Title: Eukaryotes
1Eukaryotes
2What do Eukaryotes have that Prokaryotes do not?
- Membrane-bound nucleus
- Mitochondria, chloroplasts, and endomembrane
system - Cytoskeleton
- Flagella of microtubule construction
- Multiple chromosomes of linear DNA compactly
arranged with proteins - Diploid life stages
- Mitosis and Meiosis and Sex
3Compartmentalization of functionsoccurs in
eukaryotes
4Endosymbiotic theory of eukaryotic evolution
- Evidence of mitochondria and chloroplast origin
- Appropriate size
- Replication by binary fission
- Inner membranes containing enzymes and transport
systems similar to prokaryotic plasma membranes - DNA is circular and not complexed with histones
- Have their own ribosomes, tRNAs and other
components for transcription/translation - Ribosomes are more similar to prok. than euk.
5 A model of the origin of eukaryotes
6Protistan taxonomy is in a state of flux (a mess)
- Your Lab book and your text book approach
protists in very different manners using
different terminology. - Your lab book is the more classic approach and
we will follow that more closely
7 Traditional hypothesis for how the three
domains of life are related
8 An alternative hypothesis for how the three
domains of life are related
9 A tentative phylogeny of eukaryotes (Campbell
6th Edition)
We are going to look at protists using a more
Classic, simpler scheme
10First a couple definitions
- Plankton
- Communities of organisms, mostly microscopic,
that drift passively or swim weakly near the
surface of oceans, ponds, and lakes - Encystment
- Cyst formation
- A response to adverse conditions
- Allows a parasitic species to survive outside a
host, allows others to survive hostile
environmental conditions - Only some protists can do this
11Archezoans
- Lack mitochondria or chloroplasts
- Have prokaryotic-like ribosomes
- Simple cytoskeletons
12Archezoans
- Giardia lamblia
- Unicellular flagellate. Most commonly transmitted
in the cyst form through water contaminated with
human feces
13Trichomonas vaginalis An inhabitant of vaginal
tract of human females. Can be sexually
transmitted. Has flagella and an undulating
membrane for movement
14The Protozoa (animal-like protists)
- Diverse group of heterotrophic protists
- Classically grouped into different Phyla based
upon their movement and how they feed
15The Protozoa Rhizopoda the amoebas
- Very simple protists, unicellular
- Pseudopodia
- Entamoeba histolytica
- ( human pathogen)
16Amoeba proteus
17 Use of pseudopodia for feeding
18The Protozoa Actinopoda (Helizoans and
Radiozoans)
- Axopodia projections reinforced by bundles of
microtubules thinly covered by cytoplasm - Most are planktonic
- Heliozoans fresh water
- Radiozoans- marine, silica shells
19Actinopods Heliozoan (left), radiolarian (right)
20Radiolarian skeleton
21The Protozoa Foraminifera (Forams)
- Marine organisms
- Porous shells of organic material hardened by
calcium carbonate - Many have algae living beneath the shell which
provide nutrients via photosynthesis
22 Foraminiferan
23The Protozoa Apicomplexa (Sporozoans)
- All species are obligate intracellular parasites
of animals - Toxoplasma gondii
- Toxoplasmosis
- Cryptosporidium
- Diarrhea. Transmitted via fecal contamination
- Water supply outbreaks have been reported
- Plasmodium
- Malaria
24The two-host life history of Plasmodium, the
apicomplexan that causes malaria
25The Protozoa Zoomastigophora (flagellates)
- Move by whip-like flagella
- Trichonympha
- Inhabits the gut of termites
- Trypanosoma
- Hemoflagellate
- African Sleeping sickness
26 Trichonympha
27 Trypanosoma, the kinetoplastid that causes
sleeping sickness
28The Protozoa Ciliophora (ciliates)
Stentor
Paramecium
- Move by cilia
- Most are free-living in fresh water
- Paramecium
- Stentor
- Vorticella
Vorticella
29 Ciliates Paramecium
30Fungus-like Protists
- Filamentous body structure at times makes them
appear to be like molds, but they are more
closely related to amoebas than to true fungi. - Myxomycota (plasmodial slime molds)
- Acrasiomycota (cellular slime molds)
- Oomycota (water molds, white rusts, downy mildews)
31 The life cycle of a plasmodial slime mold, such
as Physarum
32 Plasmodial slime mold
33 Slime mold Sporangia
34 The life cycle of a cellular slime mold
(Dictyostelium)
35 Dictyostelium life cycle
36Stages of Dictyostelium
37 The life cycle of a water mold (Layer 3)
38 Water mold Oogonium
39 Powdery mildew
40Algae
- Diverse group of photoautotrophic aquatic
organisms - Major role in aquatic food chains
- Fix carbon dioxide into organ carbon
- Produce somewhere between 50 and 80 of the
Earths oxygen
41AlgaeDinoflagellata (dinoflagellates)
- They have two flagella and may have armor
(cellulose plates) or may be naked (without
armor). Dinoflagellates have pigments and can
carry on photosynthesis. Major component of
phytoplankton. - Gonyaulax
- Red tide
- Paralytic shellfish poisoning
- Peridinium (lab)
- Noctiluca miliaris
- Bioluminescent
42 Dinoflagellate
43Dinoflagellates
44Swimming with bioluminescent dinoflagellates
45AlgaeBacillariophyta (Diatoms)
46a diatom, a unicellular "alga"
47Chrysophyta Golden algae
48Phaeophyta (Brown algae)
- Largest and most complex of the algae
- Kelp is a brown algae
- Giant kelp - up to 100 meters in size
- Seaweeds large, multicellular marine algae of
coastal waters which include members of the
Brown, Red, and Green algae groups
49Australian bull kelp (Durvillea potatorum)
50Kelp forest
51Kelp forest
52Red algae Dulse (top), Bonnemaisonia hamifera
(bottom)
Rhodophyta Red Algae
53Chlorophyta (green algae)
- Over 7000 species known
- Freshwater and marine
- Unicellular and multicellular forms
- Chlamydomonas
- Volvox
- Spirogyra
- Cladophora
- Lichensa mutualistic relationship between a
green algae and a fungus
54 Colonial and multicellular chlorophytes Volvox
(left), Caulerpa (right)
55Chlamydomonas
56Volvox
57Spirogyra
58Chladophora
59Lichens