Title: Chapter 23 - 24
1Chapter 23 - 24 Bacteria Viruses
2Antimicrobial agents
- Disinfectants
- 1 Bleach
- 2 Ammonia
- 3 409
- 4 Sterile water
- Antiseptics
- 1 Hand gel
- 2 Iodine
- 3 Alcohol
- 4 Sterile water
- Antibiotics
- 1 Streptomycin
- 2 Erythromycin
- 3 Tetracycline
- 4 Sterile water
- Bacteria
- Bacillus cereus
- E. coli
- Serratia marcsens
3E. coli
E. coli
E. coli
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1
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3
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2
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4
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Disinfectant CC
Antibiotic CC
Antiseptic CC
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3
4
2
4Bacteria Objectives
- What are some common ways to identify bacteria?
- Describe the structure of bacteria.
- What are some ways in which bacteria reproduce?
- How are bacteria important to us?
5How are bacteria classified?
- Domain Archaea
- Kingdom Archaebacteria
- Lack Peptidoglycan (protein
carbohydrate) in cell wall - Extremophiles -
- Halophiles (love salt),
- Methanogens (convert H2 CO2 into methane gas),
- Thermoacidophiles (love acidic hot
environments) - First organisms to colonize primitive earth
Mouth of a geyser
6Domain BacteriaKingdom Eubacteria
- Eu True
- 3 basic shapes
- Bacilli rod shaped. E. coli, Bacillus
anthracis - Cocci spherical shaped. Staphylococcus aureus,
Streptococcus pyogenes - Spirilla spiral shaped. Spirochette, Syphilis
7Staining properties
- Groups Eubacteria in two groups
- Gram Staining
- Gram Positive Gram stain purple with Crystal
violet due to thick layer of peptidoglycan.
Easier to kill with antibiotics - Gram Negative Gram stain pink with Safarin.
Hard to kill with antibiotics due to thin layer
of peptidoglycan
Gram Positive Gram Negative
8Basic Structure
- Cell Wall,
- Plasma membrane
- Ribosomes
- Circular DNA
- Pili (hairs) for adherence to host cells
- Flagella (protein) for movement, capsule (made of
polysaccharides) for attachment.
9Endospores
- Produced by Gram (usually Bacillus
Clostridium) - Dormant structure to survive adverse conditions
(heat, cold, dryness). Vegetative cell (2N), not
reproductive
Bacillus anthracis
10Methods of Respiration
- Obligate aerobic bacteria must have oxygen
(tuberculosis bacteria) - Obligate anaerobes die if oxygen is present
(tetanus bacteria that causes lockjaw) - Facultative anaerobes do not need oxygen, but
dont die if oxygen is present (E. coli) - Anaerobes carry on fermentation, while aerobes
carry on cellular respiration
11Nutrition
- Heterotrophic or autotrophic
- Saprophytes feed off dead, decaying material
- Autotrophs capable of making their own food,
photoautotroph photosynthesize, or
chemoautotrophs oxidize inorganic compounds to
produce energy (ammonia (NH3) to form nitrite
(NO2) to get energy
12Reproduction
- Asexually by binary fission
- Conjugation - Sexual reproductive method . Two
bacteria form a conjugation bridge or tube
between them - Pili hold the bacteria together
- DNA is transferred from
- one bacteria to the other
13Transformation
- Bacteria pick up pieces of DNA from other dead
bacterial cells - New bacterium is genetically different from
original
14Bacteria and Humans
- Pathogens disease causing agents (Pathology
science of studying diseases) - Can produce poisonous toxins (poisons)
- Endotoxins are made of lipids carbohydrates by
Gram - bacteria released after the bacteria die
(cause high fever, circulatory vessel damage) E.
coli - Exotoxins are made of protein by Gram
bacteria . Secreted into environment.
Clostridium tetani
15To fight them
- Antibiotics interfere with cellular functions
(Penicillin interferes with synthesis of the cell
wall tetracycline interferes with protein
synthesis) - Some antibiotics are made by Actinomycetes
bacteria or fungi - Broad-spectrum antibiotics affect a wide variety
of organisms - Bacteria can mutate and become antibiotic
resistant (often results from overuse of
antibiotics)
16Helpful Bacteria
- Bacteria of decay
- Nitrogen fixing bacteria (Legumes) Rhizobium
- Fermentation of milk products sour cream,
yogurt, buttermilk - Production of cheese
- Fermentation to produce wine, sauerkraut, pickles
- Mining and oil spill cleanup
- Bioremediation
- Biotechnology
17Diseases caused by bacteria
- Anthrax
- Botulism
- Cholera
- Cavities
- Gonorrhea
- Syphilis
- Tetanus
- Staph Infection (MRSA)
- Food Poisoning
- Lyme Disease
- Diphtheria
- Tuberculosis
- Escherichia coli O157 H7
- Leprosy
- Meningitis
- Strep throat
- Whooping cough (Pertussis)
18Food poisoning
- Results from decay of foods and production of
toxins - 33 million people/yr get stomach flu
- Seafood accounts for 20 25 of cases
- 33 of all raw poultry tests for Staphylococcus
- 1 in every 200 eggs has Salmonella
194 Cs of Food Safety Chill your foods Cook your
food to the proper temperature Clean food and
cooking surfaces Combat Cross Contamination
20Antibacterial Agents
- Antibiotics organic substance that inhibits
growth in/on living material. Penicillin - Disinfectants inhibits growth on a non-living
surface bleach, ammonia - Antiseptics inhibits growth on a living surface
alcohol, hydrogen peroxide - Sterilization high heat or chemicals that kills
bacteria
21Chapter 24 Viruses
22Virus Objectives
- What is a virus?
