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Chapter 21

Chapter 21. Prokaryotes. AP Biology Spring 2011. Objectives. Domains the two domains of prokaryotes Describe the unique characteristics of prokaryotes and their metabolic diversity Discuss how prokaryotes reproduce Give examples of positive and negative impacts of bacteria on humans.

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Chapter 21

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  1. Chapter 21 Prokaryotes AP Biology Spring 2011

  2. Objectives • Domains the two domains of prokaryotes • Describe the unique characteristics of prokaryotes and their metabolic diversity • Discuss how prokaryotes reproduce • Give examples of positive and negative impacts of bacteria on humans

  3. Chapter 21.1-21.21.2 Viruses

  4. Viruses • Read chapter 21.1-21.2 • Good refresher on viruses • Remember: • Structure • Viral replication • http://www1.teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?title=Viral_infection_and_replication&video_id=50887

  5. Chapter 21.3 Viroids and Prions

  6. Viroids and Prions • Since the 1970’s about 30 viroids have been identified • A viroid is a small circle of RNA that can affect organisms • Most affect plants; only one viroid known to affect humans • Prions are misfoldings of proteins • Accumulate in nervous system cells • Cause cell death and a spongiform pathology in the brain cell

  7. Chapter 21.4 Prokaryotes- Enduring, Abundant, and Diverse

  8. Evolutionary History and Classification • The earliest cells were prokaryotes, cells with no nucleus

  9. Evolutionary History and Classification • Bacteria: • Classified based on shape, cell wall properties, metabolism, and other properties

  10. Evolutionary History and Classification • Automated gene sequencing has elucidated prokaryote diversity • Shortly after life began there was a branching between bacteria and Archae • Which eventually led to Eukaryote lineage • Despite estimates of millions of species of bacteria, only about 5,000 named

  11. Abundance and Metabolic Features • Bacteria are very successful and terms of reproduction • Metabolic diversity is key to reproductive success in bacteria

  12. Abundance and Metabolic Features • Metabolic diversity: • Photoautotrophs are photosynthetic • Cyanobacteria • Chemoautotrophs use electrons that they strip from inorganic compounds and use that energy to build organic compounds from CO2 and water

  13. Abundance and Metabolic Features • Photoheterotrophs use light energy and obtain carbon from organic compounds from their environment • Chemoautotrophs get both their carbon and their energy by breaking down organic compounds • This group includes many prokaryotes, some protists, and all animals and fungi • Usually parasites- get butrients from living host

  14. Chapter 21.5 Prokaryotic Structure and Function

  15. Cell Structure and Size • Modern prokaryotes include bacteria and archeans • They are unicellular and do not enclose their DNA in a nucleus • All prokaryotes have ribosomes • Some have infoldings of their membrane • Nearly all have a cell wall, some have an external slime coat that helps them adhere to surfaces

  16. Cell Walls • Gram staining: can identify many bacteria species by their wall staining properties • Unknown species exposed to purple dye, then iodine, then alcohol wash, and finally a counterstain • Gram-positive: stays purple • Gram-negative: loses colour at first, then counterstain turns it pink

  17. Gram Staining

  18. Cell Structure and Size • Glycocalyx: sticky mesh, consists of polysaccharides, polypeptides, or both • Capsule: when highly organized and attached firmly • Slime layer: when less organized, and loosely attached

  19. Cell Structure and Size • Three basic shapes: • Coccus: • Spherical • Bacillus: • Rod • Cylindrical • Spirillum: • Helical

  20. Cell Structure and Size

  21. Cell Structure and Size • Two kinds of filamentous structures may be attached to the cell wall • Bacterial flagellum: rotates like a propeller to pl the cell along • Pili: help bacteria attach to another in conjugation (exchange of DNA), or help them attach to surfaces

  22. Reproduction and Gene Transfer • Reproductive rates in prokaryotes are high, some species can reproduce every 20 minutes • Some species reproduce using a budding mechanism • More commonly, reproduce with fission that is similar to mitosis

