1 / 63

Unicellular Eukaryotes

Unicellular Eukaryotes. Chapter 11. Emergence of Eukaryotes . First evidence of life dates to 3.5 billion years ago. First cells were bacteria-like. Emergence of Eukaryotes . Origin of complex eukaryote cells Most likely symbiosis among prokaryotic cells.

sancha
Download Presentation

Unicellular Eukaryotes

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. Unicellular Eukaryotes Chapter 11

  2. Emergence of Eukaryotes • First evidence of life dates to 3.5 billion years ago. • First cells were bacteria-like.

  3. Emergence of Eukaryotes • Origin of complex eukaryote cells • Most likely symbiosis among prokaryotic cells. • Modification of engulfed prokaryote into an organelle: Primary endosymbiosis. • Aerobic bacteria engulfed by bacteria. • May have become mitochondria found in most modern eukaryotic cells. • Engulfed photosynthetic bacteria evolved into chloroplasts. • Descendants in green algae lineage gave rise to multicellular plants.

  4. Emergence of Eukaryotes • Other groups apparently originated by secondary endosymbiosis. • One eukaryotic cell engulfed another eukaryotic cell and the latter became transformed into an organelle.

  5. Protozoans • Protozoans are an extremely diverse assortment of unicellular eukaryotes.

  6. Protozoans • Protozoa • Lack a cell wall • Have at least one motile stage in life cycle • Most ingest their food • Carry on all life activities within a single cell. • Can survive only within narrow environmental ranges. • Very important ecologically. • At least 10,000 species of protozoa are symbiotic in or on other plants or animals. • Relationships may be mutualistic, commensalistic, or parasitic.

  7. Protozoans • Protozoans are more diverse than all other eukaryotes. • No longer classified in a single kingdom. • Recently shown that there are at least seven or more clades. • May be more than 60 monophyletic eukaryotic clades. • “Protozoa” is now used informally without implying phyletic relationship.

  8. Cladogram of the Major Divisions of Organisms

  9. Nutrition in Protozoans • Autotrophs - contain chloroplasts. • Heterotrophs - absorb organic molecules or ingest larger food particles. • Phagocytosis • Mixotrophs - combine photosynthesis and heterotrophic nutrition.

  10. Protozoans Occur in Diverse Habitats • Freshwater and marine species. • Require moisture • Free-living and symbiotic species. • Mutualistic – benefits both. • Commensalistic – one benefits, the other is neutral. • Parasitic – one benefits at a cost to the other.

  11. Locomotion in Protozoans • Protists have three main methods of locomotion. • Some protists, like this Euglena, have one or two long flagella that they can whip around an propel themselves through the water.

  12. Locomotion in Protozoans http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jl0TzaWUQWk

  13. Locomotion in Protozoans • Some, like this Tetrahymena, are covered with numerous, but shorter, cilia that facilitate movement and/or feeding.

  14. Locomotion in Protozoans http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApjDSGZWHsw

  15. Locomotion in Protozoans • Others use ameboid movement to get around. • A pseudopod is extended forward, followed by the rest of the organism.

  16. Locomotion in Protozoans http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7pR7TNzJ_pA

  17. Form & Function - Locomotion • Cilia and flagella share an internal structure of the axoneme (extending beyond the cell) consisting of 9 pairs of microtubules surrounding a central pair. • Inside the cell, the kinetosome consists of 9 triplets of microtubules just like centrioles.

  18. Form & Function - Locomotion • Pseudopodia are extensions of the cell cytoplasm used for locomotion.

  19. Form & Function - Locomotion • Lobopodia – large blunt extensions of the cell body. • Filopodia – are thin extensions, usually branching. • Reticulopodia – repeatedly rejoin to form a netlike mesh.

  20. Form & Function - Locomotion • Axopodia – long thin pseudopodia supported by axial rods of microtubules.

  21. Functional Components – Specialized Organelles • Nucleus – contains DNA. • Mitochondria – organelle used in energy production. • Golgi – part of the secretory system of the ER. • Plastids – organelles containing photosynthetic pigments. • Extrusomes – organelles that extrude something from the cell.

  22. Nutrition • Holozoic feeders, or phagotrophs, ingest particles of food. • Food vacuole – the membrane-bound vesicle containing the food. • Food vacuoles fuse with lysosomes containing digestive enzymes.

  23. Nutrition • Often, the site of phagocytosis is a definite mouth structure, the cytostome.

  24. Nutrition • Saprozoic feeding (ingestion of soluble food) may be by pinocytosis or by transport of solutes across the cell membrane.

  25. Excretion and Osmoregulation • Contractile vacuoles fill with fluid and then expel the fluid outside the cell. • Function in osmoregulation. • More common in freshwater species.

