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Prokaryotes (the fancy way to say Bacteria)

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Prokaryotes (the fancy way to say Bacteria) Chapter 27 Outline Prevalence of Prokaryotes Prokaryotic Diversity Prokaryotic Complexity Prokaryotic Variation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prokaryotes (the fancy way to say Bacteria)


1
Prokaryotes(the fancy way to say Bacteria)
  • Chapter 27

2
Outline
  • Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Prokaryotic Diversity
  • Prokaryotic Complexity
  • Prokaryotic Variation
  • Prokaryotic Metabolism
  • Human Bacterial Diseases
  • Benefits of Prokaryotes

3
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • In almost every place or environment
    microbiologists (scientists who study small
    organisms) look, prokaryotes have been found.
  • Hot springs, hypersaline environments, highly
    toxic gaseous environment, within clean rooms of
    hospitals
  • In the 1980s a new method of classification was
    used
  • Divided prokaryotes into 2 groups
  • Archaebacteria (Archae) and bacteria

4
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Prokaryotes are the oldest, structurally
    simplest, and most abundant forms of life on
    earth.
  • abundant for over 2 billion years before the
    appearance of eukaryotes
  • Prokaryotic synthesis (from cyanobacteria) is
    thought to have been the source for much of the
    earths oxygen in atmosphere
  • 5,000 different kinds currently recognized

5
Structure of a Prokaryotic Cell
6
Structure of a Prokaryotic Cell
  • Most prokaryotic cells are small and lack
    interior organization.
  • The plasma membrane is enclosed within a rigid
    cell wall
  • DNA not contained within a membrane-bounded
    nucleus.
  • Prokaryotes exteriorly may have a flagellum and
    other outgrowths called pili.
  • Pili aid in attachment to other cells

7
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Prokaryotic form
  • bacillus (bacilli) straight and rod-shaped
  • coccus (cocci) spherical shaped
  • spirillum (spirilla) long and helical shaped
  • Some bacillus and coccus bacteria form colonies
  • Spirilla generally do not form colonies and are
    often free swimming
  • Some bacterial colonies form spore producing
    structures.

8
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Prokaryotic form
  • Coccus
  • Diplococcus
  • pairs
  • Streptococcus
  • chains
  • Tetrad
  • quads

9
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Coccus
  • Sarcina
  • Staphalo

10
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Bacillus
  • Single
  • Strepto
  • coccobacillus (no pics)

11
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Spiral Types
  • Vibrio
  • Comma shaped
  • Sprillium
  • Thick rigid spiral
  • Spirochete
  • Thin flexible

12
Prevalence of Prokaryotes
  • Prokaryotes versus Eukaryotes
  • unicellularity
  • some may form filamentous matrices
  • cell size
  • 1 µm or less in diameter
  • May vary by 5 orders of magnitude
  • chromosomes
  • naked (no protein) circular DNA located in
    nucleoid
  • cell division and recombination
  • binary fission (asexual)
  • internal compartmentalization
  • No internal compartments (mitochondria or
    chloroplasts)
  • only organelle is the ribosome
  • flagella
  • Single protein flagella of flagellin
  • Spin like propellers instead of whiplike
  • metabolic diversity
  • Several kinds of anaerobic and aerobic
    photosynthesis
  • Chemoautotrophs

13
Prokaryotic Diversity
  • Original key classification characteristics
  • photosynthetic or nonphotosynthetic
  • motile or nonmotile
  • unicellular or colony-forming or filamentous
  • spore formation by division or transverse binary
    fission

14
Prokaryotic Diversity
  • Now prokaryotic classification completed with
    genetic and molecular approaches
  • Analysis of amino acids sequence of key proteins
  • Nucleic acid analysis by establishing guanine
    (G) and cytosine (C)
  • nucleic acid hybridization
  • ribosomal RNA sequencing
  • whole genome sequencing

15
Kinds of Prokaryotes
  • Very early, prokaryotes split into two lines
  • Archaea and bacteria are as different in
    structure and metabolism from each other as
    either is from eukarya.
  • Archae (archebacteria) not actually as old as
    Bacteria

16
Prokaryotic Diversity
  • Comparing archaebacteria and bacteria
  • plasma membranes
  • composed of different lipids
  • cell wall
  • archaebacteria lack peptidoglycan
  • gene translation machinery
  • Bacteria ribosomal proteins and RNA polymerases
    different from eukaryotes
  • archaebacteria similar to eukaryotes
  • gene architecture
  • bacteria genome not interrupted by introns
  • some archaebacteria posses introns

17
Prokaryotic Complexity
  • Prokaryotic cell surface identifying features
  • cell wall maintains shape and protects the cell
    from swelling and rupturing
  • usually consist of peptidoglycan
  • Gram-positive - thicker peptidoglycan
  • (purple color after stain)
  • Gram-negative - thinner peptidoglycan
  • (red color after stain)
  • flagella slender protein - locomotion
  • pili - hairlike structures attachment (7.5 10
    nm)
  • endospores - resistant to environment

