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Viruses & Bacteria

This article provides an overview of viruses and bacteria, including their structures, characteristics, and methods of reproduction. It discusses topics such as viral vaccines, retroviruses, different types of bacteria, and their energy sources. The article also covers bacterial respiration and reproduction methods such as binary fission, conjugation, and spore formation.

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Viruses & Bacteria

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  1. Viruses & Bacteria www.assignmentpoint.com

  2. What are Viruses A virus is a non-cellular particle made up of genetic material and protein that can invade living cells. www.assignmentpoint.com

  3. T4 Bacteriophage www.assignmentpoint.com

  4. Herpes Virus www.assignmentpoint.com

  5. Escherichia Coli Bacterium E. coli is a bacterium. That is a crude cell, it is not a virus because viruses are protein containers with DNA cores or RNA cores. www.assignmentpoint.com

  6. E. Coli and the Bacteriophage What it looks like in real life www.assignmentpoint.com

  7. The Structure Of a Virus • Viruses are composed of a core of nucleic acid • The Nucleic acid core is surrounded by a protein coat called a capsid • The Nucleic core is either made up of DNA or RNA but never both www.assignmentpoint.com

  8. Cycle of Lytic and Lysogenic www.assignmentpoint.com

  9. Vaccines • Viruses grown on chicken embryos are attenuated vaccines • Another type of vaccine is made by heat killing the virus www.assignmentpoint.com

  10. Retrovirus • Change DNA into RNA. • Example of a Retrovirus is HIV www.assignmentpoint.com

  11. A typical, "minimal" retrovirus consists of: • an outer envelope which was derived from the plasma membrane of its host • many copies of an envelope protein embedded in the lipid bilayer of its envelope • a capsid; a protein shell containing • two molecules of RNA and • molecules of the enzyme reverse transcriptase www.assignmentpoint.com

  12. Bacteria Cell www.assignmentpoint.com

  13. Prokaryotes • Cells that do not have a nucleus • Exist almost every where on earth • Grow in numbers so great you can see them with the unaided eye • Are placed in either the Eubacteria or the Archebacteria Kingdoms • Make up the smaller of the two kingdoms www.assignmentpoint.com

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  15. Eubacteria • Make up the larger of the two prokaryote kingdoms • Generally are surrounded by a cell wall composed of complex carbohydrates www.assignmentpoint.com

  16. Cyanobacteria • Photosynthetic bacterium • Bluish-greenish color • Contain membranes that carry out the process of photosynthesis • Do not contain the same type of chloroplasts as plants do • This bluish-greenish algae can be found nearly everywhere on earth. • Can survive in extremely hot environments and even extremely cold environment www.assignmentpoint.com

  17. Archaebacteria • Lack important carbohydrate found in cell walls • Have different lipids in their cell membrane • Different types of ribosomes • Very different gene sequences • Archaebacteria can live in extremely harsh environments • They do not require oxygen and can live in extremely salty environments as well as extremely hot environments. www.assignmentpoint.com

  18. Identifying Prokaryotes • Cell Shape • Cell Wall • Movement www.assignmentpoint.com

  19. Bacterium Shapes • Cocci~ Sphere shaped bacteria • Bacillus~ Rod shaped bacteria • Spirrillium ~ Spiral shaped bacteria • Flagella~ Leg-like structures that help to propel the bacterium. www.assignmentpoint.com

  20. Gram + and Gram – Bacterium Cell Walls www.assignmentpoint.com

  21. Cellular Walls • Chemical nature of a cell wall can be determined by Gram Staining • By finding out what color the cell produces when it is gram stained you can figure out the type of carbohydrates in the cell wall www.assignmentpoint.com

  22. Movement • Flagella ~ Tail like structure the whips around to propel the bacterium • Cillia ~ Miniature flagella surround the cell that help to “swim” • Non motile ~ Sticky cillia like structures that keep the bacterium from moving www.assignmentpoint.com

  23. Flagella www.assignmentpoint.com

  24. www.assignmentpoint.com

  25. Bacteria and their energy • Autotrophs • Chemotrophs • Heterotrophs www.assignmentpoint.com

  26. Autotrophs • Make their own energy • Using Solar energy • Eg. Cyanobacteria www.assignmentpoint.com

  27. Chemotrophs • Make own Energy • Using Chemical energy • Eg. Archaebacteria www.assignmentpoint.com

  28. Heterotrophs • Obtain food • By eating • Eg. E-coli www.assignmentpoint.com

  29. Obligate Anaerobes Facultative Anaerobes Obligate Aerobes Live without Oxygen Can live with or without oxygen Cannot live without oxygen. Bacteria Respiration www.assignmentpoint.com

  30. Bacteria Reproduction • Binary Fission • Conjugation • Spore Formation www.assignmentpoint.com

  31. Cellular organism copies it’s genetic information then splits into two identical daughter cells www.assignmentpoint.com

  32. Conjugation • A type of Bacteria Sex • Two organism swap genetic information, that contains the information such as a resistance to penicillin www.assignmentpoint.com

  33. Spore Formation: Endospore • A type of dormant cell • Exhibit no signs of life • Highly resistant to environmental stresses such as: -High temperatures -Irradiation -Strong acids -Disinfectants • Endospores are formed by vegetative cells in response to environmental signals that indicate a limiting factor for vegetative growth, such as exhaustion of an essential nutrient. www.assignmentpoint.com

  34. Symbiosis • Close relationship between to species in which at least one species benefits from the other • Live together for LIFE www.assignmentpoint.com

  35. Parasitism • Bacteria exploit the host cell, injuring them • Eg. Mychobacterium tuberculosis www.assignmentpoint.com

  36. Mutualism • Symbiosis in which two of the species live together in such a way that both benefit from the relationship • Eg. E-coli www.assignmentpoint.com

  37. Nitrogen Fixations • Process by which nitrogen in the atmosphere is converted into a form that can be used by living things www.assignmentpoint.com

  38. THE END www.assignmentpoint.com

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