191Bacteria - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 61
About This Presentation
Title:

191Bacteria

Description:

How big are they? What are their structures? How do they eat and make energy? ... Methanogens digest cellulose in cow and termite guts. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:50
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 62
Provided by: pren91
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 191Bacteria


1
Section 19-1
CHAPTER Summary
  • 191 Bacteria
  • A. Classifying Prokaryotes
  • 1. Eubacteria
  • 2. Archaebacteria
  • B. Identifying Prokaryotes
  • 1. Shapes
  • 2. Cell Walls
  • 3. Movement
  • C. Metabolic Diversity
  • 1. Heterotrophs
  • 2. Autotrophs
  • 3. Releasing Energy

D. Growth and Reproduction 1. Binary
Fission 2. Conjugation 3. Spore
Formation E. Importance of Bacteria 1. Decomposer
s 2. Nitrogen Fixers 3. Human Uses of Bacteria
2
BACTERIA Chapter 19
  • How big are they?
  • What are their structures?
  • How do they eat and make energy?
  • How do they reproduce?
  • In general, what role do many bacteria play?
    (niche)
  • What are some of the positive uses of bacteria?

3
Concept Map
Section 19-1
Bacteria
are classified into the kingdoms of
live in harsh environments such as
include a variety of lifestyles such as
4
  • Eubacteria
  • Prokaryotic
  • More species
  • Found everywhere
  • Cell walls of peptidoglycan
  • Archeabacteria
  • Prokaryotic
  • No peptidoglycan
  • Different lipids in its membrane
  • Found in harsh environments
  • DNA sequences similar to eukaryotes

5
  • The domain Archaea
  • Include prokaryotes that do not have
    peptidoglycan walls
  • 3 major groups
  • Methanogens
  • Extreme halophiles
  • Extreme thermophiles

6
Methanogens
  • Methanogens convert hydrogen and carbon dioxide
    into methane to generate energy anaerobically.
    Methanogens are obligate anaerobes they are
    killed by oxygen.
  • Methanogens digest cellulose in cow and termite
    guts. Each cow belches 50 liters of methane a
    day. A major greenhouse gas.
  • Methanogens are also in swamps, wetlands, and
    garbage dumps. (Garfield Shopping Mall)

7
Halophiles
  • Extreme halophiles. Grow in very salty
    conditions. Colorful bacteria in seawater
    evaporation beds, Great Salt Lake.
  • Mostly aerobic metabolism.
  • Some have a form of photosynthesis that uses
    bacteriorhodopsin, a pigment very similar to the
    rhodopsin pigment in our eyes. It is also called
    purple membrane protein

8
Thermophiles
  • Extreme thermophiles. Live at very high
    temperatures ocean hydrothermal vents (up to
    113o C, which would be boiling except for the
    high pressure under the ocean), hot springs in
    Yellowstone National Park.
  • Use sulfur to generate energy just like we use
    oxygen donate electrons to sulfur to create
    hydrogen sulfide. Some generate sulfuric acid
    insteadthey live at very low pHs.

9
Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic vs Mitochondria and
Chloroplasts
10
  • Methods for Identifying and classifying
    microorganisms
  • Morphological characteristics
  • Differential staining
  • Biochemical tests
  • Bergeys Manual of Systematic Bacteriology- Used
    to identify microorganisms based on the results
    of these observations. The bible of bacterial
    identification.

11
Basic Bacterial Shapes
  • Three basic shapes
  • Coccus
  • Bacillus
  • Spirilum
  • Common Prefixes
  • Diplo - two
  • Tetra - four
  • Staphylo - cluster
  • Strepto - chain

12
Bacterial morphologies (1)
Assorted Shapes
13
(No Transcript)
14
What shape?
15
What shape?
16
  • Appendages - flagella, pili
  • Surface layers - capsule, cell wall, cell
    membrane
  • Cytoplasm - nuclear material, ribosome, cytoplasm
  • Specialized structure - endospore

17
Section 19-1
18
  • Examples of bacterial flagella arrangement
    schemes.
  • A-Monotrichous B-Lophotrichous
  • C-Amphitrichous D-Peritrichous

19
Bacterial Cell Wall
  • Gram ()
  • Those made up of peptidoglycan.
  • (Appear blue/purple after staining)
  • Gram (-)
  • Those with little petidoglycan but a great deal
    of lipopolysaccharide.
  • (Appear pink/red after staining)

20
Gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria
21
Gram Stain
(-)
( - )
()
22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
Differential Agar - Mannitol agar
28
(No Transcript)
29
  • Positive strep test Hemolysis of blood cells in
    sheep blood agar.

30
(No Transcript)
31
  • Capsule or slime layer
  • Many bacteria are able to secrete material that
    adheres to the bacterial cell
  • It consists of polysaccharide (and sometimes
    polypeptide) on bacilli. Most of them have only
    polysaccharide. It is a protective layer that
    resists host phagocytosis (process of engulfing).

