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The Wonderful World of Bacteria

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The Good, Bad, and the Ugly The Wonderful World of Bacteria 2/11/11 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Facts-Why should we care ? we share our ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Wonderful World of Bacteria


1
The Good, Bad, and the Ugly
  • The Wonderful World of Bacteria

2/11/11
2
Facts-Why should we care ?
  • we share
  • our world with them!
  • our guts with them!
  • normal flora
  • human Gut motel

3
the Good
  • hand full - soil billions of bacteria
  • Recycle nutrients -
  • eg nitrogen cycle N2 to NH3 to nitrates, to
    nitrites
  • plants can use nitrogen in this form.
  • bioremediation - clean up pollutants ?
  • contaminated waste sites -
  • convert poisonous toxins to harmless molecules
  • bacteria fungi do this.
  • sewage treatment - breaks up - solid wastes-
  • easy recycling
  • Control harmful organisms living within us.-by
    controlling their nutrients

4
The Good bacteria- continued.
  • Decomposers -
  • dead organisms - break down flesh- release
    nutrients
  • nutrients from dead are freed up
  • Lacy Peterson -
  • Antibiotics -
  • are produced by bacteria
  • to inhibit competing bacteria - competing for
    food.
  • bacteria are ideal factories - churning out
    chemicals.
  • reproduce like rabbits!!

5
The Good bacteria- continued.
  • Genetic engineering -
  • We can cut splice genes (DNA) - together into
    new combinations.
  • different organisms made - by fused genes.
  • these new recombinations -multiplied in quantity
    by bacteria
  • eg. also vaccines, HGH, insulin,

6
Useful bacteria
  • Food that we eat-
  • lactobacillus (lactic acid bacteria)
  • pickles, yogurt, olives, sauerkraut, cheese,
    fermented meats - salami, vinegar, soy sauce,
    chocolate,
  • B vitamins, citric acid (candy and soft drinks

7
Research Technology
  • Decomposers - yea!
  • Sewage treatment Methanogens
  • Can decompose pesticides petroleum products -
  • Pseudomonads
  • Can produce chemicals - in huge vats
  • eg acetone, butanol,
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Can create vitamins antibiotics,
  • are even bacteria containing magnetic particles
  • maybe a commercial source for -magnetic tapes
    recording devices.

8
The Bad
  • Food spoilage
  • milk-
  • salmonella - food poisoning
  • runny eggs - not fully cooked.
  • tetanus - caused by a toxin
  • deep puncture
  • lockjaw - affects muscles and nerves
  • Food poisoning - eg Mexico
  • unfamiliar local bacteria
  • Montezumas revenge travelers diarrhea!

9
The Ugly
  • Diseases
  • TB - tuberculosis -
  • slowly takes hold (lungs), unnoticed
  • penetrates cells of immune system.
  • tissues die, dead tissue serves as food for
    bacteria.
  • Strep throat -Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • exist in our moist throats -
  • Usually well behaved, until were weakened by
    cold or flu
  • pneumonia-
  • e coli
  • Botulism
  • botox commercial product - paralyzes muscles

10
Bacteria-what are they?
1
  • are single celled organisms simple
  • 1/100th size of human cell (1 micrometer long)
  • 3.5 billion years old!
  • are Prokaryotic Cells
  • no nucleus no nuclear membrane
  • No organelles no nucleus,
  • no mitochondria, no ER, no Golgi, etc.
  • In Cytoplasm is nucleoid region no separation
  • no compartments just a big vat
  • like a large hall, multiple classrooms
  • plasma membrane w/inward folds
  • enzymes may be located in folds.

11
Size ?
1/100th size of human cell (1 micrometer long)
head of pin
12
Structure
  • Cell wall structure protection
  • Plasma membrane -
  • transport - materials in out
  • Surface receptor markers -
  • receive of extracellular signals.
  • 1 large loop of DNA - genome
  • plus multiple plasmids - circles of DNA
  • Some, which carry genes for antibiotic resistance
  • plasmids can be copied passed to other bacteria
    as close to sexual transmission as we can get
    here.
  • Ribosomes - protein workbench

13
Structure
14
Shapes - 3 main ones
  • Sphere - Cocci (kahk-sie)
  • Streptococci (Strep-tuh-Kahk-sie)-
  • chains-oooooooooooooooooooooooooo
  • Staphlococci (Staf-uh-loh-Kahk-sie)
  • Grapelike clusters
  • Rod -bacilli (buh-SIL-ie)
  • helix -spiral -Spirochete

15
Movement
  • Flagella - whip like
  • Propeller -
  • Towards vs away
  • or use slime - glide along cells surface

16
Pili
  • Pili - acts like velcro
  • and when partnered with slime capsule.
  • used to attach to others, and objects
    Stickiness -
  • biofilm on back of tongue
  • Cutting boards
  • plaque on teeth
  • lining of instrument, tubes hospital, dentist
    office.

