Title: Prokaryotes and the Origins of Metabolic Diversity
1Prokaryotes and the Origins of Metabolic Diversity
2Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes
- Prokaryotes DO NOT have a nucleus or
membrane-bound organelles while Eukaryotes have
both - Biomass of Prokaryotes outweighs all eukaryotes
by at least ten-fold
3Figure 27.4x2 Prokaryotes and eukaryotic cell
4Prokaryotes are not all bad
- Many do cause disease, but others are symbiotic
(E. coli in intestines), help with cycling
nutrients (decomposers and carbon cycle) - Are about 5,000 species known, could be as many
as 4 million
55 kingdoms vs. 3 domains for classification
- 5 kingdoms Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae,
Animalia - this scheme emphasizes the structural
differences between prok and euk - but, a single kingdom does not reflect
evolutionary history seem to be two major
branches of prok evolution - 3 Domains Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya
- shows early divergence in types of bacteria
6Figure 27.2 The three domains of life
7See page 537
8Structure of Prokaryotes Groups, shape, and
size range
- Most are unicellular, but some may aggregate in
groups of two or more - Others are true colonies permanent aggregates
of identical cells chains (strepto) - clusters (staphalo)
- Differ in shape 3 most common
- spherical (coccus or cocci)
- rod-like (bacillus or bacilli)
- helical (spirillum or spirilla, spirochetes)
- Diameter ranges between 1-5 um largest is .75 mm
in diameter (Thiomargarita namibiensis)
9Figure 27.0 Bacteria on the point of a pin
10Figure 27.3 The most common shapes of prokaryotes
11Figure 27.4 The largest known prokaryote
12Structure
- Has a cell wall which
- maintains shape of cell
- affords physical protection
- prevents cell from bursting in hypotonic
conditions - (BUT, bacteria will also plasmolyze and
die in hypertonic conditions, so ex.,
salted meat keeps)
13Domain Bacteria vs. Archaea
- cell walls of bacteria contain peptidoglycan
- consists of polymers of modified sugars
cross-linked by short polypeptides that vary
from bacterial species to species this gives a
single molecular network enclosing and
protecting the entire cell. - Walls of archaea lack peptidoglycan
-
14Identification of Bacteria
- Culture area affected throat w/ giant swab
- Grow suspected pathogen on petri dish
- Isolate the org (if are several present) by using
STREAKING technique - first pass on petri is all pathogens
- flame tip of innoculation loop
- make second pass at 90 degree angle through
first set - flame tip of innoculation loop
- make third pass at 90 degree angle through
second set - Last colonies streaked should be most pure
15Figure 27.9x Bacterial and fungal colonies
16Figure 27.9 Prokaryote colonies in culture
17Identification of Bacteria
- Use Kochs Postulates to identify pathogen
- a. Isolate org suspected of causing illness
- (using streaking technique) in several
diseased individuals - b. Grow org in lab culture
- c. Innoculate a healthy animal with the
cultured org, see if animal contracts
illness induce disease in new host - d. If illness occurs, re-isolate the org that
caused the disease - e. repeat and retest the org
18Gram staining
- Adds dye to bacteria way stains is indication
of bacterial type (structure) - Gram positive stains PURPLE has simple, thick
cell wall made of polysaccharides - Gram negative stains PINK has a protective
outer cell membrane, and has less peptidoglycan
in cell walls are structurally more complex
(contain lipopolysaccharides that are often toxic
to host) - negatives are more resistant to antibiotics
19Figure 27.5 Gram-positive and gram-negative
bacteria
20Figure 27.5x Gram-positive and gram-negative
bacteria
21If bacteria can be treated
- Grow bacteria into lawn on petri dish
- Drop different types of antibiotics at different
locations on lawn - Many antibiotics inhibit the synthesis of
cross-links in peptidoglycan and prevent the
formation of a functional wall, so can look for - formation of plaques areas where bacteria
have died - Large, clear plaques are best if see a halo
effect, some of the bacteria are resistant, not a
good antibiotic to use against that bacteria
22Other protective coverings
- Slime capsule secretions that allow bacteria to
adhere to a substrate and to hold on in colonies - Pili surface appendages that hold on to
substrates may even assist in conjugation (DNA
transfer between bacteria)
23Figure 27.6 Pili
24Figure 27.x1 Prokaryotic conjugation
25Mobility in prokaryotes
- In a uniform environment, movements may be random
- Use of flagella is most common type of propulsion
- May be scattered over the entire cell surface
or concentrated on one or both ends of the cell - Prokaryotic flagella are smaller than that of
eukaryotes, and are not covered by cell
membrane - Spirochetes have cork-screw movement due to
helical filaments under the outer layer of the
cell wall - Some secrete slimy threads and glide along
26Figure 27.7 Form and function of prokaryotic
flagella
27Figure 27.x3 Prokaryotic flagella (Bacillus)
28Figure 27.x2 Prokaryotic flagella (A. serpens)
29Figure 27.x1 Prokaryotic flagella
30Taxis
- Def Movement toward or away from a stimulus
- can be a positive or negative taxis
- Ex. Toward food, positive chemotaxis
- Away from toxin, negative chemotaxis
- Many prokaryotes are capable of this in
heterogeneous environments - May even have special devices that allow for
response (Ex. magnetic particles that allow for
orientation to Earths magnetic field know up
from down, so go to nutrient-rich sediment at
bottom of ponds)
31Genomic organization in Prokaryotes
- Prok genomes are smaller, simpler than Eukaryotic
genomes (P have 1/1000th as much DNA as E) - DNA is concentrated as a snarled fiber in a
nucleiod region (is no nucleus) with very little
protein present referred to as a genophore - Along with DNA, prok may have plasmids smaller
rings of DNA that endow the cell with - resistance to antibiotics
- metabolism of unusual nutrients
32Growth and adaptation
- Prok reproduce asexually by binary fission
- NO MITOSIS OR MEIOSIS OCCURS!!!
