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Summaries – 1 BI-311
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Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Summaries – 1BI-311

Page 2: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Ferdinand Cohn • Founded the field of bacteriology

• Recognized distinction between

prokaryotic and eukaryotic

cellular organization

• Discovered bacterial endospores

The Historical Roots of Microbiology: The Science

Page 3: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

The Historical Roots of Microbiology:

Louis Pasteur • Discredited the theory of Spontaneous Generation.• Introduced control of microbial growth. • Discovered lactic acid bacteria• Role of yeast in alcohol fermentation • Rabies vaccine

Page 4: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

The Historical Roots of Microbiology:

Robert Koch • Growth of pure cultures of microorganisms• Solid growth media• Discovered cause of tuberculosis. • Developed criteria for the study of infectious microorganisms• Kochst Postulates.

Page 5: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Koch’s Postulates

• OBSERVE: The presence of suspected pathogenic microorganism correlates positively with the symptoms of the diseased and negative with healthy control

• ISOLATE the suspected pathogen into axenic culture

• INFECT a healthy animal with cultured strain. Observe whether the same symptoms show

• RE-ISOLATE the pathogen from the new victim and compare both cultures

Page 6: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

The Historical Roots of Microbiology: General Microbiology - Microbial Ecology and Diversity

Martinus Beijerinck • Enrichment Culture Technique • Concept of Virus

Sergey Winogradsky • Concept of Chemolithotrophy and

Autotrophy

Page 7: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Monera

Protoctista

fungi

Anim

als pla

nts

EUKARYOTES

PROKARYOTES

12

3

4

5

Five Kingdoms

“Crown species”

Page 8: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

5

4

1

2

3

Page 9: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Incident light microscopy (dissecting)• Transmitted light microscopy (compound)• Phase contrast• Dark field• Differential Interference Contrast (DIC)• Fluorescence microscopy• Confocal Scanning Light Microcopy (CSLM), • Transmission electron microscopy (TEM)• Scanning electron microscopy (SEM)• The atomic force microscope

Page 10: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Differential Interference Contrast (DIC) and Confocal Scanning Light Microcopy (CSLM) allow for greater three-dimensional imaging than other forms of light microscopy, • Confocal microscopy allows imaging through thick specimens. • The atomic force microscope yields a detailed three-dimensional image of live preparations.

Page 11: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Electron microscopes use electron beams instead of light. They have far greater resolving power than do light microscopes, the limits of resolution being about 0.2 nm. Two major types of electron microscopy are performed:

Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), for observing internal cell structure down to the molecular level, and

Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), useful for three-dimensional imaging and for examining surfaces.

Page 12: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Scanning Electron Microscopy – SEMGlutaraldehyde-fixed, critical point-dried, gold-paladium coated

Page 13: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Eukaryotic cellFreeze-etched preparationCarbon-coated, Gold-shaded, TEM image

Page 14: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Macromolecules

• Organic chemistry = chemistry of carbon

• Biochemistry = chemistry of macromolecules

• Water = solvent & chemical bondingproperties: polarity, hidrophilic vs. hydrophobicH-bonds, glycosidic, esteric, etheric, peptide.

• Biogenic elements = C, O, H, N, S, P constructpolymers from monomers: polysaccharides, (phospho-)lipids, polypeptides, polynucleotides

Page 15: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

CARBOXYL

ALDEHYDE

ALCOHOL

KETO

ESTER

PHOSPHO-ESTER

THIOESTER

ETHER

ACID ANHYDRIDE

PHOSPHO ANHYDRIDE

Page 16: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• The cell walls of Bacteria contain a polysaccharide called peptidoglycan. • This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid, with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides. Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present, depending on the organism.

• Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or of protein. The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan, leading to cell lysis in Bacteria but not in Archaea

Page 17: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• In addition to peptidoglycan, gram-negative Bacteria contain an outer membrane consisting of lipopolysaccharide, protein, and lipoprotein.

• Proteins called porins allow for permeability across the outer membrane. •The space between the membranes is the periplasm, which contains various proteins involved in important cellular functions.

Page 18: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Prokaryotic cells often contain various surface structures. These include:

fimbriae pili S-layers capsules slime layers. These structures have several functions, but a key one is in attaching cells to a solid surface.

Page 19: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Prokaryotic cells often contain internal granules such as sulfur, PHB, polyphosphate, PHAs, and magnetosomes. These substances function as storage materials or in magnetotaxis.

Page 20: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Gas vesicles are small gas-filled structures made of protein that function to confer buoyancy on cells. Gas vesicles contain two different proteins arranged to form a gas permeable, but watertight structure: Gas Vesicle Proteins GVP-a and GVP-c.

Page 21: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

The endospore is a highly resistant differentiated bacterial cell produced by certain gram-positive Bacteria. • Endospore formation leads to a highly dehydrated structure that contains essential macromolecules and a variety of substances such as calcium dipicolinate and small acid-soluble proteins, absent from vegetative cells.

• Endospores can remain dormant indefinitely but germinate quickly when the appropriate trigger is applied.

Page 22: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Motility in most microorganisms is due to flagella. In prokaryotes the flagellum is a complex structure made of several proteins. • Most of these proteins are anchored in the cell wall and cytoplasmic membrane.

• The flagellum filament, which is made of a single kind of protein, rotates at the expense of the proton motive force, which drives the flagellar motor.

Page 23: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Prokaryotes that move by gliding motility do not employ rotating flagella, but instead creep along a solid surface by any of several possible mechanisms.

