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Bacteria and Archaea. The Prokaryotic Domains. Prokaryotic Complexity Figure 4.5. Eukaryotic Complexity Figure 4.7. Prokaryotes. derived from ancient lineages more biomass than all other life combined “simple” cellular structure no nuclear membrane no membrane-bound organelles
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Bacteria and Archaea The Prokaryotic Domains
Prokaryotes • derived from ancient lineages • more biomass than all other life combined • “simple” cellular structure • no nuclear membrane • no membrane-bound organelles • no cytoskeleton • limited morphological variation
Prokaryotes • diverse metabolic “strategies” • photoautotrophy • chemoheterotrophy • most bacteria and archaea • chemoautotrophy • photoheterotrophy • energy from light • carbon from organic compounds
Prokaryotes • in nearly every habitat on Earth • terrestrial • aerobic/anaerobic • marine/freshwater • deep ocean rifts/deep in crust (>2 km) • antarctic ice pack • hot/acidic (>100˚C; pH = 2-3) • salty/alkaline (pH = 11.5) • etc.
Prokaryotes • a range of growth rates • generation times • 10 min • 1-3 hours • days - weeks • suspensions between growth periods • indefinite • years, decades, >century, millions?
Prokaryotes • Some defy taxonomic notions • get too big • possess internal membrane systems • exhibit “eukaryote-like” growth forms
MorphologyFigure 27.3 Diplococcus Neisseria gonorrhoeae Streptococcus pyogenes Staphylococcus aureus
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Historically • morphology • motility (+/-) • rolling/gliding • vertical positioning • flagella & axial filaments
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Historically • morphology • motility • reactivity • Gram’s stain - peptidoglycan cell wall • metabolism • aerobic/anaerobic • resource utilization • products • inclusion bodies
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Historically • distinctive features • size • very large or very small • stress response • endospore formation • life style • colonial/parasitic/pathogenic
crown gall on geraniumdue to Agrobacterium tumefaciensFigure 27.10
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Pathogenic requirements • contact • entry • defense evasion • multiplication • damage • infectious transfer
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Pathogen characteristics • Invasiveness • Toxigenicity • Corynebacterium diphtheriae vs. Bacillus anthracis • endotoxin vs. exotoxin • Salmonella vs. Clostridium tetani
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Koch’s postulates • Always found in diseased individuals • Grown in pure culture from host inoculant • Cultured organisms causes disease • Newly infected host produces a pure culture identical to the infective culture
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Historically • distinctive features • size • very large or very small • stress response • endospore formation • life style • parasitic/pathogenic • ecological niche
Methanogens & methane using Archaea • Methanogens release 80-90% of atmospheric methane, a greenhouse gas • Methane users intercept methane seeping from sub-oceanic deposits
Prokaryotic Taxonomy • Biofilm production • on solid surfaces • mixed colonies • polysaccharide matrix • resistant to treatments
Recent Prokaryotic Phylogeny • Based on rRNA • evolutionarily ancient • shared by all organisms • functionally constrained • changes slowly with time • encodes signature sequences • BUT - yields a different phylogeny than other sequences analyzed
Recent Prokaryotic Phylogeny • sources of phylogenetic confusion • Lateral gene transfer • among members of bacterial species • among members of different species • across domains… • phylogenetic analysis assumes cladogenic evolution • evolution may have been highly reticulate
Recent Prokaryotic Phylogeny • sources of phylogenetic confusion • Mutation • prokaryotes are haploid • “recessive” mutations are not masked • prokaryotes have very little non-coding DNA • many prokaryotes have very short generation times
Recent Prokaryotic Phylogeny • rRNA led to three domains • Archaea: more similar to Eukarya than to Bacteria • An ancient split between Bacteria and Archaea was followed by a more recent split between Archaea and Eukarya
Shared Features of the Three Domains • plasma membrane • ribosome structure • glycolysis • encode polypeptide sequences in DNA • replicate DNA semi-conservatively • transcribe, translate with same genetic code
Bacterial Phylogeny • Molecular comparisons suggest several higher level groups • Proteobacteria are highly diversified • gram negative • bacteriochlorophyll • source of mitochondria • N2-fixers, Rhizobium, Agrobacterium, E. coli, Yersinia, Vibrio, Salmonella, etc.
Bacterial Phylogeny • Molecular comparisons suggest several higher level groups • Proteobacteria are highly diversified • ancient Cyanobacteria produced oxygen and chloroplasts • “blue-green algae” • fix CO2 & N2 • single or colonial - sheets, filaments, balls
Bacterial Phylogeny • Molecular comparisons suggest several higher level groups • Proteobacteria are highly diversified • ancient Cyanobacteria produced oxygen and chloroplasts • Spirochetes have axial filaments • human parasites & pathogens • free living in water sediments
Bacterial Phylogeny • Molecular comparisons suggest several higher level groups • Proteobacteria are highly diversified • ancient Cyanobacteria produced oxygen and chloroplasts • Spirochetes have axial filaments • Chlamydias have a complex life cycle • obligate intracellular parasites