Top Banner
Lab 17 on Thursday
48

Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Dec 25, 2015

Download

Documents

Mervin Crawford
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Lab 17 on Thursday

Page 2: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotes and Viruses

Chapter 25

Page 3: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Learning Objectives

• Describe prions and the diseases they cause• Describe general characteristics of Prokaryotes• Compare and contrast bacteria, archeae and

eukarya• Compare and contrast gram positive and gram

negative bacteria• Describe gram + and gram- bacteria • Describe the three main bacterial shapes

Page 4: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Why It Matters

• Prokaryotes: The smallest organisms

Page 5: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prions

• Infectious proteins with no associated nucleic acids

• Misfolded versions of normal cellular proteins that can induce other normal proteins to misfold

Page 6: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prion Diseases

Degenerate nervous system in mammals– Scrapie: Brain disease in sheep– Mad cow disease (Bovine spongiform

encephalopathy): Spongy holes and protein deposits in brain tissue

– Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: Rapid mental deterioration, loss of vision and speech, paralysis

– Kuru-cannibalistic tribe in New Guinea,

Page 7: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Brain Tissue Damaged by BSE

Page 8: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

25.1 Prokaryotic Structure and Function

• Prokaryotes are simple in structure compared with eukaryotic cells

• Prokaryotes have the greatest metabolic diversity of all living organisms

• Prokaryotes differ in whether oxygen can be used in their metabolism

Page 9: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

25.1 (cont.)

• Prokaryotes fix and metabolize nitrogen

• Prokaryotes reproduce asexually or, rarely, by a form of sexual reproduction

• In nature, bacteria may live in communities attached to a surface

Page 10: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotes

• Colonize a great diversity of habitats

• Are small but complex cells

• Have great metabolic diversity

• Adapt rapidly to their environments

Page 11: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Three Common Shapes in Prokaryotes

• Spherical: cocci• Rodlike: bacilli• Spiral: vibrios (curved) and spirilla (helix)

Page 12: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.
Page 13: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotic Genomes

• Prokaryotic chromosome– Single, circular DNA molecule– Packaged into nucleoid

• No nucleolus• No nuclear membranes

• Plasmids– Small circles of DNA– Genes supplement nucleoid genes– Replicate independently (along with main DNA)

Page 14: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Fig. 25-3, p. 528

Cell wall

Capsule

Outermembrane

Cytoplasmcontainingribosomes

Folded DNAmolecule(in the nucleoid)

Peptido-glycan layer

Plasmamembrane

Plasmid Pili

Flagellum

Page 15: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotic Ribosomes

• Bacterial ribosomes– Smaller than eukaryotic ribosomes– Protein synthesis similar to eukaryotes

• Archaeal ribosomes– Size similar to bacteria– Different structure– Protein synthesis is combination of bacterial

and eukaryotic processes

Page 16: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotic Cell Wall

• Protects plasma membrane– Helps withstand osmotic pressure– Prevents action of detergent-like chemicals

• Made of peptidoglycans– Polysaccharide polymers connected by short

polypeptides

Page 17: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Gram Stain

• Gram stain technique– Stain with crystal violet, then with iodine

• Fixes dye to cell wall

– Wash with alcohol– Stain again with fuchsin or safranin

• Gram-positive bacteria– Appear purple because crystal violet retained

• Gram-negative bacteria– Appear pink because crystal violet lost

Page 18: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Gram-Positive Bacteria

• Single, relatively thick peptidoglycan layer

Page 19: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Fig. 25-4, p. 529

Peptidoglycan layer

a. Gram-positive bacterial cell wallCapsulemay bepresent

Cellwall

Cytoplasm

Plasma membrane

Page 20: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Gram-Negative Bacteria

• Two-layered walls; relatively thin peptidoglycan sheath surrounded by outer membrane

Page 21: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Fig. 25-4, p. 529

Peptidoglycan layer

b. Gram-negative bacterial cell wall

Cell wall

Cytoplasm

Plasma membrane

Capsule

Outer membrane

Page 22: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Slime Coat

• Capsule– Slime attached to cells

• Slime layer– Loosely associated with cells

• Protects bacteria from desiccation, antibiotics, viruses, antibodies, and enzymes

• Helps bacteria adhere to surfaces

Page 23: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Pili

• Rigid protein shafts extend from cell walls

• Mostly in Gram-negative bacteria

• Help bacteria attach to each other or to surfaces

Page 24: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Obtaining Carbon and Energy (1)

• Autotrophs (auto = self; troph = nourishment) – Use carbon dioxide as their carbon source

• Heterotrophs – Obtain carbon from organic molecules

Page 25: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Obtaining Carbon and Energy (2)

• Chemoautotrophs – Obtain energy by oxidizing inorganic or

organic substances

• Phototrophs – Use light as energy source

Page 26: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Fig. 25-8, p. 531

CO

2

PHOTOHETEROTROPH

Found in somephotosyntheticbacteria

Found in some photo-synthetic bacteria, insome protists, andin plants

PHOTOAUTOTROPH

Light

Include some bacteriaand archaeans, andalso in protists, fungi,animals, and plants

Found in some bacteriaand archaeans; notfound in eukaryotes

CHEMOHETEROTROPH

CHEMOAUTOTROPH

Oxidation of molecules

Energy source

Org

anic

mo

lecu

les

Car

bo

n s

ou

rce

* Inorganic molecules for chemoautotrophsand organic molecules for chemoheterotrophs.