  26. Reproduction • Fission is the cell multiplication process in protozoa. • Binary fission – one individual splits into two equal sized individuals. • Budding – progeny cell much smaller than parent. • Multiple fission – multiple nuclear divisions followed by multiple cytoplasmic divisions producing several offspring.

  27. Reproduction • All of above accompanied by some form of mitosis. • Mitosis in protozoa divisions varies from metazoan mitosis. • Nuclear membrane often persists. • Spindle may form within the nuclear membrane. • Centrioles not observed in ciliates. • Macronucleus of ciliates elongates, constricts, and divides without mitosis (amitosis).

  28. Reproduction • Many types of protists reproduce sexually as well as asexually. • Isogametes – all look alike. • Anisogametes – two different types. • Syngamy – gametes from two individuals fuse to form the zygote. • Autogamy – gametes from one individual fuse. • Conjugation – gametic nuclei are exchanged.

  29. Cysts • Many protists are able to survive harsh conditions through the formation of cysts, dormant forms with resistant outer coverings and a shutdown of metabolism.

  30. Major Protozoan Taxa • After the eukaryotic cell evolved, diversification followed, resulting in many clades. • Opisthokonta is a very large clade characterized by a combination of flattened mitochondrial cristae and one posterior flagellum on flagellated cells. • Includes animals, fungi, chaonoflagellates and microsporidians.

  31. Stramenopila • The clade Stramenopila includes several groups of heterotrophs as well as certain groups of algae. • Most stramenopiles have a “hairy” flagellum paired with a “smooth” flagellum.

  32. Stramenopila • Water molds, diatoms, golden algae, brown algae.

  33. Viridiplantae • The clade Viridiplantae contains unicellular and multicellular green algae, bryophytes and vascular plants. • Phylum Chlorophyta – single celled algae colonial forms.

  34. Viridiplantae • Volvox is a colonial organism that shows a division of labor where most cells are somatic cells concerned with nutrition & locomotion, but a few germ cells are responsible for reproduction.

  35. Volvox http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pjW1cMfTz8

  36. Euglenozoa • Phylum Euglenozoa is a diverse clade that includes predatory heterotrophs, photosynthetic autotrophs, and pathogenic parasites. Kinetoplastids & Euglenids. • Persistence of nucleoli during mitosis. • Cell membrane contains microtubules to stiffen it into a pellicle.

  37. Euglenids • Subphylum Euglenida have one or two flagella that emerge from a pocket at one end of the cell. • Contain chloroplasts surrounded by a double membrane – may have arisen by secondary endosymbiosis.

  38. Kinetoplastids • Subphylum Kinetoplastahave a single, large mitochondrion that contains an organized mass of DNA called a kinetoplast. • Include free-living consumers of bacteria in freshwater, marine, and moist terrestrial ecosystems. • Others are parasitic. • Trypanosoma

  39. Retortamonads • Phylum Retortamonada includes commensal and parasitic unicells. • Lack mitochondria & Golgi

  40. Diplomonads • Phylum Retortamonada: Diplomonads: • Are adapted to anaerobic environments. • Lack plastids. • Lack mitochondria but may have mitochondrial genes in the nucleus. • Diplomonads have two nuclei and multiple flagella. • Giardia

  41. Parabasalids • Parabasalids move by means of flagella and an undulating part of the plasma membrane. • This clade may have diverged from the main eukaryotic clade very early. • Trichomonas

  42. Alveolata • Members of the clade (superphylum) Alveolata have membrane-bounded sacs (alveoli) just under the plasma membrane. • Dinoflagellates, apicomplexans, ciliates.

  43. Alveolata - Ciliates • Members of the phylum Ciliophora use cilia to move and feed. • Ciliates have large macronuclei and small micronuclei.

  44. Alveolata - Ciliates • Ciliates are a large, varied group of protists.

  45. Nutrition http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yO0tRvYEXGc&feature=player_embedded

  46. Alveolata - Ciliates • Ciliates are structurally complex. • All ciliates have a kinety system made up of the cilia, kinetosomes and other fibrils. • Many have structures that can be expelled such as trichocysts and toxicysts. • Defensive function

  47. Alveolata – Types of Ciliates • Suctorians – ciliates that lose cilia as adults, grow a stalk and become sessile. • Use tubelike tentacles for feeding. • Symbiotic ciliates – some commensal, others parasitic. • Free-living ciliates – may be swimmers, or sessile. • Stentor, Vorticella, Paramecium

  48. Alveolata – Reproduction in Paramecium • Paramecium, as well as many other protists, reproduce asexually by binary fission.

  49. Alveolata – Reproduction in Paramecium • Conjugation is a sexual process that produces genetic variation. • Conjugation is separate from reproduction which generally occurs by binary fission.

  50. Alveolata – Reproduction in Paramecium http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgkgD4XcqTk&feature=related

More Related