Title: Bacterial Classification, Anatomy, Nutrition, Growth, Metabolism and Genetics
1Bacterial Classification, Anatomy, Nutrition,
Growth, Metabolism and Genetics
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3Classification Systems in the Prokaryotes
- Macroscopic morphology
- Colony appearance color
- Texture size
- Microscopic morphology
- Cell shape, size
- Staining
- Physiological / biochemical characteristics
- Enzymes
- Chemical analysis
- Chemical compound of cell wall
- Serological analysis
- Ag/ Ab binding
- Genetic and molecular analysis
- G C base composition
- Nucleic acid sequencing and rRNA analysis
4G C base composition
- Low GC Gram-Positive Bacteria
- Clostridia
- Mycoplasmas
- High GC Gram-Positive Bacteria
- Corynebacterium
- Mycobacterium
5Bacterial Taxonomy Based on Bergeys Manual
- Bergeys Manual of Determinative Bacteriology
five volume resource covering all known
procaryotes - classification based on genetic information
phylogenetic - two domains Archaea and Bacteria
- five major subgroups with 25 different phyla
6Major Taxonomic Groups of Bacteria
- Vol 1A Domain Archaea
- primitive, adapted to extreme habitats and modes
of nutrition - Vol 1B Domain Bacteria
- Vol 2-5
- 2 - Phylum Proteobacteria Gram-negative cell
walls - 3 - Phylum Firmicutes mainly Gram-positive with
low G C content - 4 - Phylum Actinobacteria Gram-positive with
high G C content - 5 Loose assemblage of phyla All gram negative
7Species and Subspecies
- Species
- bacterial cells which share overall similar
pattern of traits - Subspecies
- Strain or variety
- culture derived from a single parent that differs
in structure or metabolism from other cultures of
that species - E. coli O157H7
- Type
- subspecies that can show differences
8Bacterial Shapes, Arrangements, and Sizes
- Typically described by one of three basic shapes
- coccus
- Spherical
- bacillus
- Rod
- coccobacillus
- vibrio
- spirillum
- Helical, twisted rod,
- Spirochete
9Bacterial Shapes, Arrangements, and Sizes
- Arrangement of cells dependent on pattern of
division and how cells remain attached after
division - cocci
- singles
- diplococci
- tetrads
- chains
- irregular clusters
- cubical packets
- bacilli
- chains
- palisades
10Bacilli
Cocci
11Bacterial anatomy
12Generalized structure of a prokaryotic cell
13Appendages Cell Extensions? Flagella
- 3 parts
- filament
- long, thin, helical structure composed of
proteins - Hook
- curved sheath
- basal body
- stack of rings firmly anchored in cell wall
- rotates 360o
- 1-2 or many distributed over entire cell
14Flagellar Arrangements
- monotrichous
- single flagellum at one end
- lophotrichous
- small bunches arising from one end of cell
- amphitrichous
- flagella at both ends of cell
- peritrichous
- flagella dispersed over surface of cell, slowest
15Movement by flagella
Fig. 4.4
- Polar
- Rotates counterclockwise
- Cell swims forward in runs
- Reverse will stop it
- Peritrichous
- All flagella sweep towards one end
16Chemotaxis
17Internal Flagella ? Axial Filaments
- aka Periplasmic
- Endoflagella
- Spirochetes
- enclosed between cell wall and cell membrane of
spirochetes
18Appendages for Attachment ? Fimbrae
- fine hairlike bristles from the cell surface
- function in adhesion to other cells and surfaces
19Appendages for Mating? Pili
- rigid tubular structure
- made of pilin protein
- found only in Gram negative cells
- Functions
- joins bacterial cells for DNA transfer
(conjugation) - Adhesion
- to form biofilms and microcolonies
20The Cell Envelope
- External covering outside the cytoplasm
- Composed of few basic layers
- glycocalyx
- cell wall
- cell membrane
- Maintains cell integrity
21The Cell Membrane
- fluid layer of phospholipid and protein
- phospholipid molecules are arranged in a bilayer
- Hydrophobic fatty acid chains in the
phospholipids form a permeability barrier
22The Bacterial Surface Coating? Glycocalyx
- Coating of molecules external to the cell wall
- Made of sugars and/or proteins
- functions
- attachment
- inhibits killing by white blood cells
- receptor
23The Bacterial Surface Coating? Glycocalyx
- 2 types
- slime layer - loosely organized and attached
- capsule - highly organized, tightly attached
24Cell Wall
- Four Groups Based on Cell Wall Composition
