Title: Bacteria
1Bacteria
- Prokaryotes are the most numerous organisms on
Earth
2Prokaryotes
- Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms that do
not have a membrane-bound nucleus - They live in every environment on Earth
- They are a major source of food for many
organisms - They also help many organisms digest food
3General Characteristics
- Unicellular
- Prokaryotic
- Nutrition modes mainly absorption, some
photosynthetic, some chemosynthetic - Anaerobic and aerobic species
- Reproduction fusion or budding
- microscopic
4Carl Woese
- Discovered in the late 1970s that prokaryotes
made up 2 of the 3 domains of life - Categorized based on ribosomal RNA analysis
52 Major Domains
- Archaea means archaic or ancient
- Bacteria
6Domain Archaea
- Not like bacteria, but more like Eukaryota
- Differ from bacteria in the make up of their cell
wall, membrane lipids, their genetics
metabolism - Cell walls do not have peptidoglycan (a
protein-carbohydrate compound) - Cell walls have different amino acids and
different types of lipids
7Truth about Archaea
- Archaea were first discovered in extreme
environments like swamps, salt lakes and hot
springs - Recently, scientists found Archaea genetic
materials in samples of surface water from the
North Pacific Antarctic Oceans - So, Archaea may be more common that once thought.
83 Broad Groups of Archael Bacteria
- Methanogens
- Halophiles
- Thermoacidophiles
91. Methanogens
- Named for their unique way of getting energy
- Convert H2 gas CO2 into methane gas (CH4)
- Live in anaerobic environments)-like swamp
bottoms (marsh gas), sewage, intestinal tracts of
humans, cows, termites - Oxygen is poisonous to them
A cow can belch 200 400 L Of Methane per day
10The methane that bubbles out at marshes are
called marsh gas
112. Halophiles
- Salt Lovers-live in high salt concentrations
like the Great Salt Lakes Dead Sea - High salt concentrations would kill most bacteria
but favor the growth of halophiles b/c they have
adapted to live in very salty water - Aerobic organisms
12 133. Thermoacidophiles
- Live in very acidic environments that have very
high temperatures (ph less than 2) with
temperatures (230 F) - Found in hot springs (Yellowstone National Park),
volcanic vents, hydrothermal vents of the ocean - Requires sulfur
- anaerobes
14- Hot Springs at Yellow Stone National Park
15Domain Bacteria
- Most well known prokaryotes
- General Characteristics
- 1. Largest group of bacteria
- 2. Occur in many shapes and sizes
- 3. Have distinct biochemical and genetic
characteristics
16Domain Bacteria
- Occur in different shapes and sizes
- Identified by basic shapes
- Sphere Coccus round
- Rods Bacillus Rod Shaped
- Spirals Spirillum
17Three Bacterial Cell Shapes
18Bacterial cells are also classified by their
arrangements
- Diplo Two
- Staphlyo Clusters
- Strepto Long Chain
Bacteria can occur in pairs diplo- bacilli or
cocci
Staphylococci cause staph infections
Streptococcus cause infections such as strep
throat
19Some well known Bacteria
Streptococcus mutans causes tooth decay by
converting sugars to an acid That erodes the tooth
Clostridium botulinum produces a poison causing
food poisoning
Treponema pallidum causes syphilis
20Gram Stain
- Used to group bacteria into 2 groups based on the
structure of their cell walls - 1. Gram-positive bacteria appears purple because
they retain the crystal violet stain - Are simpler and have more peptidoglycan
- The stain retains purple dye and appear purple
21Gram-negative bacteria
- 2. Gram-negative bacteria appears pink because
the cell becomes counterstained by the safranin
red stain - Gram negative bacteria have cell walls that are
complex and have small amounts of peptidoglycan - It takes up the the red dye of the Gram stain
making it look pink
22Peptidoglycan
Cell Wall
Peptidoglycan
Cell Wall
23Important Bacterial Groups5 major phyla
(actually 12 phyla exist)
- 1. Cyanobacteria
- 2. Spirochetes
- 3. Gram-Positive Bacteria
- 4. Proteobacteria
- 5. Chlamydia
24Important Bacterial Groups5 major phyla
(actually 12 phyla exist)
- 1. Phylum Cyanobacteria
- (blue green bacteria)
- Photosynthestic
- Encased in a jelly like substance-live in
