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Prokaryotes and Protists

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Title: Prokaryotes and Protists


1
Prokaryotes and Protists
  • Chapter 16

2
Organizing Life
  • Domains
  • What are they?
  • Linnaean hierarchy
  • Arrangement of taxons
  • http//animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/index.h
    tml
  • Tree of Life
  • Branched organization
  • http//www.tolweb.org/tree/
  • Cell Types
  • Prokaryotes or eukaryotes

3
Comparing Cell Types
  • Eukaryotes
  • Prokaryotes
  • 1-5 um in size
  • 10Xs more biomass
  • Wider range of environments
  • Greater diversity
  • Single, circular chromosome
  • Can live without eukaryotes
  • 10-100 um in size
  • 10Xs larger in size
  • Membrane bound nucleus and organelles
  • DNA arranged on multiple chromosomes
  • Cant live without prokaryotes

4
Prokaryotic Shapes
  • Cocci
  • Sperical
  • Chains or clusters
  • E.g streptococci and staphylococci (MRSA and
    beta-lactams)
  • Bacilli
  • Rod shaped
  • Occur singularly, in pairs, or chains
  • E.g. soil organisms
  • Spirochetes
  • Corkscrew shaped
  • E.g. Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease)

5
Prokaryote Characteristics
  • Cell wall
  • Maintains shape, provides protection, and
    prevents lysis
  • Salt and curing meats
  • Gram stains identifed as gram () or gram (-)
  • () simple walls with thicker peptidoglycan
    (sugar polymer)
  • (-) more complex walls with less peptidoglycan
  • More resistant to antibiotics
  • Capsule
  • Sticky polysaccharides or proteins to adhere to
    substrates
  • Prevent immune system attacks
  • Pili
  • Hair-like appendages for adhesion
  • Specialized for DNA transfer

6
Prokaryotic Characteristics
  • Motility
  • Many utilize a flagella
  • Reproduction
  • Review division by binary fission
  • Occurs quickly (E. coli overnight from 1 to 16
    million)
  • Adaptation
  • Form resistant structures like endospores during
    inhospitable times
  • Bacillus anthracis (anthrax) and Clostridium
    botulinum (botulism)
  • Internal Organization
  • All DNA is actively used
  • Lack junk DNA found in eukaryotes called
    __________?
  • Small genetic rings that aid in resistance called
    plasmids
  • Smaller ribosomal efficiency of antibiotics

7
Prokaryotic Nourishment
  • Unmatched diversity in nutrient attainment
  • Nutrients provide energy and carbon
  • Naming
  • Photo- or chemo- energy source
  • Auto- or hetero- carbon source
  • -troph to eat

8
Biofilms
  • Surface coating colonies of prokaryotes
  • Signal to recruit more cells and produce sticky
    proteins
  • E.g. dental plaque, UTIs, or sewer treatment
  • Can be 1 species
  • Channels provide nutrients to entire colony

9
Prokaryotes
  • Archaea
  • Live where other organisms cant survive,
    extremophiles
  • Thermophiles
  • Very hot water such as geysers and hot springs
  • Halophiles
  • Salt environments such as the Great Salt Lake and
    salt farms
  • Methanogens
  • Animal guts and swamps where they produce methane
    gas
  • Bacteria
  • Few species are pathogens, disease-causing
    organisms
  • Most not harmful to humans

10
9 Bacterial Clades
  • Proteobacteria (5 subgroups)
  • Gram negative
  • Gram positive
  • Chlamydias
  • Spirochetes
  • Cyanobacteria

11
Proteobacteria
  • Alpha (a)
  • Rhizobium ? root nodules, fix N2
  • Foreign DNA carriers into crop plant genomes
  • Gamma (?)
  • Photosynthetic examples
  • Animal intestine inhabitants
  • E.g Salmonella, Vibrio cholerae, and Escheria
    coli
  • Delta (d)
  • Slime secreting myxobacteria
  • Can form fruiting bodies for selves when food is
    scarce
  • Bdellovibrio attacks other bacteria

Salmonella
Myxobacteria
12
Gram Positive
  • Actinomycetes
  • Branched chains of cells or are solitary
  • Pathogenic or free-living
  • Mycobacteria leprae and mycobacteria tuberculosis
  • Live in soil and give it the earthy smell
  • Streptomyces
  • Cultured by pharmaceutical companies as
    antibiotics
  • Bacillus anthracis
  • Form endospores, a cell within a cell that
    dehydrates and lies dormant till more favorable
    conditions exist
  • Staphylococcus and streptococcus
  • Mycoplasmas
  • Lack cell walls
  • Tiniest of all known cells

