Title: Prokaryotes and Viruses
1Prokaryotes and Viruses
216.1 Prokaryotic life began on a young Earth
- Stromatolites Ancient fossils found in
dome-shaped rocks - Used as evidence bacteria were present 3.5
billion years ago.
3How did life begin?
- Origin of small molecules
- 1953 Stanley Miller, simulated conditions on
early Earth - Formation of Organic Polymers
- How did polymers form?
- Heat and clay help bind organic monomers together
- Lightening was energy source
4Formation Cont.
- What was the original process of inheritance?
- RNA, short strands could replicate without the
use of enzymes - Formation of Pre-Cells
- Early organic materials and RNA became encased in
membranes
5Supports 4 stage process
- First, small organic molecules, such as amino
acids and nucleotides - Second, these small molecules joined together
into larger ones such as proteins and nucleic
acids. - Third, molecules that could copy themselves
provided a basis for the inheritance of molecular
information. - In the last stage, these various organic
molecules became packaged within membranes and
separated from their surroundings. In other
words, they formed pre-cells.
6Where did life begin?
- Shallow waters and moist sediments such as clay
- Deep-sea thermal vents
716.2 Diverse prokaryotes populate the biosphere
Diversity of Prokaryotic Life -found EVERYWHERE
8Archaea
- ancient bacteria
- Extremophiles
- Consists of three types
- Thermophiles heat lovers
- Halophiles salt lovers
- Methogens live anaerobic environment, produce
methane gas - DNA evidence indicates closer relationship to
eukaryotes than bacteria
9Differences between Archaea and Bacteria
- Differences in RNA and DNA information
- Enzymes that catalyze RNA are different
- Bacteria lack introns
- Antibiotics effective only to Bacteria
- Archea cell walls lack petidoglycan
10Structure and Function of Bacteria
- Bacteria is identified and distinguished based
partly on three characteristics. - Cell Shape
- cocci (round)
- bacilli(rod)
- spiral(spirochetes)
11Structure and Function of Bacteria
- Cell Wall Structure
- Two types of cell walls
- Determined by a Gram stain
- Gram positive bacterium (purple)
- Gram negative bacterium (pink)
12Structure and Function of Bacteria
- Motility
- Flagella
- Pili
- Slimy threads
13Asexual Reproduction
- Binary fission
- Rapid reproduction
- Cloning of the parent
- Can have mutations, antibiotic resistance
14Sexual Reproduction
- Transformation bacterium takes up free DNA from
the environment - Conjugation two bacterial cells temporarily
join and directly transfer genetic material
between them - Transduction virus phage inserts genetic
material - Endospore Formation dormant bacteria with
highly resistant outer wall
15Genetic Variation
16Modes of Nutrition
17Cyanobacteria and Oxygen
- Believe to be the first photoautotrophs.
- Helped bring oxygen in the atmosphere
- Revolutionized the evolution of aerobic organisms
and cellular respiration.
1816.3 Prokaryotes perform essential functions in
the biosphere
- Chemical recycling help in breaking down or
decomposing, organic waste products and dead
organisms - e.g. carbon locked in organic compounds returned
to atmosphere as CO2 - Used in nitrogen gas conversion through legumes
19Nitrogen Cycle
20Human uses of bacteria
- Use of organisms to remove pollutants from water,
air and soil bioremediation - Used in sewage treatment, oil clean up, mining
clean up, genetic exploration
PCB clean up
2116.4 Some Prokaryotes cause disease
- Pathogen bacteria or other microorganism that
cause a disease. - Bacteria can invade the cell and destroy it
- Develop toxins
- Secrete toxins from the bacterial cell Exotoxins
- can destroy the cell or interfere with cell
function - Cause digestive problems or paralysis
- Toxin is a component of the bacterial cell wall
Endotoxins - Causes the body to respond (immune system) with
fever, aches, weakness, or can lead to shock.
22Diseases and Methods of Transmission
- Inhalation
- Anthrax
- Tuberculosis
- Sexual
- Syphilis
- Gonorrhea
- Bites
- Lyme disease
- Improperly stored or prepared foods
- Botulism
- salmonella
23Bacterial Diseases
- Tuberculosis
- Invades tissues and destroys cell
- Engulfs white blood cells
24Bacterial Diseases caused by poisons
- Closstridium botulinum botulism
- 1 gram of pure toxin could kill 1 million people
- Staphylococcus aureus Staph infection
- Secretes a poison by the bacterial cells
- Proteins secreted cause the illness
25Diseases caused by bacteria
- Salmonella
- Is a component of the cell wall that causes the
illness - Can also cause typhoid fever
26Defense against bacteria
- Hygiene wash your hands, stay clean
- Clean drinking water
- Dont get run down, weakens the immune system
- Antibiotics, resistance to antibiotics
2716.5 Viruses infect cells by inserting genes
- Virus is not a cell, cannot reproduce on its own.
- Structure of a virus
- Protein coat
- Genetic material, either RNA or DNA
28Virus reproduction
- Two reproductive cycles
- Lytic cycle
- 1. Host cell produce virus parts
- 2. Virus parts assemble
- 3. Host cell bursts, releasing hundreds of
complete, functioning viruses - Lysogenic cycle
- 1. Viral DNA combines with host DNA
- 2. Host cell replicates as normal
- 3. Then converts to lytic cycle
29Viral reproduction
30Viruses and Disease
- Viruses have an outer envelop that help the virus
enter and leave a cell - Contain RNA as genetic material
- Common cold, flu, measles, mumps, polio, AIDS
- Contain DNA as genetic material
- Hepatitis, herpes infections
- Antibiotic do not work against viruses
31HIV A retrovirus
- Retrovirus uses RNA as genetic material versus
DNA
32Defense against Viruses
- Vaccines dead or disabled pieces of virus that
fool immune system, form future resistance - First vaccine Edward Jenner, small pox vaccine
- Some may not work as the virus mutate too quickly
for a vaccine to work (HIV)