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16.1 Prokaryotic life began on a young earth

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Title: 16.1 Prokaryotic life began on a young earth


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16.1 Prokaryotic life began on a young earth
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I. The Oldest Fossils
  • A. Stromatolites- are thin layers of rock that
    contain ancient fossils
  • B.Prokaryotes are simple organisms that lack true
    nuclei and many of the organelles found in
    eukaryotes

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II. How Did Life Begin?
  • A. The early Earth was able to produce organic
    molecules that are essential to life and this was
    duplicated by Stanley Miller
  • B. Millers experiment was able to produce simple
    molecules but experiments show that even more
    complex molecules could be created by duplicating
    the early Earth

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Miller-Urey
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II. How Did Life Begin?
  • C. RNA is thought to be the molecule that started
    to store genetic information and direct protein
    synthesis
  • D. Experiments have shown that polypeptides can
    come together and form microscopic, fluid-filled
    spheres
  • E. All of the experiments support a hypothetical
    four-stage sequence for how life could have
    developed

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RNA
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III. Where Did Life Begin?
  • A. It used to be thought that life began in
    shallow water
  • B. Deep Sea vents are populated with prokaryotes
    that resemble some of the earliest cells

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Concept 16.2 Diverse prokaryotes populate the
biosphere
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I. Diversity of Prokaryotes
  • A. Most bacteria do not cause disease and many
    can be helpful to humans or other organisms
  • B. Prokaryotes help cycle nutrients between
    organisms, the soil and the atmosphere
  • C. The are two Types of Prokaryotes
  • 1. Archaea- which means ancient live in some
    of the most extreme environments on Earth
  • 2. Bacteria- differ from archaea in their
    nucleic acids, enzymes and cell wall

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II. Structure and Function of Bacteria
  • A. Cell Shape
  • 1. Cocci- Spheres
  • 2. Bacilli- Rods
  • 3. Spirochetes- Spirals
  • B. Cell Wall Structure- Gram
  • positive (purple) or Gram negative
    (red)
  • C. Motility- About half are motile

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III. Reproduction
  • A. Rapid Reproduction-Some bacteria can divide
    every 20 minutes
  • B. Genetic Reproduction
  • 1. Transformation- Bacteria take up DNA from
    the environment and incorporate it
  • 2. Conjugation- Two bacterial cells join
    together and transfer genetic material
  • 3. Binary fission- makes a duplicate copy
  • C. Endospore Formation- Some bacteria form spores
    when environmental conditions become severe

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Binary Fission
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Nutrition
  • D. Modes of Nutrition
  • 1. Photo- gets energy from
  • photosynthesis
  • 2. Chemo- gets energy from chemical
  • sources
  • 3. Autotrophs- obtain carbon atoms
  • from CO2
  • 4. Heterotrophs- obtain carbon from
  • existing organic molecules

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IV. Cyanobacteria and the Oxygen Revolution
  • A. Earths early atmosphere very little or no
    free oxygen
  • B. Cyanobacteria release oxygen as a byproduct of
    photosynthesis
  • C. Nearly all eukaryotes are aerobic and owe
    their evolution to cyanobacteria

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Concept 16.3 Prokaryotes perform essential
functions in the biosphere
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I. Chemical Recycling
  • A.Many prokaryotes perform an essential function
    by breaking down organic waste products and dead
    organisms in the environment
  • B.Carbon is returned into the atmosphere as
    carbon dioxide, nitrogen is taken from the
    atmosphere and fixed in nitrogen compounds in
    soil and water

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II. Human uses of Prokaryotes
  • A. Humans use bacteria to remove pollutants from
    water, air and soil in a process called
    bioremediation
  • B. Pseudomonas bacteria has been shown to be able
    to help clean up oil spills
  • C. Bacteria are also used to clean up arsenic,
    copper, zinc, lead and mercury. They can also be
    used to make vitamins and antibiotics
  • D. Genetic engineering is finding more and more
    uses for bacteria

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Concept 16.4 Some prokaryotes cause disease
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I. How Bacteria Cause Illness
  • A. Bacteria and other microorganisms that cause
    disease are called pathogens
  • B. Most pathogenic bacteria cause disease by
    producing one of two types of bacterial poisons.
    One type is secreted by the bacterium and the
    other is a component of the bacterias cell wall

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II. Defense Against Bacterial Diseases
  • A. The major reason for the decline in bacterial
    diseases is better hygiene and public health
    measures
  • B. The human body has built in defenses against
    disease
  • C. The other way to defend against bacterial
    diseases is through the use of antibiotics

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Concept 16.5 Viruses Infect Cells by Inserting
Genes
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I. Virus Structure and Reproduction
  • A virus is composed of a short piece of DNA
  • or RNA surrounded by a protein coat
  • B. There are two ways that viruses reproduce
  • 1. Lytic Cycle- the virus attaches itself
    to
  • the host and injects its DNA
  • 2. Lysogenic Cycle- the virus injects its
  • DNA into the host and it is
    incorporated
  • into the host cells DNA

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II. Viruses and Disease
  • A. A virus that causes disease must use the host
    cell to reproduce
  • B. Antibiotics do not work on viral illness so
    the bodys immune system must destroy the virus

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III. HIV A Retrovirus
  • A. AIDS is the disease which is caused by the HIV
    virus
  • B. HIV is a retrovirus which means their genetic
    information is carried in RNA
  • C. The RNA is transcribed into DNA with the help
    of the enzyme reverse transcriptase

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IV. Defense Against Viral Disease
  • A. Vaccines are deactivated varieties or small
    pieces of pathogen that stimulate the immune
    system to respond to a particular pathogen
  • B. The first vaccine was for smallpox it was
    invented in the 1700s by Edward Jenner
  • C. Some viruses mutate rapidly and are not
    recognized by the body, such as the flu and HIV
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