colonies - Some are made of chains of cells with special
enlarged cells called heterocysts (fixes nitrogen
into ammonia which plants use)
25- Environmental note Anabaena loves phosphates and
nitrates-undergoes a population bloom
(eutrophication)-following the bloom many die and
become decomposed by heterotrophic bacteria which
consume large amounts of oxygen causing fish kills
26Important Bacterial Groups5 major phyla
(actually 12 phyla exist)
- 2. Phylum Spirochetes
- Gram negative, spiral-shaped bacteria
- Some are aerobic, some anaerobic
- Moves by means of a cork-screw like rotation
- Live freely, symbiotically, or as parasites
- Treponema pallidum causes syphilis
- Borrelia burgdorferi causes limes disease
27Important Bacterial Groups5 major phyla
(actually 12 phyla exist)
- 3. Phylum Gram Positive Bacteria
- Not all are gram positive
- Some gram negative in this group share molecular
similarities - Makes yogurt
- Found in oral cavity and human intestines
- Causes tooth decay
- Makes antibiotics (actinomycetes)
28- Members include
- streptococcal species, causes strep throat
- Clostridium botulinum makes toxins in botulism
(used medically to treat painful muscle spasms
and frown lines on the face) - Anthrax is caused by the rod Bacillus anthracis
which is used as a biological weapon
29Important Bacterial Groups5 major phyla
(actually 12 phyla exist)
- 4. Phylum Proteobacteria
- Largest most diverse bacteria
- Divided into several subdivisions
- A. Enteric Bacteria
- Gram negative, heterotrophic, found in animal
intestinal tracts, aerobic or anaerobic,
Escherichia coli (E.coli) found in human
intestines makes vitamin K, aids in the break
down of nutrients, Salmonella-disease causing
protobacteria
30- B. Chemoautotrophs
- Gram negative, extracts energy from minerals
- Lives symbiotically
- Rhizobium and Azotobacter-fix nitrogen in the
soil. Live in nodules inside the roots of legumes
which is important to the success of plants - Called Nitrogen Fixation
- C. Other Proteobacteria
- Some cause disease like Rocky Mountain Spotted
Fever - Helicobacter plyori causes stomach ulcers
- Agrobacterium causes tumors in plants
31Important Bacterial Groups5 major phyla
(actually 12 phyla exist)
- 5. Chlamydia
- Gram-negative-coccoid bacteria
- Live only inside animal cells (rely for
protection and nutrients) - The cell walls do not have peptidoglycan
- Chlamydia tramchomatis causes chlamydia---an STD
32The importance of bacteria
- Soybeans have nodules on their roots that convert
nitrogen gas to ammonia that is used by the plant
- Foods Medicines some foods would not exist
without bacteria
Swiss cheese
Crispy Pickles
vinegar
sauerkraut
Distinctive flavors
Nitrogen fixing bacteria
33Biology of Prokaryotes
34Structure Function
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36Nutrition Metabolism
Prokaryotes have many ways of getting carbon and
energy from the environment
Heterotroph
Photoheterotroph Uses light energy but gets its carbon from other organisms
Chemoheterotroph Obtains both energy and carbon from other organisms
Autotrophs
Photoautotroph Uses light energy and gets carbon from CO2
Chemoautotroph Extracts energy from inorganic compounds and uses CO2 as a carbon source
37Reproduction binary fission
- Prokaryotes reproduce asexually by binary fission
38ANTIBIOTICS
- Antibiotics affect bacteria with certain cellular
activities - Penicillin blocks the ability to build new cell
wall material - Tetracycline blocks protein synthesis
- Antibiotics are made naturally by some fungi
bacteria - They kill neighboring bacteria or fungi that
compete for resources
39Antibiotic Resistance
- A big worry for modern medicine
- Bacteria may become resistant to antibiotics by
- Mutations in bacterial DNA give bacterium
resistance - Mutant bacteria multiply take over the
population and stop the antibiotics curing power
40Viruses
- In 2003, some people in China started showing
symptoms of a new illness. These symptoms were
similar to those of pneumonia. The condition was
highly infectious. Soon, scientists found that
the disease was caused by a virus. They called
the disease severe acute respiratory syndrome, or
SARS
41What is a Virus?
