1 / 54

Bacteria & Archaea: Themes of Diversity

Bacteria & Archaea: Themes of Diversity. Chapter 28. Dr Karen 9/26. Announcements. Dave Temmermand (one of my former students) will be speaking at the pre-SOMA meeting HJPatterson 1104 This Wednesday 5:30 pm Dave is currently an osteopathic medical student at UMDNJ. Quiz #3.

rance
Download Presentation

Bacteria & Archaea: Themes of Diversity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bacteria & Archaea: Themes of Diversity Chapter 28 Dr Karen 9/26

  2. Announcements • Dave Temmermand (one of my former students) will be speaking at the pre-SOMA meeting • HJPatterson 1104 • This Wednesday 5:30 pm • Dave is currently an osteopathic medical student at UMDNJ

  3. Quiz #3 • Technical difficulties – not able to load quiz • It opened up last night • It will remain open till 11 am on Wednesday (day of exam 1)

  4. Exam on Wednesday • #2 pencils and erasers - scantron • Pen for short answer • UID # • Last names Armory room 0110 A to C Physics D to Z Exam will cover part way through today – clearly marked!!

  5. Where is the armory?? M

  6. Table 28.1

  7. Fig 7.3

  8. Cell wall vs plasma membrane • No cell wall in animals and protozoa • Cell wall found in • Plants • Bacteria • Fungi • Algae • Archaea • Cell wall composed of polysaccharides

  9. Fig 5.3: Review of Sugar StructureMonomers can form polysaccharides

  10. Fig 5.4a: α linkage

  11. Table 5.1a: Starch and glycogen (energy storage)

  12. Figure 5-5b-Table 5-1 Table 5.1c: Cellulose

  13. Figure 5-5b-Table 5-1 Table 5.1c: Cellulose

  14. Table 5.1e: Peptidoglycan

  15. Function of cell wall: rigidity H2O High [solute] Bacterial cell Result = hydrostatic pressure for structure

  16. Table 5.1e: Peptidoglycan:Bacterial Cell Walls

  17. Table 5.1c: Cellulose:Cell walls of Eukarya & some Archaea

  18. Lipid micelles Lipid bilayers Fig 6.5: Membrane Phospholipids No water Hydrophilic heads interact with water Hydrophobic tails interact with each other Hydrophilic heads interact with water

  19. Fig 6.4: Membrane Phospholipids Phospholipid Polar head (hydrophilic) Nonpolar tail (hydrophobic)

  20. Membrane lipid side chains

  21. Archaea plasma membranes

  22. Phospholipids Archaea Bacteria / Eukarya

  23. Membrane Phospholipids

  24. Fig 6.9

  25. Fig 6.11 Hydrocarbon chain affects fluidity : Liquid vs solidSaturation & chain length

  26. Fig 6.10:Unsaturation:More Fluid& Morepermeable

  27. To make a membrane more fluid: • Decrease length of phospholipid fatty acid or isoprene side chains • Increase degree of unsaturation (increase # of double bonds) in fatty acid side chains • NOTE: reverse is true to decrease fluidity

  28. Table 28.1

  29. Evolutionary Themes & Diversification of Bacteria and Archaea Remember why the rate of evolution and the generation of diversity is high!

  30. Answer: • Large number of organisms involved • Short generation time • i.e., many DNA replications/time • Genetic redundancy • Rapidly changing environment in many cases (selective pressures) • Plasmids = lateral gene transfer

  31. Evolutionary Themes & Diversification of Bacteria and Archaea • Morphological Diversity • Metabolic Diversity

  32. Fig 27.11: Morphological Diversity Mycoplasma Bacillus anthracis T. namibiensis Rhodo-spirllum

  33. Characterize membrane by Gram staining Gram-positive cells retain Gram stain more than Gram-negative cells do. Gram-positive cells Gram-negative cells Figure 28-14a

  34. Fig 28.14

  35. Fig 28.14 Cell walls in Gram-negative bacteria have some peptidoglycan and an outer membrane. Gram-negative cell wall Polysaccharides Cell wall Outer membrane Peptidoglycan Plasma membrane Protein

  36. Metabolic diversity Autotrophs Heterotrophs

  37. Metabolic diversity Autotrophs Heterotrophs

  38. Things to know to this point… • Table - differences among 3 major groups of organisms • Mechanisms for generating genetic diversity in Archaea and Prokaryotes • Types and structures of carbohydrates and lipids in extracellular cell walls • rRNA & FtsZ (I am pulling this stuff right out of your textbook!)

  39. EXAM TO HERE • This is as far as the exam will cover

  40. Chapter 28: Things to Examine • Diseases • Bioremediation • Extremophiles • Global Change (revisited later today and in the semester) • Nitrogen Cycle and “Dead Zones”

  41. Diseases: The Plague • Yersinia pestis • Rod shaped • Facultative anaerobe

  42. Diseases: The Plague • Killed over 100 million people • China lost 1/2 of its population • Europe lost 1/3

  43. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bubonic_plague_map.PNG

  44. Y. pestis • Life cycle utilizes a mammalian host and a flea host • Lives embedded in a biofilm in gut of flea • Flea tries to eat but regurgitates blood into host

  45. Y. pestis : evolution at its most dangerous • Produces a number of specific proteins that insure growth in host • Prevents blood clots in host • Prevents detection by host immune system • Induces apoptosis (death) by host macrophages (phagocytic cells of host immune system) • Kills host lymphocytes

  46. BioremediationPossible because of prokaryotic diversity • Inventor: George M. Robinson • 1960’s in Santa Marie CA • Petroleum engineer • Invented “Bug-Brews”

  47. Robinson’s Strategy: selection O I L Collection or soup of microbes Surviving bacteria metabolize or detoxify components of oil

  48. Example of this strategy:

  49. Other attempts: Exxon Valdezoil spill (11 million gallons of crude oil); March 1989

More Related