- May transfer genes between individuals, though,
using 3 methods - a. transformation prok cell takes up genes
from surrounding environ - b. conjugation direct transfer of genes from
one prok to another (through tube) - c. transduction viruses transfer genes
between prok - All three methods are unilateral passage of
variable amount of DNA
33- Mutation is major source of genetic variation in
prok - Generation times are short minutes or hours
so favorable mutations can be rapidly propagated
in offspring - Reproduction is geometric 1 divides into 2, 2
divide into 4, 4 divide into 8, etc.
34If conditions are not suitable for reproduction
- Some bacteria may form endospores resistant
cells where original cell replicates its
chromosome, and one copy becomes surrounded by a
durable wall outer well disintegrates, leaving
the highly resistant endospore capsule
35Figure 27.10 An anthrax endospore
36Figure 27.10x Endospores
37Nutritional Diversity
- Nutrition of prok how org obtains energy and a
carbon source to build org molecules - Are 4 categories
- a. photoautotrophs
- b. chemoautotrophs
- c. photoheterotrophs
- d. chemoheterotrophs
38Photoautotrophs
- Photosynthetic
- Harness light energy to make organic compounds
from CO2 - Ex. cyanobacteria
39Figure 27.11 One of the most independent
organisms on earth Cyanobacteria (Anabaena)
40Figure 27.11x1 Cyanobacteria Gloeothece (top
left), Nostoc (top right), Calothrix (bottom
left), Fischerella (bottom right)
41Chemoautotrophs
- Need only CO2 as carbon source
- Oxidize inorganic substances to get energy
- Chemical energy is extracted from H2S, NH3, Fe2,
etc.
42Photoheterotrophs
- Use light to generate ATP but must get carbon in
organic form
43Chemoheterotrophs
- Must consume organic molecules for energy and
carbon - Very common in prokaryotes
- Ex.
- saprobes decomposers that absorb nutrients
from dead organic matter - parasites absorb nutrients from body fluids
of living hosts
44Table 27.1 Major Nutritional Modes
45Nitrogen metabolism
- Nitrogen fixation some prokaryotes convert
atmospheric nitrogen (N2) to ammonium (NH4) - Is the only biological mechanism that makes
atmospheric nitrogen available to other orgs for
incorporation into organic compounds (namely,
proteins and nucleic acids) - Prok that do this are very self-sufficient need
only light energy, CO2, N2, water, and some
minerals in order to grow
46Metabolic relationships to oxygen
- 3 categories
- a. obligate aerobes must have O2
- b. facultative anaerobes will use O2 if it
is present but grow by fermentation in an
anaerobic environ - c. obligate anaerobes poisoned by O2
-
47See pages 538 and 539 for five major clades of
bacteria
- Proteobacteria
- Chlamydias
- Spirochetes
- Gram-positive bacteria
- Cyanobacteria
- be familiar with general characteristics
48Ecological Impact of Prokaryotes
- Indispensable links in recycling of nutrients
(decomposers) - Symbiotic relationships interact with other
orgs and form food webs - Cause many diseases
- opportunisitic (normal residents, but cause
disease when immune system is weak) - Bioremediation use or orgs to remove pollutants
from water, air, and soil - Ex. Sewage treatment plants anaerobic prok
- Ex. Decompose petroleum compounds at oil spills
-- pseudomonads - Act as metabolic factories for human use
- -produce acetone, butanol
- -make vitamins, antibiotics
- -food flavorings (yogurt, cheese)
- -DNA technology produce hormones like insulin
-