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I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into a nucleoid region.
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I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Jan 19, 2016

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Page 1: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• I. Characteristics of Bacteria• A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no

true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into a nucleoid region.

Page 2: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.
Page 3: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• B) They are unicellular.

• C) Most bacteria have a cell wall that helps maintain the cell shape. The cell wall also protects the bacterial cell and prevents it from bursting.

Page 4: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• D) Some bacteria contain a capsule. This is a gelatinous secretion which provides the cell with additional protection and helps the bacteria adhere to their host.

Page 5: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• E) Some bacteria contain a flagellum which is like a tail anchored to the cell wall. The

flagellum works like a propeller and moves the bacteria through a fluid environment.                                                    

Page 6: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Quick review

• What do bacteria have that keeps the cell from bursting?

• What helps some bacteria stick to their host?

Page 7: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Quick review

• What do bacteria have that keeps the cell from bursting?Cell Wall

• What helps some bacteria stick to their host?Capsule

Page 8: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• F) Reproduction:

• Binary Fission - asexual reproduction (no exchange of genetic material) in which the cell simply divides into two equal parts.

Page 9: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• *bacterial growth is exponential

• 2 to 4 to 8 to 16 to _____ to _____ to _____

Page 10: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• Conjugation – A way that genetic material is transferred from one bacteria to another through a tube.

Page 11: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• II. Response to Oxygen • A) Some bacteria need oxygen: Aerobes  • B) Some bacteria don’t: Anaerobes

• In fact, some anaerobes cannot survive in the presence of O2

Page 12: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Quick Review

• How do bacteria exchange DNA?

• Do bacteria reproduce sexually or asexually?

Page 13: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Quick Review

• How do bacteria exchange DNA?Through conjugation

• Do bacteria reproduce sexually or asexually?Asexually (Binary fission!)

Page 14: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• III. Bacteria Fall Into One of Two Kingdoms

• A) Archaebacteria - Members of this small kingdom live only in extreme places such as high salt environments and hot acidic water of sulfur springs

Page 15: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• B) Eubacteria - This is the larger group of “normal bacteria” , there are thousands of bacteria types in this group.

Page 16: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Quick review

In what kingdom are “normal” bacteria categorized?

Page 17: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Quick review

• In what kingdom are “normal” bacteria categorized?Eubacteria

Page 18: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• Eubacteria may be:– A) photosynthetic ex. cyanobacteria– B) chemosynthetic- make their own – food using chemicals … or– C) heterotrophic – can’t make their own food

• Ex. Parasitic bacteria

Page 19: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• A) Nitrogen Fixation - convert N2 gas into Ammonia

• B) Recycling of Nutrients (decomposition) - breakdown dead organic matter and return nutrients to the soil

Page 20: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

• The nodules on soybean roots contain Rhizobium bacteria that convert nitrogen gas into ammonia.

• Symbiosis: plant gains useable source of nitrogen/ bacteria use sugars supplied by the plant

Page 23: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Disease Causing Agents • A. It is estimated that half of all human disease is

caused by bacteria • B. Examples of bacterial disease:• -tuberculosis• -strep throat• - syphilis• -tetanus

Page 24: I. Characteristics of Bacteria A) Bacteria are Prokaryotes - they have no true nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Instead, DNA is concentrated into.

Bacteria: A Review

• Let’s Review what we’ve learned• Video• While watching the video write down

– Three ways in which bacteria are beneficial– Three ways in which bacteria can be harmful