Chapter 23: Bacteria Archaea and Bacteria. Kingdom Archaebacteria – the most primitive organisms...
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Transcript of Chapter 23: Bacteria Archaea and Bacteria. Kingdom Archaebacteria – the most primitive organisms...
![Page 1: Chapter 23: Bacteria Archaea and Bacteria. Kingdom Archaebacteria – the most primitive organisms (archae = ancient) live in harsh conditions including.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062304/56649f3f5503460f94c5fdc2/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Chapter 23: Bacteria
Archaea and Bacteria
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Kingdom Archaebacteria – the most primitive organisms
(archae = ancient)
live in harsh conditions including
- acidic hot springs
- very salty water
- environments with no oxygen
- near undersea volcanic vents
- different from other bacteria
- cell wall composition (pseudomurien)
- Cell membrane
- rRNA
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Phyla 1: Methanogens:
- obligate anaerobes (oxygen kills them)
- metabolizes hydrogen gas and CO2 to methane gas
- live in the bottom of swamps, sewage, and inside the digestive tracks of many animals
Helps
- grazing animals process cellulose
- termites process wood
- in industry to treat sewage, purify water.
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Phyla 2: Thermoacidiphiles
- can live in extremely hot and acidic water or deep in the ocean near hydrothermal vents in the ocean floor
- Ex: hot springs of Yellowstone Natl Park
- chemotrophs = process sulfur compounds to produce energy
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Phyla 3: Halophiles:
- live in extremely salty (saline) environments,
ex: Dead Sea
- use the salt to generate ATP.
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Phyla 4: Psychrophiles
- live in temperatures below 15C
- Found mostly in the Arctic and Antarctic oceans sea ice.
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Kingdom Eubacteria (Eu = true) “Germs”
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1) Composition of the cell wall – identified with Gram staining technique
Gram positive – stains purple – thick outer layer of peptidoglycan
Gram negative – stains pink/red – lipid layer covering thin layer of peptidoglycan
Peptidoglycan – a protein-carbohydrate compound
Characteristics used for classifying:
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3) Type of metabolism
obligate aerobe – must have oxygen; dies without it
obligate anaerobe – dies if exposed to oxygen; processes ATP by fermentation
facultative anaerobe – uses oxygen
when it can but doesn’t need it
4) Shape of bacterial cells
round coccus (cocci)
rod shaped bacillus (bacilli)
spiral shaped spirillus
2. Method of getting energy: autotrophic (chemotroph, phototroph), heterotrophic
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5) How cells grow (prefixes)
a) staphylo – clumps
b) strepto - chains
c) diplo - pairs
6) Motility – movement
a) flagellated – move with flagellum or flagella
b) slime layer allows gliding
c) spirochete - cork-screw rotation
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A) Proteobacteria
• may have symbiotic lifestyle
• ex. Nitrogen fixing bacteria inside legumes (ex: beans)
• In human and animal intestines, help break down foods (enteric bacteria)
• Some in soil or fresh water and process iron and other minerals as an energy source (chemotrophs)
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B) Gram positive
- thick outer layer of peptidoglycan (stains purple)
- may be beneficial or cause disease
- may be used to make yogurt, pickles, and buttermilk
- or to make medicines using biotechnology
Ex. Strep throat ; staph infections; tuberculosis
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C) Cyanobacteria
• Gram-negative • contain chlorophyll (but not
chloroplasts), perform a plant-like photosynthesis releasing oxygen as a by-product
• Ex. Filamentous bacteria (grow in stagnant water)
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D) Spirochetes
- gram negative
- spiral shaped
E) Chlamydia (no peptidoglycan)
- gram negative
- round shape
- are parasites to animal cells
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Reproduction – 2 types
Asexual - most common
Binary fission – divides into two new cells
Sexual – exchanges genetic info giving variation
a) conjugation
- two bacterial cells connect with a hair-like “pili”
- info is passed through the tube
b) transformation
– living bacteria absorbs dead related bacterial DNA and incorporates it into it’s own genome
c) transduction
– a virus transfers DNA
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Endospores
- special dehydrated cells formed by some bacteria to survive bad living conditions
- ex: high temperatures
- when conditions improve cell is revived
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Bacteria and Disease
Toxins – poisons produced by some bacteria
1) endotoxin
- created inside the bacterial cell
- released as the cell dies
- usually Gram neg.
2) exotoxin
- secreted by living bacterial cell into surrounding environment (host)
- usually Gram-positive
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Pathogens – bacteria that cause disease
Antibiotics
- chemicals that kill bacteria by interfering with cellular functions such as protein or cell wall
synthesis - Gram positive bacteria that cause disease need different antibiotics than Gram negative bacteria
Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria
• most of the population dies, some survive
• Survivors reproduce and are no longer affected by antibiotic
• Occurs when antibiotics are overused or used improperly