Page 24: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Motile bacteria can respond to chemical and physical gradients in their environment. • In the processes of chemotaxis and phototaxis, random movement of a prokaryotic cell can be biased either toward or away from a stimulus by controlling the degree to which runs or tumbles occur.

• The latter are controlled by the direction of rotation of the flagellum, which in turn is controlled by a network of sensory and response proteins.

Page 25: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Microbial Metabolism

• Biocatalysis & Energy Generation• Phosphorylation• Oxidation & Reduction• Fermentation & Respiration• Chemiosmosis: Proton Motive Force• ATPase Motor• Energy Yielding Metabolic Systems• Biosynthesis

Page 26: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

∆G0' versus ∆G

standard conditions pH 7, 25°C

Page 27: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• The chemical reactions of the cell are accompanied by changes in energy, measured in kilojoules (kJ).

• A chemical reaction can occur with the release of free energy (exergonic) or with the consumption of free energy (endergonic).

• 1 calorie = 4.186 Joules

Page 28: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Energy

G 0’f = free Energy of formation

for elements G 0’f = 0

ΔG 0’ = change in free Energy in reactions

ΔG 0’ of the reaction: A+B C+D equals

ΔG 0’ [C+D] - ΔG 0’ [A+B]products - reactants

if + , the reaction is ENDERGONICif - , the reaction is EXERGONIC

ΔG 0’ does not affect the rates of reaction

Page 29: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• The reactants in a chemical reaction must first be activated before the reaction can take place, and this requires a catalyst.

• Enzymes are catalytic proteins that speed up the rate of biochemical reactions.

• Enzymes are highly specific in the reactions they catalyze, and this specificity resides in the three-dimensional structure of the polypeptide(s) in the protein.

Page 30: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Enzyme Biocatalysis

• Specific substrate binding

• Substrate orientation o active sites

• Lowering the activation energy

Page 31: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• The energy released in redox reactions is conserved in the formation of certain compounds that contain energy-rich phosphate or sulfur bonds. The most common of these compounds is ATP, the prime energy carrier in the cell.

• Long-term storage of energy is linked to the formation of polymers, which can be consumed to yield ATP.

Page 32: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Microbial Metabolism

• Biocatalysis & Energy Generation• Phosphorylation• Oxidation & Reduction• Fermentation & Respiration• Chemiosmosis: Proton Motive Force• ATPase Motor• Energy Yielding Metabolic Systems• Biosynthesis

Page 33: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Oxidation–reduction reactions involve the transfer of electrons from electron donor to electron acceptor. The tendency of a compound to accept or release electrons is expressed quantitatively by its reduction potential, E0’.

Page 34: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• The transfer of electrons from donor to acceptor in a cell typically involves one or more electron carriers.

• Some electron carriers are membrane-bound, whereas others, such as NAD+/NADH, are freely diffusible, transferring electrons from one place to another in the cell.

Page 35: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• The energy released in redox reactions is conserved in the formation of certain compounds that contain energy-rich phosphate or sulfur bonds.

• The most common of these compounds is ATP, the prime energy carrier in the cell.

• Long-term storage of energy is linked to the formation of polymers, which can be consumed to yield ATP.

Page 36: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Fermentation and respiration are the two means by which chemo-organotrophs conserve energy from the oxidation of organic compounds.

• During these catabolic reactions, ATP synthesis occurs by way of either substrate-level phosphorylation (fermentation) or oxidative phosphorylation (respiration).

Page 37: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Glycolysis is a major pathway of fermentation and is a widespread means of anaerobic metabolism.

• The end result of glycolysis is the release of a small amount of energy that is conserved as ATP and the production of fermentation products.

• For each glucose consumed in glycolysis, 2 ATPs are produced.

Page 38: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Respiration involves the complete oxidation of an organic compound with much greater energy release than during fermentation. The citric acid cycle plays a major role in the respiration of organic compounds.

Page 39: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Respiration involves the complete oxidation of an organic compound with much greater energy release than during fermentation. The citric acid cycle plays a major role in the respiration of organic compounds.

Page 40: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• When electrons are transported through an electron transport chain, protons are extruded to the outside of the membrane forming the proton motive force.

• Key electron carriers include flavins, quinones, the cytochrome bc1 complex, and other cytochromes, depending on the organism.

• The cell uses the proton motive force to make ATP through the activity of ATPase.

Page 41: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Chemo – Energy from chemical reactions

• Organo – – trophic

of organic compounds feeding

• Hetero – Carbon from organic sources

Page 42: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

• Electron acceptors other than O2 can function as terminal electron acceptors for energy generation. Because O2 is absent under these conditions, the process is called anaerobic respiration.

• Chemolithotrophs use inorganic compounds as electron donors, while phototrophs use light to form a proton motive force.

• The proton motive force is involved in all forms of respiration and photosynthesis.

Page 43: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Energy from:

Chemical reactions or Light

Chemo- Photo- of:

inorganic or organic compounds

Litho- Organo-

Source of carbon :

CO2 or (CH2O)n

Auto- Hetero-

Page 44: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Amino acids are formed from carbon skeletons generated during catabolism while nucleotides are biosynthesized using carbon from several sources.

Page 45: Summaries – 1 BI-311. Ferdinand Cohn Founded the field of bacteriology Recognized distinction between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular organization.

Lipids

Fatty acids are synthesized two carbons at a time and then attached to glycerol to form lipids.