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Bacteria

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Deep sea hydrothermal vents. Salt Lakes. Hot springs. Under Antarctica. Eubacteria. Found everywhere ... Bacilli rod-shaped (L. little sticks) Spirilla ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bacteria


1
Bacteria Viruses
  • Chapter 19

2
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3
Bacteria Size
  • Smaller than plant animal cells
  • Larger than viruses
  • Measured in microns
  • (1 x 10-6 meter)

4
Two types depend on environment
  • Archaebacteria
  • Extreme conditions
  • Deep sea hydrothermal vents
  • Salt Lakes
  • Hot springs
  • Under Antarctica
  • Eubacteria
  • Found everywhere
  • Human intestine, E. coli
  • Dirt
  • Water

5
Write these downShapes Patterns
  • Cocci spherical (Gr. berry)
  • Bacilli rod-shaped (L. little sticks)
  • Spirilla (spirillum) spiral shaped
  • Diplo pairs
  • Staphylo clusters
  • Strepto - chains

6
Now, name these bacteria
  • C)
  • D)

7
Name these bacteria
  • B)
  • A)

8
Cell Structure - Prokaryote
  • No organized nucleus
  • Has some organelles (i.e. ribosomes)
  • Plasmid
  • Pili
  • Flagella
  • Cell wall
  • Endospores

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10
Cell Walls
  • Eubacteria have an outer wall made of
    peptidoglycan
  • Some have an additional covering of
    polysaccharides bound to lipids
  • Chemical differences in cell wall determine which
    (if any) antibiotics will be effective

11
Gram Staining
  • Process that determines bacteria type, using two
    different stains and an alcohol wash
  • Gram Positive (G)
  • Has no outer covering OUTSIDE of the cell wall
  • Stains a deep violet or purple
  • Gram Negative (G-)
  • Has a protective lipid outer covering OUTSIDE of
    the cell wall
  • Stains a light pink or red color

12
Bacterial Reproduction
  • Binary Fission
  • Splitting in two
  • New cells are identical to the parent cell
    unless there is a mutation

13
Bacterial Reproduction, cont.
  • Conjugation
  • Transfer of some genetic material from one
    bacteria to another through a bridge formed by
    pili
  • Does not increase the number of bacteria, but it
    increases genetic possibilities

14
Adapting to the Environment
  • Endospores
  • A thick internal wall that surrounds the DNA and
    a portion of the cytoplasm
  • Makes it possible for bacteria to survive harsh
    conditions
  • Drought Flood
  • Extreme heat or cold

15
Nutrition
  • Autotrophs make their own food
  • Photoautotrophs Photosynthesize (convert
    sunlight, CO2 and H2O into O2 and carbon
    molecules)
  • Chemoautotrophs - Chemosynthesize (convert CO2
    into carbon molecules)

16
Nutrition, cont.
  • Heterotrophs
  • Cannot make their own food
  • Can be decomposers
  • Can be parasitic

17
Oxygen Requirements
  • Obligate Aerobes
  • Require constant supply of O2
  • Obligate Anaerobes
  • Require ABSENCE of O2
  • Facultative Anaerobes
  • Can live with or without O2

18
Symbiotic Bacteria
  • E. coli in human intestine
  • E. coli makes Vitamin K which we need for blood
    clotting
  • Rhizobium and legumes
  • Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
  • Bacteria converts atmospheric nitrogen (N2) into
    ammonia (NH3), a form of nitrogen that the plant
    can use.

