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Welcome to Microbiology. Bacteria. Learning Objectives: To be able to describe characteristics of bacteria and the functions of each structure. What can you remember?. ALL bacteria are prokaryotes. What does this mean? Without nucleus Compare prokaryotes and eukaryotes:.
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Bacteria Learning Objectives: To be able to describe characteristics of bacteria and the functions of each structure
What can you remember? • ALL bacteria are prokaryotes. What does this mean? • Without nucleus • Compare prokaryotes and eukaryotes: Small – less than 5 µm Large cells (>10 µm) Always unicellular Often multicellular No nucleus or any membrane bound organelles Always have a nucleus and other membrane bound organelles DNA is circular, without proteins DNA is linear and associated with proteins to form chromatin Ribosomes are large (80S) Ribosomes are small (70S) No cytoskeleton Always has a cytoskeleton Motility by rigid rotating flagellum Motility by flexible waving undulipodium made of tubilin Cell division by binary fision Cell division by mitosis or meiosis Reproduction is sexual or asexual Reproduction is always asexual Huge variety of metabolic pathways Common metabolic pathways
How big? • A metre (m) contains an thousand millimetres (mm) • A millimetre contains a thousand micrometres (µm) • A micrometre contains a thousand nanometres (nm) • The size of an animal cell and some of its contents, in micrometres and nanometres is given below. Animal cell 20µm; mitochondrion 1µm; cell membrane (width) 8nm; nucleus 5µm; ribosome 15nm Imagine an animal cell is 5 metres across. How big would the various organelles inside it be? Real animal cell = 20µm. 5 metres = 5000 000µm, so the cell has been magnified 5000 000/20 = 250 000 • Size of nucleus • 5 µm x 250 000 = 1.25m • Size of mitochondria • 1 µm x 250 000 = 250 mm • Size of ribosome • 15nm x 250 000 = 3.75mm • Width of cell membrane • 8nm x 250 000 = 2mm
Bacteria are classified according to their shape: Make a list of the shapes of bacteria that you can remember
Cocci – spherical bacteria: • Cocci – smallest bacteria, occur as single spheres. • Diplococci – pairs of spheres, e.g. Diplococcus pneumoniae (pneumonia). • Staphylococci – clusters of spheres, e.g. Staphylococcus aureus (boils and food poisoning). • Streptococci – chains of spheres, e.g. Streptococcus pyogenes (sore throats).
Bacilli – rod-shaped bacteria: • Individual rods – e.g. Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhi (typhoid fever). • Chains of rods – e.g. Azotobacter, Bacillus anthracis (anthrax).
Spirilla – large, spiral-shaped bacteria (motile with flagella), e.g. Treponema pallidum (causes syphilis).
Vibrio – crescent-shaped bacteria (motile), e.g. Vibrio cholerae (causes cholera).
Give four features that most bacteria have in common • Cell wall made of peptidoglycan • Reproduce asexually by binary fission • No membrane bound organelles • DNA is a circular molecule • Give three features that are only present in some bacteria • Presence of flagella • Mesosomes • Pili or fimbriae • Slime layer or capsule • The mitochondria found in eukaryotic cells contain their own loop of DNA as well as 70S ribosomes. Given this information suggest how mitochondria may have originated