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Classification, Bacteria, and Viruses

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Title: Classification, Bacteria, and Viruses


1
Classification, Bacteria, and Viruses
  • Biology ?

2
Classification
  • Taxonomy is
  • the science of naming and classifying organisms
  • Linnaeus developed a two-word naming systems
    called binomial nomenclature.
  • Each species is assigned a two-part scientific
    name.
  • Written in italic, with just the first word
    capitalized
  • First word Genus
  • Second word species
  • For examples, humans are Homo sapiens

3
Classification
  • Overtime, Linnaeuss classification/taxonomy
    system expanded to organize living things
    further. This includes
  • Kingdom
  • Phlyum
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Genus
  • Species

4
Classification
5
Classification
  • Cladogram-
  • a model used by evolutionary biologists to
    represent evolutionary history among species
  • Clade- a group of species that includes a single
    common ancestor and all descendants of that
    ancestor.
  • Derived character- a trait that arose in the most
    recent common ancestor of a particular lineage
    and was passed along to its descendants.

6
Classification
7
Classification
  • Classification has broaden beyond kingdoms to
    domains
  • Bacteria
  • Archaea
  • Eukarya

8
Domain Bacteria
  • Characteristics
  • Unicellular prokaryotes
  • Peptidoglycan cell wall, cell membrane, ribosomes
  • No membrane-bound organelles
  • Naked DNA, single circular chromosome
  • Asexual reproduction binary fission
  • Heterotrophs, photoautotrophs, chemoautotrophs
  • Rods, spheres, spirals Gram positive and gram
    negative

9
Domain Bacteria
  • Domain Bacteria
  • Examples include Bacillus, E. Coli,
    Streptococcus

10
Domain Archaea
  • Characteristics
  • Unicellular prokaryotes
  • Cell wall (no peptidoglycans), cell membrane,
    ribosomes, no membrane-bound organelles
  • DNA histone proteins, single circular
    chromosome
  • Asexual reproduction binary fission
  • Extremophiles halophiles, thermophiles,
    methanogens

11
Domain Archaea
  • Examples
  • Methancoccus, Halobacterium, Thermoproteus

12
Domain Eukarya
  • Examples
  • Animals, Plants, Fungi, Protists
  • We will explore each Kingdom in more detail
    throughout the remainder of the year ?

13
Prokaryotes
  • All bacteria are prokaryotes-
  • unicellular organism that lack a nucleus.
  • small cells (about 1-10 µm) that do not have
    membrane-bound organelles
  • Found in bacteria and archaebacteria

14
Prokaryotes
  • Bacteria
  • Surrounded by cell wall which contains
    peptidoglycan
  • Archaebacteria
  • Look similar to bacteria
  • Lack peptidoglycan in cell walls
  • Live in harsh environments

15
Bacteria
  • Prokaryotic Cell Structures
  • Nucleoid region
  • part of the prokaryotic cell where the DNA is
    found
  • Cell membrane
  • innermost covering of the cell
  • Cell wall
  • outside of cell membrane
  • Capsule
  • outside of the cell wall, protective covering
    (not all bacteria have it)

16
Bacteria
  • Prokaryotic Cell Structures (continued)
  • Flagella (sing. Flagellum)
  • long, whiplike structure that moves bacteria
  • Endospore
  • A thick wall that encloses DNA resistance
    structure enabling bacteria to survive harsh
    conditions
  • Pili
  • short, hair-like projection used to stick to
    other surfaces and for conjugation (exchange of
    genetic materials between bacteria)
  • Cytoplasm
  • jelly-like fluid that dissolves substances and
    holds organelles
  • Ribosomes
  • organelles that make proteins in the cytoplasm

17
Bacteria
18
Bacterial cell walls
  • In bacteria, the cell wall consists of a
    protein/carbohydrate complex called carbohydrate
    called peptidoglycan. They are classified based
    on their cell walls
  • Gram positive bacteria
  • More peptidoglycan in cell walls
  • Appear purple under the microscope after gram
    stain
  • Gram negative bacteria
  • Have less peptidoglycan in cell walls
  • Have outer membrane
  • Apper pink under the microscope after gram stain

19
Bacteria- shapes
  • Bacilli
  • Rod-shaped
  • Cocci
  • Spherical-shaped as either
  • Staph- clusters
  • Strep-chains
  • Spirilla
  • Spiral-shaped