18
Gram Stain
19
Flagellar Motor
20
The Cell Interior
  • Internal membranes
  • invaginated plasma membrane for respiration
    and/or photosynthesis
  • Nucleoid region
  • lack nucleus - genes encoded with single
    double-stranded DNA
  • Prokaryotes often posses plasmids independently
    replicating circle of DNA that contain only a few
    genes (not usually essential for survival)
  • Ribosomes
  • Prokaryotic ribosomes are smaller than eukaryotic
    ribosomes, and differ in protein and RNA content.
  • Some antibiotics (tetracycline and
    chloramphenicol) bind to prokaryotic ribosomes to
    block protein synthesis

21
The Cell Interior
  • Internal membranes
  • (a) aerobic bacterium exhibits extensive
    respiratory membranes within cytoplasm
  • (b) cyanobacterium has thylakoid-like membranes
    that provide sites for photosynthesis
  • Do you think that it is likely that
    photosynthetic and respiratory membranes evolved
    more than once?
  • How could your idea be tested experimentally?

22
Processes to Create Prokaryotic Variation
  • mutation
  • spontaneous errors in DNA replication
  • prokaryotic ability to mutate rapidly often has
    adverse effect on humans
  • Radiation, UV light, and various chemicals
    (mutagens) cause DNA replication errors
  • Normal mutation rate 1 per million bases
  • E. coli has 5000 genes
  • This means that 1 out of every 200 bacteria will
    have a mutation
  • 1 spoonful of soil has 1 billion bacteria, so
    there should be 5 million mutant individuals per
    spoonful!

23
Processes to create Prokaryotic Variation
  • mutation
  • with sufficient nutrients, a typical bacterium
    population could double in 20 minutes.
  • this allows for mutations to spread rapidly
  • individual bacterium not killed by an antibiotic
    can then reproduce rapidly and after 30
    generations (10 hours) there would be over 1
    billion clones of this resistive bacteria
  • Some hospitals now have strains of Staphyloccus
    aureus that are penicillin resistant
  • Why then could antibiotic soaps be a problem?
  • Why should you take all 10 days of your
    medication?

24
Processes to create Prokaryotic Variation
  • mutation figure 27.7

25
Processes to create Prokaryotic Variation
  • genetic recombination
  • occurs by gene transfer from one cell to another
    by viruses or conjugation
  • conjugation temporary union of 2 unicellular
    organisms, during which genetic material is
    transferred from one cell to another.
  • this is another method that can lead to resistant
    bacteria

26
Prokaryotic Metabolism
  • Autotrophs
  • obtain carbon from inorganic CO2
  • photoautotrophs use sunlight to build organic
    molecules from CO2
  • chlorophyll a as pigment and H20 as electron
    donor
  • bacteriochlorophyll as pigment and H2S as
    electron donor
  • chemoautotrophs - inorganic chemicals
  • obtain energy by oxidizing inorganic substances
  • Nitrifiers oxidize ammonia or nitrite
  • On ocean floors H2S is oxidized as it escapes
    from thermal vents

27
Prokaryotic Metabolism
  • Heterotrophs
  • obtain carbon from organic molecules
  • photoheterotrophs sunlight organic C
  • purple non-sulfur bacteria
  • organic molecules such as carbohydrates or
    alcohols source for C
  • chemoheterotrophs (most prokaryotes)
  • carbon and energy from organic molecules
  • most decomposers and pathogens

28
Prokaryotic Metabolism
  • How heterotrophs infect host organisms
  • proteins secreted by type III system
  • may be used to transfer other virulence proteins
    into nearby eukaryotic cells

29
Human Bacterial Diseases
  • Tuberculosis
  • afflicts respiratory system and easily
    transmitted from person to person through the air
  • Dental caries
  • tooth decay caused by bacteria present in plaque
  • high sugar diets increase tooth decay
  • lactic acid bacteria ferment sugars and reduce
    pH, thus degenerating tooth enamel

30
Human Bacterial Diseases
  • Sexually transmitted diseases
  • Gonorrhea (Neisseria gonorrhoeae)
  • Syphilis (Treponema pallidum)
  • Chlamydia (Chlamydia trachomatis)

31
Benefits of Prokaryotes
  • Environment
  • chemical cycling
  • decomposition
  • nitrogen fixation
  • reduces N2 to NH3
  • Symbiotic properties
  • nitrogen-fixation
  • digestive tract of animals

32
Benefits of Prokaryotes
  • Genetic engineering
  • nonpolluting insect control
  • bioremediation
  • pollutant removal
  • biofactories
  • commercial production of antibiotics
  • Bioweapons
  • anthrax
  • smallpox

33
Bioremediation
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