32
Bacterial capsule
33
Capsules
34
How do bacteria eat?
35
How do bacteria breathe?- Obligate aerobe-
Obligate anaerobe- Facultative anaerobes
36
Endotoxin VS Exotoxin
  • Exotoxins Produced inside the bacterium and
    given off.
  • Endotoxins Make up the bacteriums cell wall
    (some lipopolysaccharides in Gram (-))

37
  • Cytoplasm Structures
  • 80 water, nucleic acids, proteins,
    carbohydrates, lipid and inorganic ions etc.
  • 1. Bacterial chromosomes
  • Single large circular double stranded DNA (no
    histone proteins)
  • 2. Plasmids
  • An extra loop of DNA found in some bacteria.
    Used in genetic engineering.

38
Cytoplasm Structures (contd)
  • 3. Ribosome
  • Site of protein synthesis. (Amino acids linked
    together)

39
Bacterial Reproduction
  • Binary fission
  • (What is it?)
  • Conjugation
  • (What does it accomplish?)
  • Endospores
  • (What is their advantage?)

40
Spore Production (endospores)
41
  • Endospore stain B. cereus

42
Two different stains showing endospores.
Closteridium tetani on the right.
43
Growth of Bacteria
  • Under ideal conditions, bacteria grow very
    rapidly some double in number every 20 minutes.
  • Doubling in number 1-2-4-8-16- is exponential
    growth. It starts off slowly, but once going the
    number of bacteria increase very rapidly
  • Usually some nutrient runs short, or waste
    material builds up, and growth ceases.
    Eventually a die-off occurs, reducing the number
    of live bacteria.

44
Ideal conditions?
  • Temperature
  • Food
  • Water
  • No light (or light?)
  • Oxygen (or no oxygen)

45
Section Outline
  • 192 Viruses
  • A. What Is a Virus?
  • B. Viral Infection
  • 1. Lytic Infection
  • 2. Lysogenic Infection
  • C. Retroviruses
  • D. Viruses and Living Cells

Section 19-2
46
VirusesSize
  • Here is how you can imagine the size of viruses
  • If a virus was the size of a basketball
  • A bacterium would be as large as a city block
  • A grain of sand would be two miles long
  • A person would be 4,000 miles tall

47
Figure 19-9 Virus Structures
Tobacco Mosaic Virus
Influenza Virus
T4 Bacteriophage
48
What Are Viruses Made Of?
  • Viruses are composed of nucleic acid, proteins,
    and sometimes, lipids.
  • Nucleic acid, which can be either DNA or RNA,
    encodes the genetic information to make virus
    copies.
  • The nucleic acid is surrounded by a protective
    protein coat, called a capsid.
  • An outer membranous layer, called an envelope,
    made of lipid and protein, surrounds the capsid
    in some viruses..

49
(No Transcript)
50
  • Lysogenic
  • into the
  • Lytic Cycle

51
Figure 19-11 Viruses and Cells
Sectin 19-2
52
Viroids Prions
  • No capsid
  • Strand of RNA
  • Can reproduce inside cell
  • No DNA or RNA
  • No capsid.
  • Only a protein (glycoprotein) that can enter
    into cells and cause disease

53
Section 19-3
Section Outline
193 Diseases Caused by Bacteria and
Viruses A. Bacterial Disease in Humans 1. Using
Cells for Food 2. Releasing Toxins 3. Preventing
Bacterial Disease B. Bacterial Disease in
Animals C. Controlling Bacteria 1. Sterilization
by Heat 2. Disinfectants 3. Food Storage and
Processing D. Viral Disease in Humans E. Viral
Disease in Animals F. Viral Disease in
Plants G. Viroids and Prions 1. Viroids 2. Prions
54
Common Diseases Caused by Bacteria
Section 19-3
Disease
Pathogen
Prevention
Tooth decay Lyme disease Tetanus Tuberculosis Salm
onella food poisoning Pneumonia Cholera
Streptococcus mutans Borrelia burgdorferi Clostrid
ium tetani Mycobacterium tuberculosis Salmonella
enteritidis Streptococcus pneumoniae Vibrio
cholerae
Regular dental hygiene Protection from tick
bites Current tetanus vaccination Vaccination Prop
er food-handling practices Maintaining good
health Clean water supplies
55
Common Diseases Caused by Viruses
Section 19-3
Type of Virus
Nucleic Acid
Disease
Cancer Cancer, AIDS Respiratory
infections Chickenpox Smallpox
Oncogenic viruses Retrovirus Adenoviruses Herpesvi
ruses Poxviruses
DNA RNA DNA DNA DNA
56
Retrovirus
  • Possesses RNA rather than DNA
  • HIV is a retrovirus
  • Human Immune Deficiency Virus
  • Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome

57
Electron Microscope Pic of HIV
58
(No Transcript)
59
(No Transcript)
60
CD4 Receptor
  • (protein data bank)

61
HIV Infection of T Helper Cell
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com