- Gram positive cells
- Gram negative cells
- Bacteria without cell walls
- Bacteria with chemically unique cell walls
25Structure of the Cell Wall? Peptidoglycan
- macromolecule composed of a repeating framework
of long glycan chains - cross-linked by short peptide fragments
- provides strong, flexible support
- keep bacteria from bursting or collapsing because
of changes in osmotic pressure
26Gram Positive Cell Wall (1)
- Consists of
- a thick, homogenous sheath of peptidoglycan
- tightly bound acidic polysaccharides
- teichoic acid and lipoteichoic acid
- Periplasmic space
- cell membrane
27Gram Negative Cell Wall (2)
- Consists of
- an outer membrane containing lipopolysaccharide
(LPS) - periplasmic space
- thin shell of peptidoglycan
- periplasmic space
- cell membrane
- Protective structure while providing some
flexibility and sensitivity to lysis
28Gram Negative Cell Wall
- LPS
- endotoxin that may become toxic when released
during infections - may function as receptors and blocking immune
response - contains porin proteins in upper layer
- Regulates molecules entering and leaving cell
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31The Gram Stain
- Important basis of bacterial classification and
identification - Practical aid in diagnosing infection and guiding
drug treatment - Differential stain
- Gram-negative
- lose crystal violet and stain red from safranin
counterstain - Gram-positive
- retain crystal violet and stain purple
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33Atypical Cell Walls
- Some bacterial groups lack typical cell wall
structure - Mycobacterium and Nocardia
- Gram-positive cell wall structure with lipid
mycolic acid - pathogenicity
- high degree of resistance to certain chemicals
and dyes - basis for acid-fast stain
- Some have no cell wall
- Mycoplasma
- cell wall is stabilized by sterols
- pleomorphic
34Chromosome
- single, circular, double-stranded DNA molecule
- contains all the genetic information required by
a cell - DNA is tightly coiled around a protein
- dense area called the nucleoid
- central subcompartment in the cytoplasm where DNA
aggregates
35Plasmids
- small circular, double-stranded DNA
- stable extrachromosomal DNA elements that carry
nonessential genetic information - duplicated and passed on to offspring
- replicate independently from the chromosome
36Plasmids
- may encode antibiotic resistance, tolerance to
toxic metals, enzymes toxins - used in genetic engineering
- readily manipulated transferred from cell to
cell - F plasmids allow genetic material to be
transferred from a donor cell to a recipient - R plasmids carry genes for resistance to
antibiotics
37Storage Bodies? Inclusions Granules
- intracellular storage bodies
- vary in size, number content
- Examples
- Glycogen
- poly-b-hydroxybutyrate
- gas vesicles for floating
- sulfur
38Endospores
- resting, dormant cells
- produced by some G genera
- Clostridium, Bacillus Sporosarcina
- resistance linked to high levels of calcium
certain acids - longevity verges on immortality
- 25 to 250 million years
- pressurized steam at 120oC for 20-30 minutes will
destroy
39Endospores
- have a 2-phase life cycle
- vegetative cell
- endospore
- sporulation
- formation of endospores
- Germination
- return to vegetative growth
- withstand extremes in heat, drying, freezing,
radiation chemicals
40Endospores
- stressed cell
- undergoes asymmetrical cell division
- creating small prespore and larger mother cell
- prespore contains
- Cytoplasm
- DNA
- dipicolinic acid
- mother cell matures the prespore into an
endospore - then disintegrates
- environmental conditions are again favorable
- protective layers break down
- spore germinates into a vegetative cell
41Microbial nutrition, growth, and metabolism
42Obtaining Carbon
- Heterotroph
- organism that obtains carbon in an organic form
made by other living organisms - proteins, carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic acids
- Autotroph
- an organism that uses CO2 (an inorganic gas) as
its carbon source - not dependent on other living things
43Growth Factors
Carbon source Energy source
photoautotrophs CO2 sunlight
chemoautotrophs CO2 Simple inorganic chemicals
photoheterotrophs organic sunlight
chemoheterotrophs organic Metabolizing organic cmpds
