Title: Ch. 27: Bacteria and Archaea
1Ch. 27 Bacteria and Archaea
- Modern/regular/eubacteria
- and the ancient methanogens
- Prokaryote ? cells with cell membranes,
cytoplasm/cytosol, DNA in the form of one
circular chromosome and many plasmids, and 70s
ribosomes. - Shapes are cocci, bacilli, spirillum
- May have cell wall, flagella, cilia and other
structures
2Adaptations
- Adaptations to extremes of climate from freezing
to boiling to acidic and salty. (species specific
ranges) - Salt tolerant up to 32
- Hot springs - thermophiles
- Near frozen waters at arctic
- Acid conditions 0.03 pH !! acidophiles
- 3 million Rads of radiation
3Fig. 27-1
4Structure and functions contribute to success
- Unicellular but may aggregate into colonies
- Cell walls Gram positive and gram negative based
on peptidoglycans and lipids - Capsules waxy layer that helps avoid antibiotics
- Fimbriae (like velcro) and pili (trade plasmids)
- Motility cilia and flagella and taxis roughly
50 are capable of movement at relatively fast
speeds - Plasmids
5Fig. 27-3
Carbohydrate portion of lipopolysaccharide
Outer membrane
Peptidoglycan layer
Cell wall
Cell wall
Peptidoglycan layer
Plasma membrane
Plasma membrane
Protein
Protein
Gram- positive bacteria
Gram- negative bacteria
20 µm
(a) Gram-positive peptidoglycan traps
crystal violet.
(b) Gram-negative crystal violet is easily
rinsed away, revealing red dye.
6Internal and Genomic Organization
- Not usually any internal, membrane-bound
structures - May have specialization built into PLASMA
MEMBRANE - 70s ribosomes smaller than eukaryotic, solid
(erythromycin and tetracycline) - Nucleoid region
- One, circular chromosome, hundreds of genes,
fills central portion, - Many plasmids copies of frequently or currently
used genes
7Adaptations of reproduction
- Binary fission one cell divides into 2 those
into 4 those into 8, etc. - Can occur every hour at optimal conditions, some
species every 20 minutes, typical is 24 hours - 1 bacteria could create a colony outweighing
Earth in 3 days. Obvious checks and balances
here. - Nutrient supply
- Toxins/ poison selves
- Competition
- Space - pressure
8Bacterial Populations
- They are very small organisms 0.5
5 mm ( eukaryotic are 10-100 mm) - They reproduce by binary fission
- They have very short generation times
- ENDOSPORES can survive harsh conditions and
survive for centuries - MSU study looked at 20,000 generations in 8 years
evidence of evolution - Simpler but not inferior or primative
- On Earth for over 3.5 billion years now
9Diversity
- Three events lead to diversity
- Rapid reproduction
- Most variety in sexually reproducing species is
from arrangement/ shuffling of alleles during
meiosis - Insertions, deletions, base pair substitutions
- Mutations still very RARE, but sheer numbers of
organisms and time per generation means more are
expressed - Mutation
- More variety in ribosomal RNA between 2 strains
of E.coli than between human and platypus - Genetic recombination
- Next page
-
10Genetic Recombination
- Transformation
- Bacteria are able to absorb genetic information
from their surroundings - Transduction
- Bacterial genes are also spread between bacteria
populations by viruses known as bacteriophages - Conjugation
- Pili bridge bacteria and they trade plasmids
- F factor and R factor
11Fig. 27-11-4
Phage DNA
A
B
A
B
Donor cell
A
Recombination
A
A
B
Recipient cell
A
B
Recombinant cell
12Fig. 27-13
F plasmid
Bacterial chromosome
F cell
F cell
Mating bridge
F cell
F cell
Bacterial chromosome
(a) Conjugation and transfer of an F plasmid
Recombinant F bacterium
A
Hfr cell
A
A
A
F factor
A
A
A
A
A
A
F cell
(b) Conjugation and transfer of part of an Hfr
bacterial chromosome
13Metabolic adaptations (table 27.1)
14Metabolism
- Oxygen Metabolism
- Obligate aerobes
- Obligate anaerobes
- Facultative anaerobes
- Nitrogen Metabolism
- N is essential for amino acids
- Atmospheric N isnt highly useable
- Microbes fix nitrogen into nitrate, nitrites
and ammonium ions that are useable - Metabolic Cooperation
- Colonies of cells that fix nitrogen and produce
oxygen so that neighboring area is hospitable - Ocean floor and dental plaque ?
15Molecular Systematics
- Previously bacterial classification (systematics)
used motility, shape, nutrition and gram staining - Molecular systematics has drastically changed the
classification - Much more diverse than assumed
- 6000 species/strains ID and named
- A soil sample could contain over 10,000 species
- Horizontal transfers of genes blur root for
this region of the tree of life - Two main branches are Archaea and Bacteria
16Groups of Bacteria
Eukarya
Archaea
Bacteria
17Fig. 27-18a
Subgroup Alpha Proteobacteria
Alpha
Beta
Gamma
Proteobacteria
Delta
2.5 µm
Epsilon
Rhizobium (arrows) inside a root cell of a legume
(TEM)
Subgroup Beta Proteobacteria
Subgroup Gamma Proteobacteria
1 µm
0.5 µm
Thiomargarita namibiensis containing sulfur
wastes (LM)
Nitrosomonas (colorized TEM)
Subgroup Delta Proteobacteria
Subgroup Epsilon Proteobacteria
B. bacteriophorus
5 µm
10 µm
2 µm
Fruiting bodies of Chondromyces crocatus,
a myxobacterium (SEM)
Helicobacter pylori (colorized TEM)
Bdellovibrio bacteriophorus attacking a larger
bacterium (colorized TEM)
18Fig. 27-18i
CHLAMYDIAS
SPIROCHETES
2.5 µm
5 µm
Chlamydia (arrows) inside an animal cell
(colorized TEM)
Leptospira, a spirochete (colorized TEM)
GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA
CYANOBACTERIA
1 µm
50 µm
5 µm
Hundreds of mycoplasmas covering a human
fibroblast cell (colorized SEM)
Streptomyces, the source of many antibiotics
(colorized SEM)
Two species of Oscillatoria, filamentous
cyanobacteria (LM)
19Positive Roles of Bacteria
- Decomposers
- Symbioses
- Mutualism
- Commensalism normal flora
- (parasitism not positive)
- Chemical recycling
- Nitrogen
- Oxygen
- Carbon
- Research and Technology
- Food (cheese) and beverages
- Waste water treatment
- Genetic engineering
20Negative Impacts of Bacteria
- Parasitic bacteria that cause disease are called
PATHOGENS - Opportunistic
- Exotoxins and endotoxins