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Prokaryotes

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Title: Prokaryotes


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Prokaryotes
3
The Current Kingdoms
  • Kingdom Monera - Eubacteria - new bacteria
  • Prokarya - Archaebacteria old bacteria
  • Kingdom Protista- 1 celled organisms- Eukaryotes
  • Kingdom Fungi- multicellular fungi/yeast-
    Eukaryotes
  • Kingdom Plantae- photosynthetic plants-
    Eukaryotes
  • Kingdom Animalia- animals from zygote-
    Eukaryotes

4
History of the Prokaryotes
  • 1735 Plant and Animal Kingdoms
  • 1857 Bacteria and fungi put in the Plant
    Kingdom
  • 1866 Kingdom Protista proposed for bacteria,
  • protozoa,
    algae, and fungi
  • 1937 Prokaryote introduced for cells "without
    a
  • nucleus"
  • 1961 Prokaryote defined as cells in which
  • nucleoplasm is
    not surrounded by a
  • nuclear
    membrane
  • 1959 Kingdom Fungi
  • 1968 Kingdom Prokaryotae proposed
  • 1978 Two types of prokaryotic cells found

5
History of the Prokaryotes
  • Prokaryotes date back 3.5 billion years.
  • They were probably the first living organisms.
  • In comparison, animals date back to 700 million
    years ago.
  • Plants date back 470 million years ago.

6
Species Definition
  • Eukaryotic species A group of closely related
    organisms that breed among themselves
  • Prokaryotic species A population of cells with
    similar characteristics
  • Clone Population of cells derived from a single
    cell
  • Strain Genetically different cells within a
    clone
  • Viral species Population of viruses with similar
    characteristics that occupies a particular
    ecological niche

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Dichotomous Key- to Identify Bacteria
8
Identification Methods
  • Morphological characteristics Useful for
    identifying eukaryotes
  • Differential staining Gram staining, acid-fast
    staining
  • Biochemical tests Determines presence of
    bacterial enzymes

Figure 10.8
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SSvedberg Unit
Table 10.2
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The Three-Domain System
Figure 10.1
12
Endosymbiotic Theory
Figures 10.2, 10.3
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Kingdom Prokaryota
  • 1. All unicellular microscopic prokaryotes
  • 2. Two subkingdoms,
  • a. Archaea
  • b. Bacteria
  • 3. Viruses- sometimes included but usually are not

14
Bacteria Organelles
  • Fimbriae or pilliThread-like structures present
    on some bacteria.
  • Pili are shorter than flagella and are used to
    adhere bacteria to one another during mating and
    to adhere to animal cells.
  • NucleoidIn contrast to eukaryotes with a
    nucleus, prokaryotes have a nucleoid where the
    chromosomes with the genetic material can be
    found.
  • In the nucleoid the genetic material is not
    enclosed in a membrane to separate it from the
    cytoplasm.
  • PlasmidsIn addition to one chromosome,
    prokaryotes usually contain one or more smaller
    circular DNA molecules called plasmids.

15
Bacteria Chromosome
  • Prokaryotes have one main chromosome which is
    made of a continuous, circular molecule of double
    stranded DNA

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Physical Traits
  • Prokaryotes are extremely small.
  • A spoonful of garden soil may contain 10 billion
    of them.
  • The total number of prokaryotes in your mouth is
    greater than the number of humans who ever lived
    on Earth.
  • Prokaryotes cover the skin, line the nose and
    mouth, and live in our intestines.

17
Bacteria Shapes
  • Bacteria come in a wide variety of shapesA.
    Rod-shapeB. Round or sphericalC. Round in
    clustersD. Round in twosE. SpiralF.
    Comma-shape

18
Bacterial Shapes

  • Coccus Bacillus Spirillum
  • Diplo- Strepto-
    Staphylo-

19
Distinguishing Features
  • Members of the kingdom Prokaryota have cells
    that
  • Lack a true nucleus
  • This means that the nucleus does not have a
    nuclear membrane (envelope) and the DNA is not
    organized into chromosomes.
  • Do not have membrane bound organelles
  • Lack many of the organelles found in eukaryotes
  • Reproduce mostly by binary fission but can
    reproduce sexually through conjugation.

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Cell Walls
  • Eubacteria cells have a cell wall.
  • Some Archaean bacteria have a cell wall, but some
    do not.
  • Plants, bacteria, fungi and algae all have cell
    walls around their cells.
  • Animal and protozoan cells do not have cell
    walls.
  • In plants, the cell wall is made from the sugar
    cellulose.
  • In fungi the the cell wall is composed of chitin
    which is the same complex sugar that composes the
    exoskeleton of arthropods.