- organic compounds that cannot be synthesized by
an organism must be provided as a nutrient - essential amino acids, vitamins
- Nutritional types
- Chemo-
- Chemical compounds
- Photo-
- light
44Types of Heterotrophs
- Saprobes
- Parasites / pathogens
- Obligate
45Nutritional Movement
- Osmosis
- Facilitated diffusion
- Active transport
- Endocytosis
- Phagocytosis
- Pinocytosis
46Extracellular Digestion
- digestion of complex nutrient material into
simple, absorbable nutrients - accomplished through the secretion of enzymes
(exoenzymes) into the extracellular environment
47Environmental Influences on Microbial Growth
- 1. temperature
- 2. oxygen requirements
- 3. pH
- 4. Osmotic pressure
- 5. UV light
- 6. Barophiles
481. Temperatures
- Minimum temperature
- lowest temperature that permits a microbes
growth and metabolism - Maximum temperature
- highest temperature that permits a microbes
growth and metabolism - Optimum temperature
- promotes the fastest rate of growth and metabolism
49Temperature Adaptation Groups
- Psychrophiles
- optimum temperature 15oC
- capable of growth at 0 - 20oC
- Mesophiles
- optimum temperature 40oC
- Range 10o - 40oC (45)
- most human pathogens
- Thermophiles
- optimum temperature 60oC
- capable of growth at 40 - 70oC
- Hyperthermophiles
- Archaea that grow optimally above 80C
- found in seafloor hot-water vents
502. Oxygen Requirements
- Aerobe
- requires oxygen
- Obligate aerobe
- cannot grow without
- oxygen
- Anaerobe
- does not require oxygen
- Obligate anaerobe
- Facultative anaerobe and aerobe
- capable of growth in the absence OR presence of
oxygen
51- Fluid thioglycollate media can be used to test an
organisms oxygen sensitivity - Gas chamber
523. pH
- The pH Scale
- Ranges from 0 - 14
- pH below 7 is acidic
- H gt OH-
- pH above 7 is alkaline
- OH- gt H
- pH of 7 is neutral
- H OH-
533. pH
- Acidophiles
- optimum pH is relatively to highly acidic
- Neutrophiles
- optimum pH ranges about pH 7 (plus or minus)
- Alkaphiles
- optimum pH is relatively to highly basic
544. Osmotic Pressure
- Bacteria 80 water
- Require water to grow
- Sufficiently hypertonic media at concentrations
greater than those inside the cell cause water
loss from the cell - Osmosis
- Fluid leaves the bacteria causing the cell to
contract - Causes the cell membrane to separate
- Plasmolysis
- Cell shrinkage
- extreme or obligate halophiles
- Adapted to and require high salt concentrations
555. UV Light
- Great for killing bacteria
- Damages the DNA (making little breaks)
- in sufficient quantity can kill the organisms
- in a lower range causes mutagenisis
- Endospores tend to be resistant
- can survive much longer exposures
566. Barophiles
- Bacteria that grow at moderately high hydrostatic
pressures - Oceans
- membranes and enzymes depend on pressure to
maintain their three-dimensional, functional
shape - Barotolerants
- Grows at pressures from 100-500 Atm
- Barophilic
- 400-500
- Extreme barophilic
- Higher than 500
57Microbial Associations
- Symbiotic
- organisms live in close nutritional
relationships - Mutualism
- Obligatory
- Dependent
- Both members benefit
- Commensalism
- One member benefits
- Other member not harmed
- Parasitism
- Parasite is dependent and benefits
- Host is harmed
58Microbial Associations
- Non-symbiotic
- organisms are free-living
- relationships not required for survival
- Synergism
- members cooperate and share nutrients
- Antagonism
- some member are inhibited or destroyed by others
59Microbial Associations
- Biofilms
- Complex relationships among numerous
microorganisms - Develop an extracellular matrix
- Adheres cells to one another
- Allows attachment to a substrate
- Sequesters nutrients
- May protect individuals in the biofilm
60Microbial Growth in Bacteria
- Binary fission
- Prokaryotes reproduce asexually
- one cell becomes two
- basis for population growth
- Process
- parent cell enlarges
- duplicates its chromosome
- forms a central septum
- divides the cell into two daughter cells
61Population Growth
- Generation / doubling time
- time required for a complete fission cycle
- Length of the generation time is a measure of the
growth rate of an organism - Some populations can grow from a small number of
cells to several million in only a few hours!!
