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Prokaryotes and the Origins of Metabolic Diversity

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Title: Prokaryotes and the Origins of Metabolic Diversity


1
Chapter 27
  • Prokaryotes and the Origins of Metabolic Diversity

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Kingdom Monera
  • ex bacteria, blue-green bacteria
  • characteristics
  • -prokaryotic
  • -unicellular (some aggregates or simple
    multiforms)
  • -1st organisms (by 2 bill. yrs.)
  • -most numerous pervasive of life forms
  • -most are benign many are essential to all
    life
  • (decomposing recycling)

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The three domains of life
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Cell structure
  • 3 common shapes
  • 1) coccus sphere
  • 2) bacillus rod
  • 3) spirillum spiral
  • monoploid genome which is circular dsDNA
  • in nucleoid region

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Bacterial shapes
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Cell structure
  • genophore prokaryotic chromosome
  • very little protein associated with DNA
  • plasmids smaller DNA rings each made of a
    few genes
  • -allow antibiotic resistance

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Cell structure
  • Not compartmentalized by endomembranes
  • plasma membrane may be invaginated to create
    internal membrane surface for specialized
    functions

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Invaginations of cell membrane
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Cell structure
  • Cell wall present protect, shape, prevent
    osmotic bursting
  • -made of peptidoglycan (not cellulose)
  • unique polymers of modified sugars cross-
  • linked with short polypeptides
  • Gram staining used to ID bacteria
  • Gram simpler walls w/ lots of peptidoglycan
  • Gram less peptidoglycan, more complex
    structure

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Gram - vs. Gram bacteria
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Cell structure
  • Some have capsules which they secrete
  • (additional protection adherence to
    substrates)
  • pili surface appendages for adherence to
    substrates, reproduction, colony formation

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Pili
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Locomotion
  • axial filaments (bundles of fine fibrils)
  • cause cells to spiral
  • slime secreted, then bacteria glide on it
  • flagella all over surface, or concentrated at
  • both ends
  • taxis movement toward/away from stimulus
  • (directed movement)

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Bacterial flagella
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Reproduction
  • asexually binary fission splitting in 2
  • sexually conjugation sex pili form to
    exchange genetic info.
  • transduction (viral) virus
  • carries part of bacterial NA to new
  • cell

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Conjugation
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Growth limits
  • exponential
  • limits are due to lack of nutrients in
    environment, too much waste created, etc.

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Metabolism Nutrition
  • autotrophic
  • chemotrophic
  • phototrophic
  • heterotrophic
  • chemoheterotrophic (most organisms)
  • photoheterotrophic
  • aerobic
  • anaerobic obligate or facultative

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Diversity
  • Phylum Eubacteria true bacteria
  • -contemporary prokaryotes
  • 1) Cyanobacteria photoautotrophs
  • (blue-green
    bacteria)
  • -may be filamentous
  • -motile forms glide
  • -freshwater (fw), saltwater (sw), damp
    soil
  • -chlorophyll a (as in plants) in
    thylakoids
  • -heterocysts in some useful for N2
    fixation

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Heterocysts
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Heterocysts
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Diversity
  • 2) Phototrophic bacteria green purple sulfur
  • -get electrons from H2S (not H2O)
  • -pigment is bacteriochlorophyll
  • usu. anaerobic
  • 3) Pseudomonads soil, aquatic
  • -most versatile chemoheterotrophs
  • (may use pesticides or other synthetic
    cmpds.)

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Cyanobacteria
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Diversity
  • 4) Spirochetes helical shaped corkscrew
  • movement
  • -large cells
  • -saprophytic parasitic
  • -ex Treponema pallidum cause syphilis
  • Borrelia burgdorferi cause Lyme
    disease

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Leptospira, a spirochete
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Diversity
  • 5) Endospore-forming bacteria
  • -produce spores dehydrated cells with
    thick
  • walls survive harsh conditions
  • -autoclave necessary to kill spores up to
    120
  • degrees C
  • -ex Clostridium botulinum
  • 6) Enteric inhabit intestinal tracts (may be
  • normal flora)
  • -ex E. coli, Salmonella typhi (pathogenic
  • enteric)

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Anthrax endospore
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Diversity
  • 7) Rickettsias Chlamydias very small
  • (dependent parasites) (non-gonococcal
    urethritis
  • most common STD in US)
  • 8) Mycoplasmas smaller than rickettsias only
  • prokaryotes lacking cell walls

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Chlamydias
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Mycoplasmas
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Diversity
  • 9) Actinomycetes colonial resembling fungal
  • bodies (once thought to be fungi)
  • -causes TB leprosy
  • -dirt smell in soil
  • -Streptomyces produce streptomycin, other
  • antibiotics

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Streptomyces
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Diverstiy
  • 10) Myxobacteria gliding bacteria
  • -elaborate colonies secrete slime
  • -erects bulbous stalk (fruiting body)
  • -spore producing brightly colored

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Myxobacteria fruiting bodies
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Diversity
  • Phylum Archaebacteria ancient bacteria
  • -cell walls lack peptidoglycan
  • -lipid cell membrane unique enzymes
  • -live in extreme environments (as in early
    Earth)
  • -sewage decomposers (model systems for
  • solar energy conversion) methanogens CO2
  • reduced to CH4, anaerobes pink scum
  • halophiles saline environment (Dead Sea)
  • thermoacidophiles hot, acidic 60 80C
    pH 2-4
  • (Yellowstone)

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Pink scum from extreme halophiles
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Importance
  • 1) decomposers (along w/ fungi) recycle for
  • ecosystems
  • 2) fix N2 CO2, generate O2

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Importance
  • 3) symbiotic relationships
  • (symbiont smaller, inside host)
  • mutualism both benefit (,)
  • ex bacteria legume roots for N2
    fixation,
  • vaginal bacteria keep pH in
    check, suppressing yeast
  • commensalism symbiont benefits, host
  • unaffected (, 0)
  • parasitism symbiont benefits at hosts
    expense (, -)

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Importance
  • 4) pathogens
  • by
  • opportunistic when defense weakens
  • responsible for ½ of human diseases
  • ex Streptococcus pneumonia (in
    throats)

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Importance
  • Robert Koch (pronounced coke) linked
  • disease to specific bacteria
  • father of bacteriology
  • -to ID pathogen to specific disease, use
  • Kochs postulates

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Importance
  • Kochs postulates
  • 1) find same pathogen in each diseased
    individual
  • 2) isolate pathogen from diseased subject
    grow in
  • pure culture
  • 3) induce disease in experimental animal by
  • inoculation from culture
  • 4) isolate same pathogen from exp. animal
    after
  • disease develops
  • true for most pathogens, few exceptions

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Importance
  • or by
  • exotoxins proteins secreted by bacterial cells
  • (among most potent poisons known)
  • -produce specific symptoms
  • or
  • endotoxins components of outer membranes
  • of Gram bacteria
  • -produce aches, fever

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Lyme disease transmitted by deer tick
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Importance
  • 5) used in lab research, sewage treatment,
  • food/drug industry, recombinant DNA
  • technology

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Sewage treatment
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Bioremediation
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Evolution of metabolism
  • -1st prokaryotes were probably chemoheterotrophs
  • absorbing ATP
  • -glycolysis evolved to generate ATP anaerobically
  • -electron transport chemiosmosis evolved from
  • transmembrane pumps once used to regulate
  • internal pH in an acidic env.
  • -photosynthetic proks. used light photosystems to
  • fix CO2
  • -1st cyanobacteria made org. cmpds. from H2O
  • CO2, releasing O2
  • -accumulation of O2 caused extinction of many
    proks.

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