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Peptidoglycan
  • Many true bacteria (eubacteria) have a cell wall
    made of a huge molecule called peptidoglycan
    which is a combination of sugars and amino acids.
  • One method for identifying bacteria is to use a
    blue stain called a Gram stain.
  • In gram-positive bacteria the peptidoglycan forms
    a thick meshlike layer that retains the blue dye
    of the Gram stain by trapping it in the cell.
  • In contrast, in gram-negative bacteria the
    peptidoglycan layer is very thin so the blue does
    not show.
  • Archaeobacteria lack peptidoglycan but some have
    glycan cell walls.

22
Photosynthesis
  • Many bacteria are capable of photosynthesis.
  • Photosynthetic halophiles use rhodopsin instead
    of chlorophyll.
  • Cyanobacteria use chlorophyll.
  • However, unlike plants, cyanobacteria do
    photosynthesis in their cytoplasm.
  • Chloroplasts in plants probably evolved from
    cyanobacteria.

23
Prokaryotic Environments
  • Prokaryotes can survive in almost any
    environment.
  • Some species live in freezing temperatures and
    others live in boiling hot springs and hot acids.
  • Some species can survive the high pressure at the
    depths of the ocean and the low pressure of the
    upper atmosphere.
  • When volcanoes damage environments, bacteria are
    among the first organisms to move in. They make
    it the environments liveable for other organisms.

24
Prokaryotic Digestion
  • As a group, prokaryotes can digest almost
    anything, even cellulose and petroleum.
  • Prokaryotes are the major decomposers in most
    ecosystems.
  • They can break down complex organic compounds
    into simple inorganic materials used by
    autotrophs, prokaryotes are essential to all food
    webs.
  • In addition to being able to break complex
    organic molecules down, prokaryotes can also
    build simple inorganic molecules into complex
    organic molecules like some antibiotics.

25
Bacteria Nutrition
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Prokaryote Respiration
  • 1. Aerobic respiration
  • 2. Anaerobic respiration
  • 3. Fermentation

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Aerobic Respiration
  • 1. Complete oxidation of organic compounds to CO2
    using oxygen
  • 2. Mitochondria oxidize glucose to CO2
  • C6H12O6 6O2 g 6CO2 6H2O

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Anaerobic Respiration
  • 1. Complete oxidation of organic compounds to CO2
    using oxidizers other than oxygen
  • 2. Instead of breaking down glucose and oxygen
    into carbon dioxide and water, these bacteria
    break down acetic acid, sulfuric acid and water
    into carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulfide and water.
  • C2H4O2 H2SO4 H2O g2CO2 H2S 3H2O

29
Fermentation
  • 1. Incomplete anaerobic breakdown of an organic
    molecule
  • 2. Saccharomyces cerevisiae ferment glucose to
    CO2 ethanol
  • C6H12O6 g 2CO2 2C2H5OH

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Archaea or Extremophiles
  • Ancient bacteria
  • Differ from all other forms of life
  • Live in extreme conditions
  • Probably the oldest organisms on Earth
  • Some are motile
  • Break down chemicals for food
  • In some ways more advanced than the eubacteria
    because they have had longer to evolve.
  • Example Archaea have DNA binding proteins
    eubacteria do not

32
Types of Archaebacteria
  • Three main types
  • a. Methanogens- methane producing live in
  • anaerobic conditions. As a bi-product
    they
  • produce methane (CH4).
  • Methanogens live in the digestive tract
    of
  • animals.
  • b. Halophiles- Extreme saline loving
  • c. Thermoacidophiles- Extreme heat or acid
    loving

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Archaebacteria Unique Traits
  • Cell walls lack peptidoglycan

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Eubacteria Metabolism
  • Eubacteria may be aerobic, anaerobic,
    photosynthetic, chemosynthetic, thermophilic or
    cryophilic.
  • The three major groups of eubacteria are
  • No cell wallsMycoplasmas
  • Thin cell wallsGram negative
  • Thick cell wallsGram positive

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Mycoplasmas
  • No cell walls
  • Simple cell structure
  • Resistant to penicillin because penicillin
    attacks the cell wall
  • Smallest known organisms capable of independent
    growth
  • Some mycoplasmas cause diseases pnuemonia
  • Most mycoplasmas are harmless

37
Gram Positive Antibiotics
  • 1. Gram stain is absorbed by peptidoglycans, only
    found in bacteria
  • 2. Bacteria with thick cell walls have lots of
    peptidoglycan and absorb lots of stain so appear
    purple, Gram
  • Streptococcus Lactobacillus
  • thermophilus acidophilus

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Uses of Gram Positive Bacteria
  • Some Gram Positive bacteria produce lactic acid.
  • These are used to prepare sauerkraut, buttermilk
    and yogurt.

