Title: Prokaryotes And The Origins of Metabolic Diversity
1Prokaryotes And The Origins of Metabolic Diversity
2The Oldest Organisms
- Oldest fossils go back 3.5 bya
- Chemical cycles evolved in prokaryotes
- Wide range of modes of nutrition
- Est. diversity of up to 4 million species
- Two main brances are archaea and bacteria
3The Three Domains
4Comparing Domains
CHARACTERISTICS BACTERIA ARCHAEA EUKARYA
Peptidoglycan in cell wall Present Absent Absent
RNA Polymerase One kind only Several kinds Several kinds
Initiator amino acid in protein synthesis Formyl-methionine Methionine Methionine
Histones associated with DNA None Present Present
Introns in genes None Some Present
5Three Common Shapes
Spheres - Cocci
Rods - Bacilli
Helices Spirilla, spirochetes
6Classification By Gram Stain
7Gram Positive and Gram Negative Bacteria
8Pilli
- Allow bacteria to attach to a substrate
- Allow for exchange of plasmids during conjugation
- Not present in all bacterial groups
9Some Bacteria Are Motile
- Bacilli may move using one or more flagella
- Narrower than eukaryotic flagella
- Lack membrane covering
- Not a 92 pattern
- Exhibit taxis chemo or photo
10Flagella
11Reproduction and Genetic Recombination
- Asexual reproduction by binary fission 20min.
in log phase growth - Three mechanisms of genetic recombination
- 1. transformation
- 2. conjugation
- 3. transduction
- Mutation is the major source of genetic variation
12Bacilli Produce Endospores
- Bacillus anthracis
- Resistant capsule
- Survives many attempts destroy it
- Requires sterilization with heat and pressure
- Steam at 15 lbs. per sq. in. for at least 20 min.
13Nutrition and Metabolic Diversity
Mode of Nutrition Energy Source Carbon Source Type of Organism
Photoautotrophs Sunlight CO2 Cyanobacteria, certain protists (algae)
Chemoautotrophs Inorganic Chemicals (H2S, NH3, Fe2) CO2 Sulfur bacteria
Photoheterotrophs Sunlight Organic molecules Certain prokaryotes
Chemoheterotrophs Organic molecules Organic molecules Animals, fungi, many protists, prokaryotes, parasitic plants
14Evolution of Photosynthesis
15Archaea
- Methanogens use CO2 to oxidize H2 into CH4
- Exteme halophiles (Bacteriorhodopsin is their
photosynthetic pigment. Purple color) - Extreme thermophiles Oxidize sulfur for energy
at deep-sea thermal vents at 105ºC
16Ecological Impact of Prokaryotes
- Decomposers Recycle chemical elements between
biological and physical components of the
ecosystem - Fix carbon (as CO2) and nitrogen (as NH3)
- Produce O2 (cyanobacteria)
- Symbiotic
- mutualism cyanobacteria in root nodules
- commensalism bacteria in/on the body
- parasitism pathogenic bacteria
- Streptomyces Source of our antibiotics
17Kochs Postulates
- Find the same pathogen in each diseased
individual. - Isolate pathogen from diseased individual and
grow it in pure culture. - Induce disease using pure culture.
- Re-isolate pathogen from individuals in which
disease was induced from pure culture. - Doesnt work for all pathogens (Treponema
pallidum, the cause of syphilis, cant be
cultured on media)
18Exotoxins
- Proteins secreted by prokaryotes
- Clostridium botulinum botulism (botox)
- Vibrio cholerae Cholera (severe diarrhea)
- E. coli Travellers diarrhea
19Endotoxins
- Components of the outer membranes of certain
gram-negative bacteria - Genus Salmonella Causes food poisoning
- Actinomycetes Fungus-like prokaryotes
- 1. Mycobacterium sp. (Tuberculosis leprosy)
- 2. Streptomyces sp. (Antibiotics)
20Benefit to Society
- Remove pollutants from soil, water, or air
- Oil spills
- Sewage treatment
- Production of drugs by genetic engineering
- Prevention of freeze damage to crops
- Antibiotic production