
12 corners. Those that attack bacteria, called
bacteriophages, have a tripod like structure. - Replication Either Lytic or Lysogenic. Get
inside, viral DNA or RNA incorporates into the
host DNA and divides. Provirus- where the viral
gene is inserted into the host cells chromosome. - Fact 22 mill died of flu in 1918 and 1919.
33Obligate intracellular parasites
reproduce only within a host cell. An isolated
virus is unable to reproduce - or do anything
else, except infect an appropriate host. lack the
enzymes for metabolism or ribosomes for protein
synthesis Viruses identify host cells by a
lock-and-key EXPLAIN
34Specific Made for Each Other
- Some viruses (like the rabies virus) have a broad
enough host range to infect several species,
while others infect only a single species. - Most viruses of eukaryotes attack specific
tissues. - Human cold viruses infect only the cells lining
the upper respiratory tract. - The AIDS virus binds only to certain white blood
cells macrophage and T-Cell populations due to
their receptor sites CD4 and CCR5 Docks with CD4
cell surface receptor and must also activate the
CCR5 receptor that turns on endocytosis. 1
immune to AIDS due to misshaped receptors.
35Viroids and Prions?? Even Simpler
- Viroids, smaller and simpler than even viruses,
consist of tiny molecules of naked circular RNA
that infect plants. - Their several hundred nucleotides do not encode
for proteins but can be replicated by the hosts
cellular enzymes. - These RNA molecules can disrupt plant metabolism
and stunt plant growth, perhaps by causing errors
in the regulatory systems that control plant
growth - Prions are infectious proteins that spread a
disease.. - According to the leading hypothesis, a prion is a
misfolded form of a normal brain protein. - It can then convert a normal protein into the
prion version, creating a chain reaction that
increases their numbers.
36References
- Jack Brown M.S. Biology
- Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2004
- Starr and Taggart The Unity and Diversity of
Life 10th edition 2004 Thomson Brookes/Cole - Campbell and Reece Biology 6th edition 2002
Benjamin Cummings. - Raven and Johnson Holt Biology 2004 Holt,
Rinehart and Winston.