Bacillus anthracis
13
Other Bacterial Clades
  • Chlamydias
  • Obligate intracellular parasite
  • Common cause of blindness (developing countries
    conjunctivitis) and most common STD (United
    States)
  • Spirochetes
  • Spiral through environments by rotating internal
    filaments
  • E.g Treponema pallidum (syphilis) and Borrelia
    burgdorferi (Lyme disease)
  • Cyanobacteria
  • Only Only prokaryote
  • Food for freshwater and marine ecosystems

Chlamydia
14
Bacterial Poisons
  • Exotoxins are proteins secreted by bacteria
  • Clostridium tetani produces muscle spasms
    (lockjaw)
  • Staphylococcus aureus common on skin and in nasal
    passages
  • Produces multiple types
  • TSS, septicemia, and pneumonia
  • Can be acquired from genetic transfer between
    species
  • E. coli ?Acquires genes that produce harmful
    effects
  • Endotoxins are components of gram (-) outer
    membranes
  • Released when cell dies or digested by defensive
    cell
  • All cause same general symptoms (fever, aches,
    and blood pressure drops)
  • Neisseria meningitidis (bacterial meningitis) and
    Salmonella (typhoid fever and salmonellosis)

15
Bacteria, Human Populations, Disease
  • Improvements in sanitation
  • Water treatment and sewer systems
  • Antibiotic development
  • Increase in bacterial resistance
  • Education
  • Importance of seeking treatment
  • Prevention
  • Biological weapons
  • Bioremediation

16
Protists
  • Single or multicellular eukaryotes
  • Source of food and parasites
  • Autotrophic (algae) or heterotrophic (protozoan)
  • Found in/near water (most) or in animal host

17
Protist Clades
  • Regularly changing hypotheses
  • Divergence not truly simultaneous
  • Eukaryotic origin is unknown

18
Diplomonads and Parabasalids
  • Heterotrophs with altered mitochondria
  • Diplomonads
  • Possibly most ancient Protist lineage
  • Mitochondria lack DNA ETC
  • Anaerobic
  • E.g Giardia intestinalis backpackers disease
  • Parabasalids
  • Anaerobic energy generation
  • E.g Trichomonas vaginalis (Trichomoniasis)
  • Lives in the vagina
  • pH shift to basic growth
  • Feed on WBC and bacteria
  • Males rarely symptomatic b/c food availability
    limits population size
  • Treatment is available, but resistance is
    increasing

19
Euglenozoans
  • Flagella have a crystalline rod structure
  • Heterotrophs, photoautotrophs, pathogenic
    parasites
  • E.g Trypanosoma
  • Causes sleeping sickness
  • Spread by African tsetse fly
  • Avoid detection by changing protein structure
  • E.g Euglena
  • Common in pond water
  • Reproduce by binary fission
  • Simultaneously heterotrophic and autotrophic

20
Alveolates
  • Contain alveoli, membranous sacs below the PM
  • Dinoflagellates
  • Red tide blooms
  • Toxins kill fish and can affect humans
  • Ciliates
  • Cilia to move and feed
  • 2 types of nuclei, 1 for daily activities
    (single, large) and 1 (many, small) for
    reproduction
  • E.g Paramecium or Stentor
  • Apicomplexans
  • Animal parasites
  • E.g Plasmodium (malaria)

21
Stramenopiles
  • Have hairy and smooth flagella
  • Water molds
  • Decomposers in moist environments
  • May be parasitic (Ireland potato famine)
  • Diatoms
  • Cell wall of silica
  • Fresh and marine organism food source
  • Diatomaceous earth
  • Brown algae
  • Autotrophic
  • Kelp

22
Amoebozoans
  • Use pseudopodia for movement and feeding
  • Free-living amoebas
  • Parasitic types
  • E.g. amoebic dysentery
  • Slime molds
  • Organisms found in moist, decaying matter
  • Spread under favorable conditions, form spore
    producing structures under less favorable ones
  • Plasmodial slime molds are brightly colored
  • Single-celled plasmodium
  • Cell cycle research
  • Cellular slime molds solitary until food is
    scarce
  • Cell differentiation research

23
Foraminiferans and Radiolarians
  • Move and feed by thread like psuedopodia
  • Forams
  • Marine and fresh water organisms
  • Pseudopodia extend through tests of calcium
    carbonate
  • Radiolarians
  • Marine
  • Internal silica shell and organic outer test

24
Land Plant Relatives
  • Red algae
  • Carrageenan stabilizes yogurt, chocolate milk,
    and pudding
  • Nori in sushi
  • Agar for medium plates
  • Green algae
  • Volvox, colonial hollow balls composed of 100s
    of biflagellated cells
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