62Prokaryotic Growth
- Bacterial Growth Curve
- lag phase
- no cell division occurs while bacteria adapt to
their new environment - logarithmic (log) phase
- Exponential growth of the population occurs
- Human disease symptoms usually develop
- stationary phase
- When reproductive and death rates equalize
- decline (exponential death) phase
- accumulation of waste products and scarcity of
resources
63Other Methods of Analyzing Population Growth
- Turbidity
- Direct microscopic count
- Coulter counting
64Turbidity
65Direct Microscopic Count
66Electronic Counting
67 Microbial genetics
68Genomes
69Prokaryotic Genomes
- Prokaryotic chromosomes
- Main portion of DNA, along with associated
proteins and RNA - Prokaryotic cells are haploid (single chromosome
copy) - Typical chromosome is circular molecule of DNA in
nucleoid
70DNA Replication in Prokaryotes
71Genetic Recombination in Prokaryotes
- Genetic recombination
- occurs when an organism acquires and expresses
genes that originated in another organism - Genetic information in prokaryotes can be
transferred vertically and horizontally - Vertical gene transfer (VGT)
- transfer of genetic material from parent cell to
daughter cell - Horizontal gene transfer (HGT)
- transfer of DNA from a donor cell to a recipient
cell - Three types
- Bacterial conjugation
- Transformation
- Transduction
72DNA Recombination Events
- 3 means for exogenous genetic recombination in
bacteria - Conjugation
- Transformation
- Transduction
73Transmission of Exogenous Genetic Material in
Bacteria
conjugation requires the attachment of two related species formation of a bridge that can transport DNA
transformation transfer of naked DNA
transduction DNA transfer mediated by bacterial virus
741. Conjugation
- transfer of a plasmid or chromosomal fragment
from a donor cell to a recipient cell via direct
connection - Gram-negative
- cell donor has a fertility plasmid
- (F plasmid, F' factor)
- allows the synthesis of a conjugation (sex) pilus
- recipient cell is a related species or genus
without a fertility plasmid - donor transfers fertility plasmid to recipient
through pilus - F and F-
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76Physical Conjugation
772. Transformation
- chromosome fragments from a lysed cell are
accepted by a recipient cell - genetic code of DNA fragment is acquired by
recipient - Donor and recipient cells can be unrelated
- Useful tool in recombinant DNA technology
78Transformation of Insulin Gene
- human insulin gene isolated and cut from its
location on the human chromosome - using a restriction enzyme
- plasmid is cut using the same restriction enzyme
- desired DNA (insulin gene) and plasmid DNA can be
joined using DNA ligase - plasmid now contains the genetic instructions on
how to produce the protein insulin - Bacteria can be artificially induced to take up
the recombinant DNA plasmids and be transformed - successfully transformed bacteria will contain
the desired insulin gene - transformed bacteria containing the insulin gene
can be isolated and grown - As transformed bacteria grow they will produce
the insulin proteins coded for the recombinant
DNA - Insulin harvested and used to treat diabetes
793. Transduction
- DNA is transferred from one bacterium to another
by a virus - Bacteriophages
- Virus that infects bacteria
- consist of an outer protein capsid enclosing
genetic material - serves as a carrier of DNA from a donor cell to a
recipient cell
80Other ways genetics can change
81Transposons
- Special DNA segments that have the capability of
moving from one location in the genome to another
- jumping genes
- Can move from
- one chromosome site to anotherr
- chromosome to a plasmid
- plasmid to a chromosome
- May be beneficial or harmful
- Changes in traits
- Replacement of damaged DNA
- Transfer of drug resistance
82Mutations
- Result of natural processes or induced
- Spontaneous mutations
- heritable changes to the base sequence in DNA
- result from natural phenomena such as radiation
or uncorrected errors in replication - UV light is a physical mutagen that creates a
dimer that cannot be transcribed properly
83- Nitrous acid is a chemical mutagen that converts
adenine bases to hypoxanthine - Hypoxanthine base pairs with cytosine instead of
thymine - Base analogs bear a close resemblance to
nitrogenous bases and can cause replication errors
84Point Mutation
- Result of spontaneous or induced mutations
- affects just one base pair in a gene
- Base-pair substitutions
- result in an incorrect base in transcribed mRNA
codons - Base-pair deletion or insertion
- results in an incorrect number of bases
85Repair Mechanisms
- Attempt to correct mistakes or damage in the DNA
- Mismatch repair involves DNA polymerase
- proofreading the new strand
- removing mismatched nucleotides
86- Excision repair
- involves cutting out damaged DNA
- replacing it with correct nucleotides