19
Viruses
  • Means little poison in Latin
  • Smaller than bacteria
  • Nonliving
  • Components
  • Particles of nucleic acid (DNA or RNA)
  • Capsid - protein coat

20
Types of Viruses
  • Viruses are specific to cells
  • Viral proteins must bind to specific receptors on
    the surface of a cell and trick the cell into
    allowing the virus inside
  • Plant viruses infect plant cells
  • Animal viruses infect animal cells
  • Bacteriophages infect bacteria cells

21
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22
Lytic Cycle (fast)
  • Virus enters cell
  • Makes copies of itself
  • Causes cell to burst (lyse)
  • Releases viruses to infect other cells
  • This is a very FAST cycle
  • COLD, INFLUENZA

23
Lysogenic Cycle (slow)
  • Virus enters cell
  • The DNA of the host cell and the viral genetic
    information replicate indefinitely
  • Can remain inactive for long periods of time, so
    you do not always know that the virus is there
  • HIV, HERPES

24
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25
Retroviruses
  • A virus that contains RNA as its genetic
    information.
  • Produces DNA copies of its RNA
  • Remain dormant before becoming active
  • Ex. HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus (causes
    AIDS)

26
Viruses Dependence
  • Viruses are nonliving, so they depend on living
    things for
  • Growth replication
  • Cellular Respiration (no mitochondria)
  • Nutrition
  • All other functions that occur in living things

27
Diseases Caused by Bacteria Viruses
28
Pathogens
  • Disease-causing agents
  • Conflict/relationship with host causes the
    disease

29
Bacteria Diseases in Humans
  • Louis Pasteur developed the germ theory of
    disease (bacteria cause disease)
  • Bacteria cause problems by
  • Damaging cells and tissues for food
  • Releasing toxins that interfere with the hosts
    normal activities

30
Using Cells for Food
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • destroys lung tissue
  • Can enter blood stream and destroy other tissue
    in the body

31
Releasing Toxins
  • Streptococcus
  • Strep throat
  • Toxins can cause scarlet fever
  • Corynebacterium diphtheria
  • diptheria
  • Toxins can cause breathing problems, heart
    failure, paralysis, and death

32
Preventing/Killing Bacterial Diseases
  • Vaccines
  • Weakened or killed pathogen
  • Stimulates the immune system
  • Antibiotics
  • Drugs that attack and destroy bacteria
  • Penicillin and tetracycline
  • Block the growth and reproduction of bacteria

33
Bacterial Diseases in Animals
  • Bacillus anthracis
  • Anthrax usually affects sheep, but can be fatal
    to animals and humans
  • Resistant spore can last for years

34
Controlling Bacteria
  • Sterilization
  • High temperatures for long periods of time, kill
    bacteria
  • Disinfectants
  • Chemical solutions that kill pathogenic bacteria
  • Antibacterial chemicals are added to soaps
  • Food storage processing
  • Refrigeration, boiling, frying and steaming,
    canning, chemical treatments (salt, vinegar)

35
Viral Diseases in Humans
  • Disrupt the bodys normal equilibrium
  • Often target certain cells
  • Cause cells to change growth or development
  • Cannot be treated with antibiotics, but can be
    treated with antivirals
  • Prevented with vaccines

36
Viral Diseases in Humans
  • Poliovirus
  • Attacks nervous system and causes paralysis
  • Human papillomavirus (warts)
  • Abnormal cell growth on skin
  • Smallpox
  • Causes high fever, fatigue, head and back aches,
    and rash
  • Virtually eliminated

37
Viral Diseases in Animals
  • Foot-and-mouth disease
  • Affects cattle
  • Rous sarcoma virus
  • Infects chickens
  • Disrupts normal controls over cell growth and
    division
  • Causes tumors

38
Viral Disease in Plants
  • Damaging to plants because of the damage to the
    cell wall
  • Tobacco mosaic virus
  • Potato yellow dwarf virus
  • Carried by leafhoppers
  • Can destroy entire crops

39
Viroids are virus-like particles
  • Single-stranded RNA molecules that have no
    surrounding capsid
  • Disrupt metabolism of plant cell
  • Stunt growth of entire plant
  • Seen in potatoes, tomatoes, apples and citrus
    fruit

40
Prions are virus-like particles
  • Protein infectious particles
  • Contain no DNA or RNA, only protein
  • Affect sheep, humans and other animals
  • Forms protein clumps, which cause normal proteins
    to become prions
  • Possible cause of mad cow disease and
    Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
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