- Youve probably had the fluinfluenzaat some
time during your life. - Nonliving particles called viruses cause
influenza.
- Viruses are composed of nucleic acids enclosed in
a protein coat and are smaller than the smallest
bacterium - Viruses are interesting to scientists because
they cause many diseases and are useful tools for
genetic research
42Did You Know
- Viruses are not alive because they lack some of
the key characteristics of living organisms - 1. They do not have cytoplasm or organelles
- 2. They cannot carry out cellular functions like
metabolism and homeostasis - 3. They do not grow as cells do by dividing into
two - 4. They cannot reproduce outside a host cell
- 5. They must enter a living cell and use the host
cells ribosomes, ATP, enzymes, and other
molecules to reproduce
43Virus Size and Structure
- Viruses are some of the smallest particles that
are able to cause disease - They vary in size and shape
44Viral Shapes
The arrangement of proteins give different shapes
to viruses
- Consist of an inner core of nucleic acid
surrounded by 1 or 2 protein coats or capsid - The human flu virus may have another layer called
a viral envelope surrounded by an outer-coat - Contains DNA RNA but never both
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46Shapes
Nucleic acid
- Viral coat is called capsids
- Polyhedral viruses (polio virus) resembles small
crystals - Tobacco mosaic viruses-small cylinders
- T-4 looks like a lunar landing module
Capsid
47Shapes
- Some viruses have a bilipid membrane called an
envelope that surrounds the capsid - The envelope is formed from the nuclear membrane
or the cell membrane of the host cell as the
viral capsid buds from the host cell
48Classification of Viruses
- By whether they have RNA or DNA as their gnome
and whether their gnome is double stranded or
linear or circular. - Based on the nature of the capsid and on the
presence or absence of an envelope - ex SARS is a coronavirus. Corona is the Latin
word for crown the envelope protein looks like
a crown
49How are they named?
- Viruses are not given names
- Often named after the disease they cause
- EXAMPLE RABIES VIRUS
50How are they named?
- Code Numbers are used to name several viruses
infecting the same host - Example T-1 ? T-7
- 7 viruses that infect the intestinal bacteria
E.coli (T stands for Type)
- Others are named for the organ or tissue they
infect - EXAMPLE ADENOVIRUSES adenoid tissue in the back
of the throat
51How are they named?
- Bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria T-4
52Attachment to a Host
- Before a virus can replicate, it must enter a
host cell - virus recognizes and attaches to a host cell when
one of its proteins interlocks with a molecular
shape that is the receptor site on the host
cells plasma membrane.
53Lytic Cycle To Break Down
- 1. Attachment
- 2. Entry once inside the virus destroys the host
DNA - 3. Replication it reprograms the cells metabolic
activity to copy the virus genes -
- 4. Assembly nucleic acid coats are assembled
into new viruses - 5. Release host cell breaks open new virus
particles are released
54A. Attachment
B. Entry
C. Replication
E. Lysis and Release
D. Assembly
55Lysogenic Cycle
- Begins like the Lytic Cycle
- Instead of destroying the host cell the DNA
becomes part of the host - New DNA does not interfere with normal functions
of the host cell
- 4. Every time the host cell reproduces, virus is
reproduced - 5. Can continue undetected for many years, but
can pop out at any time then the virus starts
killing the host cells.
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57Where are Viruses found?
