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Domain Bacteria. Domain Archaea. Domain Eukarya. Common ancestor. Prokaryotes. Domain Bacteria Domain Archaebacteria. Domain Bacteria. Domain Archaea. Domain Eukarya. Common ancestor. What characteristics make Archaea more like eukaryotes than prokaryotes?.
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Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Prokaryotes Domain Bacteria Domain Archaebacteria
Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor What characteristics make Archaea more like eukaryotes than prokaryotes? • No peptidoglycan in cell wall • More than 1 RNA polymerase • Some introns • Met is 1st amino acid in protein synthesis • Ribosomes more like eukarytoes (Streptomycin does not kill archaea)
Bacteria live EVERYWHERE! • Bacteria live in all ecosystems • on plants & animals • in plants & animals • in the soil • in depths of the oceans • in extreme cold • in extreme hot • in extreme salt • on the living • on the dead Microbes alwaysfind a way tomake a living!
Bacterial diversity rods and spheres and spirals
eukaryote cell prokaryotecell Prokaryote Structure • Unicellular • bacilli, cocci, spirilli • Size • 1/10 size of eukaryote cell • 1 micron (1um) • Internal structure:
Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote Chromosome Prokaryote Eukaryote double helix
Genetic variation in bacteria • Mutations • bacteria can reproduce every 20 minutes • binary fission • error rate in copying DNA • 1 in every 200 bacteria has a mutation • you have billions of E. coli in your gut! • lots of mutation potential! • Genetic recombination • bacteria swap genes • small supplemental circles of DNA • direct transfer of DNA conjugation
Metabolic Relation to Oxygen • How are bacteria categorized by the effect that oxygen has on growth? • Obligate aerobes • Facultative anaerobes • Obligate anaerobes • What role do prokaryotes play in nitrogen cycling? • Only way that nitrogen gas can be incorporated into organic molecules
mitochondria chloroplast Variations in Cell Interior cyanobacterium(photosythetic) bacterium aerobic bacterium internal membranesfor respirationlike a mitochondrion(cristae) internal membranesfor photosynthesislike a chloroplast(thylakoids)
Origins of Metabolic Diversity • Heterotrophs most likely came before photoautotrophs (parsimony) • Glycolysis was probably the first metabolic pathway • Natural selection favored autotrophs as heterotrophs depleted food supply • Cyanobacteria introduce chl a and oxygen gas.
Cell Wall • What are the functions of the cell wall in prokaryotes? • Maintain cell shape • Protection • Prevent bursting in hypotonic environment • Made of peptidoglycan • Why is some food preserved by salting it? • Hypertonic environment plasmolyzes bacterial cells
outer membrane of lipopolysaccharides Gram-negative bacteria Gram-positive bacteria peptide side chains outer membrane cell wall peptidoglycan cell wall peptidoglycan plasma membrane plasma membrane protein Prokaryote Cell Wall Structure That’simportant foryour doctorto know! peptidoglycan = polysaccharides + amino acid chains lipopolysaccharides = lipids + polysaccharides
Prokaryotic metabolism • How do bacteria acquire their energy & nutrients? • photoautotrophs • photosynthetic bacteria • chemoautotrophs • oxidize inorganic compounds • nitrogen, sulfur, hydrogen… • heterotrophs • live on plant & animal matter • decomposers & pathogens
Disease • Disease – • exotoxins release poisons such as botulism and cholera • Endotoxins seen in outer membrane of gram neg. bacteria (Salmonella) • What are Koch’s postulates and why are they important? • Koch’s postulates used to isolate pathogen causing disease
Bacteria as pathogens • Disease-causing microbes • plant diseases • wilts, fruit rot, blights • animal diseases • tooth decay, ulcers • anthrax, botulism • plague, leprosy, “flesh-eating” disease • STDs: gonorrhea, chlamydia • typhoid, cholera • TB, pneumonia • lyme disease
Bacteria as beneficial (& necessary) • Life on Earth is dependent on bacteria • recycling of nutrients from dead to living • only organisms that can fix N from atmosphere • needed for synthesis of proteins & nucleic acids • plant root nodules • help in digestion (E. coli) • digest cellulose for herbivores • cellulase enzyme • produce vitamins K & B12 for humans • produce foods & medicines • from yogurt to insulin
Got any Questions?? Ask da’ Boss!
Gram positive Gram negative Are these bacteria Gram + or Gram –?