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Bacteria and Viruses. Lecture Notes for May 12, 2011. Bacteria. Are prokaryotes - do not have a nucleus & membrane-bound organelles. Are placed in either kingdom Eubacteria or kingdom Archebacteria All bacteria are single cells . Some bacteria can stick together or may form strands.
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Bacteria and Viruses Lecture Notes for May 12, 2011
Bacteria • Are prokaryotes- do not have a nucleus & membrane-bound organelles. • Are placed in either kingdom Eubacteria or kingdom Archebacteria • All bacteria are single cells. Some bacteria can stick together or may form strands.
Bacterium Shapes • Cocci~ Sphere-shaped bacteria • Bacillus~ Rod-shaped bacteria • Spirillium ~ Spiral-shaped bacteria
Bacteria and their energy • Autotrophs • Chemotrophs • Heterotrophs
Autotrophs • Photosynthesis- use sunlight to make their food. Four major groups w/ different photosynthetic pigments: a. Purple sulfur (O2 free environment) b. Purple non-sulfur c. Green sulfur (O2 free environment) d. Cyanobacteria (Blue-green alage)
Cyanobacteria • Bluish-greenish color • Carry out the process of photosynthesis • Do not contain the same type of chloroplastsas plants do • Can survive in extremely hot environments and even extremely cold environment
Chemoautotrophs • Make their own food • Remove e-’s from inorganic molecules such as ammonia & methane • Live in the soil & are responsible for nitrification • Ex: Nitrobacter • Ex: Archaebacteria
Heterotrophs • Obtain their own food • Decomposers- break down the bodies of dead organisms • Ex: Rhizobium–live in lumps on legume roots. • Ex: E-coli O157:H7- eats undigested nutrients in mammal intestines
Bacteria Structure: Cell Walls • Two types of cell walls distinguished by Gram staining: Gram – or Gram + • After staining, the color for Gram – is Red & Gram + is Purple. • Gram stain helps determine which antibiotic would be most helpful in fighting an infection.
Movement of Bacteria • Flagella ~ Tail like structure the whips around to propel the bacterium • Cillia ~ Miniature flagella surround the cell that help to “swim” • Pili ~ short hair-like protein structures that help it to stick to surfacces
E. coli with pili Ciliaof a bacterium
Bacteria Reproduction • Binary Fission • Steps of Binary Fission: - DNA condenses to form a circular chromosome & it attaches to the cell membrane. - The DNA is copied, resulting in 2 identical chromosomes (which are both attached to the cell membrane)
Continuation of Reproduction • The cell grow until it reaches TWICE the original size. • The cell begins to divide and a new cell wall forms around the new cell membrane. • The result are two identicaldaughter cells.
Conjugation • Two bacteria swap genetic information, • Enables bacteria to spread genes within a population • Ex: a gene that allows resistance to penicillin
Spore Formation: Endospore • A type of dormant cell • Exhibit no signs of life • Highly resistant to environmental stresses such as: - High temperatures - Irradiation - Strong acids - Disinfectants
Obligate Anaerobes Facultative Anaerobes Obligate Aerobes Live without Oxygen Can live with or without oxygen Cannot live without oxygen. Bacteria Respiration
Parasitism • Bacteria exploit the host cell, injuring them • Eg. Mychobacterium tuberculosis
What are Viruses? A virus is a non-cellular particle made up of genetic material and protein that can invade living cells.
The Structure Of a Virus • Viruses are composed of a core of nucleic acid made of either DNA or RNA but never both. • The nucleic acid core is surrounded by a protein coat called a capsid. • Viruses are classified by differences in the structures of protien coats.
Polyhedral Virus Herpes zoster virus
Rod-shaped viruses • Tobacco Mosaic Virus- damages tobacco crops
Rod- shaped Viruses Ebola virus
Are viruses living or nonliving? • They have genetic material that is passed on to future generations • This material can change over time, therefore viruses can evolve • BUT, viruses are not made of cells, they cannot make proteins, cannot use energy (no metabolism), and cannot reproduce.
Multiplication of a Bacteriophage The virus hijacks a living cell’s nucleus. Inserts it’s genetic material into the cell’s DNA. So the cell produces about 100 virus particles in 20 minutes.
Vaccines • Viruses grown on chicken embryos are attenuated vaccines • Another type of vaccine is made by heat killing the virus
Retrovirus • Change DNA into RNA. • Example of a Retrovirus is HIV
A typical, "minimal" retrovirus consists of: • an outer envelope which was derived from the plasma membrane of its host • many copies of an envelope protein embedded in the lipid bilayer of its envelope • a capsid; a protein shell containing • two molecules of RNA and • molecules of the enzyme reverse transcriptase