Page 27: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotes and Oxygen: Aerobes

• Aerobes– Require oxygen for cellular respiration– Oxygen is the final electron acceptor

• Obligate aerobes – Cannot grow without oxygen

Page 28: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotes and Oxygen: Anaerobes

• Anaerobes– Do not require oxygen to live

• Obligate anaerobes (poisoned by oxygen)– Use fermentation or type of respiration in which

inorganic molecules (NO3– or SO4

2–) are final electron acceptors

• Facultative anaerobes – Use O2 when present– Use fermentation under anaerobic conditions

Page 29: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotes and Nitrogen (1)

• Nitrogen fixation

– Conversion of atmospheric nitrogen (N3) to ammonia (NH3)

– Ammonia ionized to ammonium (NH4+) for biosynthesis

• Nitrogen-fixing bacteria include

– Some cyanobacteria

– Free-living Azotobacter

– Bacteria such as Rhizobium that are symbiotic with plants

Page 30: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryotes and Nitrogen (2)

• Nitrification– Conversion of ammonium (NH4

+) to nitrate (NO3

–)– Two-step conversion by nitrifying bacteria

• Some types of bacteria convert ammonia to nitrite (NO2

–)• Other types convert nitrite to nitrate

Page 31: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Prokaryote Reproduction

• Binary fission– Asexual reproduction– Produces exact copies of parent

• Conjugation– Two cells connected by pilus– Part of DNA of one cell is transferred to

another cell (usually plasmids)

Page 32: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Endospore

• Develops inside some bacteria when environmental conditions are unfavorable

• Metabolically inactive

• Highly resistant to heat, desiccation, attack by enzymes or chemicals

Page 33: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Endospore: Clostridium tetani

Page 34: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

25.2 Domain Bacteria

• Molecular studies reveal more than a dozen evolutionary branches in the Bacteria

• Bacteria cause diseases by several mechanisms

• Pathogenic bacteria commonly develop resistance to antibiotics

Page 35: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Classification of Prokaryotes

Page 36: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Bacteria

• 12 separate evolutionary branches

• Six most important groups:– Proteobacteria– Green bacteria– Cyanobacteria– Gram-positive– Spirochetes– Chlamydias

Page 37: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Proteobacteria (1)

• Gram-negative bacteria– Purple sulfur (photoautotrophic)– Purple nonsulfur (photoheterotrophic)– Purple photosynthetic pigment

• Free-living proteobacteria (chemoheterotrophs)– Some cause human diseases

• Bubonic plague, Legionnaire’s disease, gonorrhea, gastroenteritis, dysentery

– Some plant pathogens• Rot, scabs, wilts

Page 38: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Cyanobacteria

• Gram-negative photoautotrophs

• Blue-green color

• Photosynthesis similar to plants

• Release oxygen as byproduct of photosynthesis

Page 39: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Fig. 25-13, p. 535

Heterocystc.

b.

Resting spore

Page 40: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Gram-Positive Bacteria (1)

• Primarily chemoheterotrophs• Many pathogenic species

– Anthrax– Staphylococcus

• Food poisoning, skin infections, toxic shock syndrome, pneumonia, meningitis

– Streptococcus• Strep throat,

pneumonia, scarlet fever, kidney infections

Page 41: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Gram-Positive Bacteria (2)

• Some beneficial species– Lactobacillus

• Lactic acid fermentation used to produce pickles, sauerkraut, yogurt

• Mycoplasmas– Naked cells that have lost their cell walls– Smallest known cells (0.1 to 0.2 µm in diameter)

Page 42: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Spirochetes

• Gram-negative spiral-shaped bacteria– Propelled by rotation of flagella– Enables movement in thick mud and sewage

• Beneficial or harmless species– Spirochetes in termite intestine digest plant fiber– Treponema in mouth

• Pathogenic species– Syphilis, relapsing fever, Lyme disease

Page 43: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Chlamydias

• Gram-negative bacteria– Cell walls with membrane outside– Lack peptidoglycans

• Intercellular parasites that cause diseases in animals

Page 44: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Bacterial Disease Mechanisms

• Exotoxins

– Toxic proteins leaked or secreted

• Clostridium botulinum (botulism exotoxin)

• Endotoxins

– Toxins only released when bacteria die or lyse

• E. coli, Salmonella, Shigella

• Exoenzymes

– Enzymes secreted that digest plasma membrane

• Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Clostridium

Page 45: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Resistance to Antibiotics

• Pathogenic bacteria may develop resistance to antibiotics– Mutation of their own genes– Acquiring resistance genes from other bacteria

• Resistant strains difficult to treat with conventional antibiotics

• Resistance is a form of evolutionary adaptation

Page 46: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

25.3 Domain Archaea

• Archaea have some unique characteristics

• Molecular studies reveal three evolutionary branches in the Archaea

Page 47: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

The Archaea

• Archaea are more closely related to domain Eukarya than domain Bacteria

• Characteristics– Some features like bacteria– Some features like eukaryotes– Some unique features

Page 48: Lab 17 on Thursday. Prokaryotes and Viruses Chapter 25.

Characteristics of Bacteria, Archaea,

and Eukarya