40
Antibiotics
  • Gram positive bacteria are used to make
    antibiotics such as streptomycin, tetracyclin,
    and erythromycin.

41
Gram Negative Photosynthesis
  • 3. Bacteria with thin cell walls have little of
    peptidoglycan and absorb small amounts of Gram
    stain so appear pink, Gram -
  • Escherichia coli

42
Gram- Sulfur Using Bacteria
  • Green and blue eubactaria are photosynthetic,
    gram negative forms that are anaerobic do not
    use water in photosynthesis and do not produce
    oxygen gas.
  • C2H4O2 H2SO4 H2O g2CO2 H2S 3H2O

43
Gram- Cyanobacteria
  • Cyanobacteria or blue-green eubacteria are the
    best known of the gram- bacteria because they use
    true photosynthesis.
  • However, instead of needing chloroplasts,
    cyanobacteria are able to photosynthesize from
    chlorophyll located in the cell membranes.
  • One theory is that the chloroplasts in plants
    evolved from a symbiotic relationship between
    cyanobacteria and algae.
  • Cyanobacteria can grow in colonies thick enough
    to be mistaken for algae.

44
Cyanobacteria, Oxygen and Eukaryotes
  • One theory is that 2 billion years ago,
    photosynthetic cyanobacteria started a metabolic
    revolution that led to the increase of oxygen in
    the atmosphere to 1.
  • This allowed plants to evolve.
  • Plants then took the oxygen from 1 to the 21 in
    the atmosphere today.
  • Almost all eukaryotic life depends on this oxygen
    today.

45
Harmful Gram Negative Bacteria
  • Spirochetes
  • Chlamydias
  • Proteobacteria

46
Nitrogen Cycle
  • Chemoautotrophs are eubacteria that obtain energy
    from inorganic molecules in the environment.
  • Among the most important chemoautotrophs is the
    nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria.
  • These are the bacteria that control the nitrogen
    cycle.

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Bacterial Reproduction
  • 1. Asexual binary fission is the primary form
  • 2. Single parent cell splits into two genetically
    identical sibling cells
  • 3. Each new cell has an exact copy of the parent
    cells DNA
  • 4. Conjugation, transformation, transduction
    also occur

48
Conjugation- Transfer of DNA between two
temporarily joined cells
  • 1. The cell donating DNA extends an external
    appendage, sex pili
  • 2. Pili attaches to the cell receiving DNA
  • 3. A cytoplasmic bridge forms the DNA is
    transferred
  • 4. Pili is withdrawn
  • 5. Not an equal sharing of genetic material.

49
Bacterial Transformation
  • Bacterial transformation is when the bacteria
    cell takes in the DNA of another organism.
  • If the foreign DNA is able to trick the bacteria
    DNA into recognizing it as its own DNA by
    imitating the protein recognition pattern of the
    cell, the bacteria will replicate the foreign DNA
    along with its own.
  • This is how viruses work.
  • It is also how antibiotics work

50
Plasmids and Transformation
  • Bacteria have evolved to take in other DNA in
    addition to their own through plasmids.
  • Plasmids are in addition to the single chromosome
    in bacteria.
  • They provide additional sources of DNA in a
    bacteria.
  • Bacteria have plasmids, but they can also take
    them up from other organisms or infect other
    organisms with them.
  • Think of a plasmid as a computer code used to
    change an organism like a virus attacks your
    computer.
  • Plasmids are the key to genetic engineering!

51
Germ Warfare
  • This is how bacteriophages work the virus
    infects the bacteria by injecting its own DNA as
    a plasmid vector.
  • Then the bacteria infects us.
  • The bacteria then acts as a vector for the virus,
    reproducing its DNA.
  • Some organisms are able to kill bacteria by using
    bacteria killing DNA to infect the bacteria and
    kill it.
  • Antibiotics work based on this principle.
  • It is this ability of bacteria to take up the DNA
    of foreign organisms that could be the key to
    unlocking the secrets of evolution.

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  • http//uk.encarta.msn.com/media_461521734/members_
    of_the_kingdom_prokaryota.html
  • hawaii.hawaii.edu/brashear/Micro130ch9a.ppt
  • http//biologypro0.tripod.com/id2.html
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