- Describe the typical structure of viruses.
- Compare/contrast lytic and lysogenic viral
cycles. - How are viruses important to us?
- Name some viruses and their action.
23Stanley (1935)
- Crystallized tobacco mosaic virus.
- Living cells dont form crystals
- Named them virus meaning Poison
24Living or non-living?
Characteristic of life Virus Bacteria
Growth No Yes
Homeostasis No Yes
Metabolism No Yes
Mutation Yes Yes
Nucleic acid DNA or RNA DNA (and RNA)
Reproduction Only within a host cell Independently by cell division
Structure Nucleic acid w/I capsid prokaryotic cell
- Neither!
- Its a non-living pathogenic particle made of a
protein coat a nucleic acid
25- A virion a single virus particle
- - Small - 20 nm (polio virus) - 350 nm (small
pox virus) - Single type of nucleic acid
(RNA or DNA but never both) - Protein coat
capsid - - Some have envelopes (made of lipids) outside
of capsid - - Surface projections made up of glycoproteins
for attachment onto host cells -
Are specific to their host
26Virus Structure
- Icosahedral
- 20 triangular faces Polio, herpes, chicken
pox, cancer, AIDs, hepatitis, Respiratory
infections (the cold) - Brick shaped small pox, cowpox
- Helical TMV, measles, rabies, influenza
27- Viruses are classified by their shape and
structure - If it contains DNA
- Host cell may produce RNA to make more viral
proteins in host cell - Join with hosts DNA to direct the production of
virions (viral particles) - If it contains RNA
- Retroviruses such as HIV. Viral RNA uses
hosts ribosomes for viral protein synthesis - Reverse transcriptase viral enzyme that uses
RNA as template to make DNA. Then DNA integrates
into host DNA and then when triggered, normal
transcription occurs with the production of RNA
and translation to produce new viruses. RNA to
DNA to RNA to protein. - Normal is DNA to RNA to protein.
28Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
29A Bacteriophage
Head
Tail w/ Tail Fibers
30The Lytic Cycle
- Get in, replicate and get out to invade other
host cells Virulent (Disease causing) - The cold, rubella (German measles), mumps
Release
Attachment at Receptor site
Entry
Assembly
Replication
31The Lytic Cycle of Virus infection
Attaches onto host cell Injects DNA
into host cell Replication of Viral parts
Reassembly of virons
Lysis bursting out
Viruses that reproduce only b y the lytic cycle
are called Virulent
32Lysogenic Cycle
- Infect cell but do not cause disease immediately.
Instead, they incorporate their nucleic acid into
hosts for extended periods of time (sometimes
years). - May turn lytic or stay incorporated depending on
conditions. - Temperate viruses - AIDS, cold sores, chicken
pox, hepatitis
Prophage
Attachment
Integration Cell
multiplication Injection of nucleic acid
Prophage
remains unnoticed and not transcribed. Occurs in
bacterial DNA
33Lytic and Lysogenic Cycles
34So are we going to just sit back and let them
cause diseases in us?
- Prevention
- Antiviral drugs not a lot since viruses arent
living. Basically change the receptor sites - Vaccines either inactivated (dead viral
particles) or attenuated (weakened or altered
viral particles) are injected into organism.
Body starts the production of antibodies and
memory cells to combat viral invaders when needed.
35Diseases caused by viruses
- AIDS
- The Cold
- Measles
- Mumps
- Rubella
- Chicken pox/Shingles
- Small Pox
- Hepatitis
- SARS
- The Flu
- Ebola
- HPV
- Bird Flu
- Polio
- Swine flu
36Polio and the Iron Lung
37- Viroids another disease causing agent but no
capsid, only the RNA. Found only in plants - Prion viral proteins that are able to cause
diseases by clumping together within cell. 250
amino acids but no nucleic acid. - Scrapie in sheep degrades nervous system.
- Mad Cow disease (Bovine spongiform
encephalopathy) in cows puts holes into brain. - In humans, its Creutzfeld-Jakob disease.