- Viruses are found everywhere
- Some have been linked to cancers, animals, in
plants - Ex Tobacco mosaic virus
58Tobacco Mosaic Virus
- First plant virus to be identified
- There are more than 400 viruses that infect a
variety of plants - Virus can stunt the growth or yield a loss in the
host plants - Plant viruses require wounds, or insect bites to
enter and infect the host
59Tobacco Mosaic Virus
60Some Other Well known Viruses
61Small Pox
- 30 of infected die
- Vaccines not administered to public since 1970s
- No treatment, only preventative vaccine
- Used as a biological weapon
The last case of smallpox in the United States
was in 1949
62Hepatitis
- Is an inflammation of the liver
- Can be caused by 5 different viruses
- Hepatitis A E can be spread by fecal
contaminated food and water - Hepatitis B, C, D are spread by sexual contact,
by contact with infected blood an serum, and by
the use of contaminated needles - Symptoms fever, nausea, jaundice, and liver
failure
Caused by Hepatitis B
63Influenza A, B, C
- Influenza types A or B viruses cause epidemics of
disease almost every winter. - In the U.S. influenza epidemics can cause illness
in 10 to 20 of people average 36,000 deaths and
114,000 hospitalizations per year
64Influenza Pandemic of 1918
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vrbYwNOcKqqcfeature
channel
65AIDS Virus
- HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
- AIDS is a serious condition in which the body's
defenses against some illnesses are broken down.
66Herpes Virus
- The virus Herpes simplex causes the common
sexually transmitted disease genital herpes - There are two types of Herpes Simplex, and both
can cause genital herpes
Most babies are born through c-section
67HPV
- Genital Wartsone of the most common types of
sexually transmitted diseases - Virus that causes them called the human
papillomavirus - http//www.thesahara.net/verrucas_plantar_warts.ht
m -
68Bubonic Plague
- During the 1300s - a massive epidemic swept
through Europe, killing one-third of the
population by some estimates, and subsequently
changing the course of European history. - Referred to as The Black Death, Caused from being
bitten by a rodent flea that is infected with the
disease
69Polio Virus
- Phase 3 Muscle weakness and muscle paralysis,
difficult swallowing, nasal voice, difficulty
breathing
- It enters through the mouth is contagious.
- Phase 1 Fever, headache, sore throat, spewing,
malaise(general bodily weakness and discomfort). - Phase 2 Meningitis, fever, severe headaches,
stiff neck and back, muscle pain.
70SARS
- When first introduced into the United States,
SARS was thought to be a chemical weapon.
- Originated in Asia in 2003
- Stands for Acute Respiratory Syndrome and can be
contracted by close person to person contact.
71West Nile Virus
- Virus carried by mosquitoes causing EEE.
- The most serious outbreak causes inflammation of
the brain in humans and horses, as well as
mortality in certain domestic and wild birds
72Ebola Virus
- Ebola Virus, common name for several strains of
virus, three of which are known to cause
hemorrhagic fever in humans, which is
characterized by massive bleeding and destruction
of internal tissues.
73Chicken Pox
- Chicken pox is a rash illness caused by a virus.
- Chicken pox usually occurs in childhood. More
than 90 of Chicken pox cases occur in children
less than 12 years of age.
74Shingles
- Chicken pox and shingles are caused by the same
varicella-zoster herpesvirus - The virus multiplies in the lungs and travels to
blood vessels in the skin
The painful shingles rash, caused By a herpes
virus, is limited to an Area of the skin
innervated by a Particular nerve branch Ex on
the side of the chest
75Anthrax
Caused by the bacteria Bacilli
- Anthrax most commonly found in wild domestic
lower animals (cattle, sheep, goats, camels,
antelopes - They ingest spores from soil
- It can occur in humans when they are exposed to
infected animals - Or when anthrax spores are used as a
bio-terrorist weapon
76Yellow Fever
- Yellow fever is a serious viral infection,
transmitted by mosquitoes in tropical regions - There are no medicines that are effective against
this virus
77Emerging Viral Diseases
- Are illnesses caused by new or reappearing
infectious agents that typically exist in animal
populationoften in isolated habitatsand can
infect humans who interact with these animals. - Ex Ebola virus also called hemorrhagic fever