  23. Reproduction and Gene Transfer • Some bacteria can also pass along genes without reproducing • During conjugation a plasmid, a small, self-replicating circle of DNA containing only a few genes, can be passed to another cell

  24. Reproduction and Gene Transfer • Some F (fertilty) plasmids allow bacteria to engage in bacterial conjugation in which a pilus joins two prokaryotic cells to permit the transfer of plasmid DNA

  25. Chapter 21.6 Prokaryotic Growth and Reroduction

  26. Prokaryotic FIssion • When a bacterium divides, each daughter cell inherits a single chromosome • Circular double-stranded DNA molecule • Bacteria reproduce by prokaryotic fission • Results in two genetically identical daughter cells • Only bacteria and archaens reproduce by this type of cell division

  27. Conjugation between cells • A plasmid is small, self-replicating circle of DNA containing only a few genes • Some F (fertility) plasmids allow bacteria to engage in bacterial conjugation in which a pilus joins two prokaryotic cells to permit transfer of plasmid DNA

  28. Conjugation

  29. Chapter 21.7 The Bacteria

  30. The Heat Lovers • Thermophiles exist in extreme environments • Members of the genus Aquifex include bacteria that live in volcanic spring, thermal vents, and hot springs

  31. The Cyanobacteria • Chloroplast-containing bacteria • Anabaena: by means of heterocysts, can fix nitrogen

  32. Metabolically Diverse Proteobacteria • Make up largest, most diverse bacterial group (gram negative) • Theiomargarita namibiensis: • Chemeoautotroph that lives in marine environments and gets its energy from striping electrons from sulfur • Rhizobium: fixes nitrogen on roots of legumes

  33. Metabolically Diverse Proteobacteria • E. Coli & H. Pylori: • Live in human digestive system • E. Coli 

  34. Metabolically Diverse Proteobacteria • Some free living, chemoautotrophic proteobacteria exhibit complex behavior • Magnetoacteria: attracted by magnetic fields • Myxobacteria: move as a group and feed on soil bacteria

  35. Gram Positive Heterotrophs • Gram Positive: • Not a monophyletic group • If all organisms in that group are known to have developed from a common ancestral form, and all descendants of that form are included in the group • Most are chemioheterotrophs with thick cell walls that retain gram stain

  36. Gram Positive Heterotrophs • Lactobacillus: used in dairy product conversions such as yogurt • L.acidophilus: lowers the pH of skin and vaginal linings • Some form resistant endospores that can survive harsh environmental conditions • Ex. Clostridium tetani (tetnus) Tetnus

  37. Spirochetes and Clamydias • Spirochetes: resemble a spring • Resposible for causing Lyme disease • Free living parasites or symbionts • Clamydias: intracellular parasites that affect animal cells • Cannot make DNA, pilfer it from cells

  38. Chapter 21.8 Archaeans

  39. The Third Domain • Archaeans: differ in their ribosomal DNA and cell walls • Resemble eukaryotic cells by making histones and sharing the same start codon for transcription • Some may resemble first cells on Earth • Recently this group has been subdivided into 3 major groups

  40. Methanogens • Methane makers • Inhabit swamps, mud, sewage, and animal guts • Make ATP anaerobically by converting carbon dioxide and hydrogen to methane • Free oxygen kills them

  41. Extreme Halophiles • Salt lovers • Can tolerate high salt environments such as brackish ponds, salt lakes, volcanic vents on seafloor, and the like • Most are heterotrophic aerobes, some can switch to a special photosynthesis, using bacteriorhodopsin to produce ATP • Light activating pigment embedded in plasma membrane, when it absorbs sunlight energy, changes shape and pumps H+ out from cell. H+ flows back into it, through ATP synthase and drives ATP formation

  42. Extreme Thermophiles • Heat lovers • Live in hot springs and other very hot places such as thermal vents of the sea floor where temps exceed 250 degrees C • Use sulfur as source of electrons for ATP formation

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