20
Bacteria-shapes
21
Bacteria- modes of nutrition
  • Heterotroph
  • Consume other organisms Clostridium
  • Photoheterotroph
  • Consume other organisms and can use light energy
    Rhodobacter
  • Photoautotroph
  • Use light energy to make carbon compounds
    Cyanobacteria
  • Chemoautotroph
  • Use chemicals, like ammonia and hydrogen sulfide,
    to obtain energy Nitrogen-fixing bacteria

22
Bacteria- Aerobic, Anaerobic, and Facultative
Anaerobes
  • Aerobic
  • Need oxygen to live
  • Anaerobic
  • Cannot live with oxygen
  • Facultative anaerobes
  • Can live with or without oxygen

23
Bacteria- Binary Fission
  • Binary fission
  • Process by prokaryotes reproduce by cell
    division.
  • Steps
  • Duplication of chromosomes and separation of
    copies.
  • Cell elongates
  • Divides into two daughter cells

24
Bacteria- Binary Fission
25
Bacteria and Disease
  • Pathology- the study of disease caused by
    pathogens (microorganismviruses or prokaryotes
    that cause disease)

26
Bacteria and disease
  • Bacteria cause disease by destroying living cells
    or by releasing chemicals that upset homeostasis.
  • Damaging host tissue
  • Releasing toxins

27
Bacteria and Disease
  • Bacteria can be controlled via
  • Physical removal
  • Disinfectants
  • Food storage
  • Food processing
  • Sterilization by heat

28
Bacteria and Disease
  • Bacterial diseases can be treated via-
  • Antibiotics
  • Blocks the growth and reproduction of bacteria
  • Examples penicillin, streptomycin, and
    tetracycline

29
Bacteria and Disease
  • Prevention of a bacterial disease via
  • vaccine-
  • A preparation of weakened or killed pathogens or
    inactivated toxins that prompt the body to
    produce immunity to a specific disease upon
    injection.

30
Virus
  • Virus
  • A nonliving particle made of proteins and nucleic
    acids.
  • Can reproduce only by infecting living cells.
  • Have no cytoplasm or organelles
  • Cannot carryout metabolism or homeostasis
  • Cant grow like cells.

31
Virus
  • Viruses consist of
  • Capsid- protein coat surrounding a virus
  • Some viruses have an envelop that surrounds the
    capsid (Influenza)
  • Nucleic acids (either DNA or RNA)

32
Virus
  • Shapes
  • Helical- Tobacco Mosaic Virus (contains RNA)
  • Polyhedral- Herpes (contains DNA) , Chicken Pox
    (contains DNA), Polio (contains RNA)
  • Spherical (enveloped)- Influenza (contains RNA)
  • Bacteriophage- T4 (contains DNA)

Bacteriophage
Spherical
Helical
33
Virus
  • Viral Infections-
  • In order to infect a cell, a virus must be able
    to recognize it.
  • Viruses must bind the proteins on their capsid
    specifically to the proteins on their specific
    host.
  • Viruses then trick the cell to take in its
    genetic material.
  • Viruses will then make multiple copies of
    themselves inside the cell, ultimately destroying
    the cell.

34
Virus
  • Viral Infections can take place in two ways-
  • Lytic infection
  • Lysogenic infection

35
Virus
  • Lytic Infection
  • The virus infects a cell, it replicates, and the
    new viruses burst or lyse from the cell.

36
Virus
  • Lysogenic Infection
  • host cell is not immediately taken over
  • The virus infects a cell, the viral DNA
    integrates with host DNA where it may stay for a
    long period of time.
  • The viral DNA multiplies as the host cells
    multiply.
  • Eventually, it will become lytic, and the viruses
    will burst from the cell.

37
Viruses and Disease
  • Viruses cause disease by directly destroying
    living cells or by affecting cellular processes
    in ways that upset homeostasis. Diseases include
  • Common cold
  • Influenza
  • AIDS
  • Chicken pox
  • Hepatitis
  • Wes Nile Virus
  • HPV (Human papillomavirus)

38
Viruses and Disease
  • Ways to fight viruses-
  • Hygiene-
  • Washing hands, avoiding contact with sick
    individuals, coughing or sneezing into a tissue
    or your sleeve
  • Vaccinations
  • Exposure to inactive forms of the virus that
    prompt the body to produce immunity to a specific
    disease upon injection.
  • Vector control
  • West Nile Virus is carried by mosquitoes (the
    vector). Controlling the population mosquitoes
    could eliminate the spread of the virus.
  • Antiviral drug therapy
  • Attack virual enzymes that in turn slow down or
    stop the infection cycle of the virus.
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