17
Reproduction -1 of 9 LA
  • Reproduce quickly - asexual fission
  • fastest 1 divides into 2 separate bacteria
    approx. once every 20-30 minutes.
  • 99.5 are identical clones !! ??
  • At this rate1 bacteria millions in 24 hours
  • TB (slow) - 1 division every 16 hours
  • Conjugation - do not reproduce sexually
  • No fusion of 2 gametes.
  • they can copy and transfer plasmids to other
    bacteria, even other strains !!
  • can transfer antibiotic resistant genes !

18
What if ? facing harsh conditions ?
  • can create sleeping cells endospores
  • slime capsule- (some bacteria) -
  • Enables them to stick to -rocks, host cells, etc.
  • Holds water in - protects from dryness?
  • Protects them vs phagocytes (which engulf)
  • Protects vs bacteriophages
  • eg botulism spores-
  • How to kill toxins endospores?
  • must boil at 120 degrees C (280 degrees F)
  • some can withstand an hour in boiling water

19
Nutrition growth
  • Autotrophic- energy from sun or minerals
  • heterotrophic-energy from organic matter.
  • saprophytes -feed on dead and decaying
  • obligate (Ahb-luh-git) anaerobes-
  • cant survive in oxygen.
  • obligate aerobes -
  • need oxygen to survive

20
How do they cause disease
  • Some penetrate host cell membrane, destroy host
    cells -
  • feed off of host cells use digestive enzymes
  • Most cause disease w/ TOXINS -
  • Poison -damages hosts metabolism.
  • ENDOTOXINS
  • in plasma membrane of Gram neg (-) Bacteria
  • Forms shield against antibiotics
  • chills, fever, damage to circulatory sys
  • EXOTOXINS-carried in blood
  • Eg diptheria, tetanus, botulism
  • all different proteins different symptoms
  • NEW- Virus (prophage) made 1 strain of diptheria
    virulent.

21
Control of bacteria
  • Prevent spread ?
  • To prevent airborne bacteria ? - eg. coughing
    sneezing droplets must Quarantine (eg.
    Diptheria, Scarlet fever, whooping cough, TB)
  • Vaccination -
  • Hygiene sanitation best preventative measure!
  • Heating to 60 oC for 30 minutes destroys exotoxin
    proteins kills most bacterial cells.
  • Pasteurization - short bursts of high heat!!
  • Antibiotics - eg penicillins interfere with cell
    wall synthesis bacteria pop.

22
evolve and adapt?
  • MRSA - methicillin resistant staphlococcus aureus
  • antibiotic resistant strains have evolved,
    reproduced
  • using conjugation to pass resistant genes along.
  • our overuse of antibiotics for minor infections
  • cause drugs to be ineffective for major bacterial
    illnesses

23
Extreme conditions
  • Extreme some.
  • live in saturated salt ponds (brine)
  • live in hot, sometimes acid springs
  • Yellowstone park - 60 degrees C, pH 1-2
  • acidic pools - pH 1-2 - same as sulfuric acid.

24
Christian Gram - 1888
  • Difference in bacterial cell wall composition -
    critical clinically.
  • Gram Staining procedure
  • bacterial cell wall not made of cellulose like
    plants.
  • gram positive bacteria - retain crystal violet
    stain
  • gram negative - cell walls very thick - dont
    retain stain
  • Gram pos () or Gram neg (-) can determine which
    antibiotic to use.
  • some have a slime capsule - protects against
    phagocytosis (engulfment) by white blood cells.
  • eg. Streptococcus pneumoniae

25
bacteria cell walls- gram /-
26
no need of a host -
  • Completely Independent organisms
  • not like viruses.
  • Can eat reproduce on their own!
  • Like fish swimming in the ocean of
  • your body.
  • Like a human swimming through honey.

27
Questions
  • What if every dead animal plant was laying out
    in the street ?
  • You have atoms in your body that were once part
    of dead organisms, and were recycled by bacteria
    and fungi.

28
Energy ?
  • fermentation

29
Your body
  • made up of 100 trillion cells
  • Each of your cells
  • has a Nucleus
  • has energy production equipment
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