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Chapter 23. Viruses and Prokaryotes. Viral structure DNA or RNA genome Capsid Protein coat. Tobacco mosaic virus. Adenovirus. T4 bacteriophage. Viruses are not cells Cannot metabolize independently Forces infected host cells to replicate viral DNA
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Chapter 23 Viruses and Prokaryotes
Viral structure • DNA or RNA genome • Capsid • Protein coat
Viruses are not cells • Cannot metabolize independently • Forces infected host cells to replicate viral DNA • Takes over cell’s translation and transcription to reproduce
Origin of viruses • Escaped gene hypothesis • Viruses are often host species-specific • Similarity of virus genome to host genome
Origin prior to divergence of the three domains • Similarities between protein structures of capsids • Genetic similarities between viruses that infect the Eubacteria and the Archaea • Convergent evolution unlikely
Lytic cycle • Destroys the host cell • Attachment • Penetration • Replication • Assembly • Release
Lysogenic cycle • Usually does not kill the host • Viral genome replicated along with host DNA • Attachment • Penetration • Integration • Replication
Viral infection of animal cells • Surface attachment proteins bind to specific cell receptors • Fuse with plasma membrane • Endocytosis • Invaginates plasma membrane to form a vesicle inside the cell
Viral infection of plant cells • Cannot penetrate cell walls unless they are damaged • Spread by insects that feed on plants or by infected seeds • Spreads throughout the plant via plasmodesmata
Retrovirus reproductive cycle • Reverse transcriptase catalyzes synthesis of DNA complementary to the viral RNA • Integrase integrates DNA into the host chromosome • Viral DNA used to transcribe viral RNA and synthesize proteins
Viroids • Short RNA strands with no protective coat • Cause plant diseases • Prions • Only protein • Cause transmissible spongiform encaphalopathies such as BSE
Prokaryotes • No membrane-enclosed organelles such as nuclei or mitochondria
Common shapes • Cocci • Bacillus (rod-shaped) • Spiral • Spirillum (rigid helix) • Spirochete (flexible helix) • Vibrios (comma shaped)
Cell walls in eubacteria • Gram-positive • Very thick peptidoglycan • Gram-negative • Thin layer of peptidoglycan • Outer membrane • Capsule • Surrounding the cell wall
Pili • Protein structures that extend from the cell • Help bacteria adhere to surfaces • Flagella • Produce a rotary motion • Basal body, hook, and filament
Genetic material • Circular DNA molecule • Plasmids • Asexual reproduction • Binary fission • Budding • Fragmentation
Transformation • Intake of DNA fragments • Transduction • Phage carries bacterial DNA between cells • Conjugation • Cells of different mating types
Heterotrophs • Photoheterotrophs • Chemoheterotrophs • Feed on dead organic matter • Autotrophs • Photoautotrophs • Chemoautotrophs
Most bacteria are aerobic • Faculatative anaerobes use oxygen if it is available • Obligate anaerobes carry on metabolism only anaerobically
Domain Eubacteria • Domain Archaea • Cell walls do not have peptidoglycan • Translation mechanisms similar to eukaryotes
Methanogens • Produce methane gas • Anaerobic environments • Extreme halophiles • Inhabit saturated salt solutions • Extreme thermophiles • Inhabit environments over 100°C
Vital ecological functions • Decomposers • Fixing nitrogen for plants • Pathogens • Koch’s postulates • Exotoxins • Endotoxins