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Bacteria and Viruses Chp 10 P. Lobosco

Bacteria and Viruses

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Bacteria and Viruses. Chp 10 P. Lobosco. Bacteria and Archaea. Members of the domain Bacteria live in soil, water and other organisms. The domain Archaea includes organisms that area found in extreme environments, such as hot springs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bacteria and Viruses

Bacteria and VirusesChp 10P. Lobosco

Page 2: Bacteria and Viruses

Bacteria and Archaea Members of the domain Bacteria live in

soil, water and other organisms. The domain

Archaea includes organisms that area found in extreme environments, such as hot springs.

These two domains are the oldest forms of life on Earth.

Page 3: Bacteria and Viruses

Characteristics of Bacteria There are more bacteria on Earth than

there are all other living things combined.

Most bacteria are too small to be seen without a microscope.

Bacterium are many sizes. The largest bacteria are 1000 times as large as the average Bacterium.

Page 4: Bacteria and Viruses

Shape of Bacteria Bacteria are

usually one of four main shapes, rod shaped, spherical, spiral shaped or thread-like.

Page 5: Bacteria and Viruses

The Shape of Bacteria Most bacteria have a rigid cell wall that

gives them their shape.

Page 6: Bacteria and Viruses

Filamentous Filamentous

bacteria are thread like

Page 7: Bacteria and Viruses

Bacilli are rod shaped bacteria.

Page 8: Bacteria and Viruses

CocciCocci are Spherical Shaped Bacteria.

Page 9: Bacteria and Viruses

Spirilla are Spiral Shaped Bacteria

.

Page 10: Bacteria and Viruses

Flagella Some bacteria

have hair-like parts called flagella that helps them move around. Flagella spin to push a bacterium through water or other liquids.

Page 11: Bacteria and Viruses

Prokaryote An organism that does not have a

nucleus is a prokaryote. Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms that do not have a nucleus.

Page 12: Bacteria and Viruses

Prokaryotes Prokaryotes function as independent

organisms but they may stick together to form strand or films. Prokaryotes are much simpler and smaller than eukaryotes. They also reproduce differently.

Page 13: Bacteria and Viruses

Prokaryote Reproduction

Page 14: Bacteria and Viruses

Binary Fission Binary fission is reproduction in which

one single-celled organism splits into two single-celled organisms.

Prokaryotes have no nucleus so their DNA is not surrounded by a membrane.

Page 15: Bacteria and Viruses

1st StepThe DNA of prokaryotes is in circular loops. In the first step of binary fission, the cell’s DNA is copied.

Page 16: Bacteria and Viruses

2nd StepThe DNA and its copy then bind to different places on the inside of the cell membrane.

Page 17: Bacteria and Viruses

3rd StepAs the cell and its membrane grows bigger, the loops of DNA separate

Page 18: Bacteria and Viruses

4th StepWhen the cell is double its original size, the membrane pinches inward and a new cell wall forms and separates into two new cells, each an exact copy of the parent cell.

Page 19: Bacteria and Viruses

Endospores Most species of bacteria do well in

warm, moist places. In dry or cold surroundings, some species of bacteria will die. In these conditions, other bacteria become inactive and form endospores.

Page 20: Bacteria and Viruses

Endospore An endospore contains genetic material

and proteins and is covered by a thick, protective coat. Many endospores can survive in hot, cold and very dry places.

Page 21: Bacteria and Viruses

Endospore When conditions

improve, the endospores break open and the bacteria becomes active again.

Page 22: Bacteria and Viruses

The Domain Bacteria Most known prokaryotes are bacteria.

The Domain Bacteria has more individual organisms than all other domains combined do. Bacteria have lived on the earth for more than 3.5 billion years.

Page 23: Bacteria and Viruses

Classification of Bacteria Bacteria are classified in part by the way they

get their food. Most bacteria are consumers. They eat other

organisms like leaves. Some bacteria are decomposers which feed on

dead organisms. Other bacterial consumers live in or on the

body of another organism. Bacteria that make their own food using

energy from sunlight are producers.

Page 24: Bacteria and Viruses

Cyanobacteria are producers that usually live in water.

Page 25: Bacteria and Viruses

Cyanobacteria Cyanobacteria contain the green

pigment chlorophyll. Chlorophyll is important to

photosynthesis, the process of making food from the energy in sunlight.

Page 26: Bacteria and Viruses

Cyanobacteria Some have a blue

pigment. Some have a red pigment.

Flamingos get their pink color from eating red cyanobacteria.

Page 27: Bacteria and Viruses

The Domain Archaea The three main

types of archaea are:

heat lovers salt lovers methane makers.

Page 28: Bacteria and Viruses

Heat Lovers Heat lovers live in

ocean vents and hot springs.

They live in very hot water, usually from 60° to 80°C, but they can survive temperatures of more than 250°C.

Page 29: Bacteria and Viruses

Salt Lovers Salt lovers live in

environments that have high levels of slat such as the Dead Sea or the Great Salt Lake.

Page 30: Bacteria and Viruses

Methane Makers Methane makers

give off methane gas and live in swamps and animal intestines.

Page 31: Bacteria and Viruses

Harsh Environments Archaea live where

nothing else can. Most archaea prefer

environments where there is little or no oxygen.

They have been found beneath 430 m of ice in Antarctica.

Page 32: Bacteria and Viruses

Good for the Environment Bacteria are good for the environment.

Bacteria is a part of:

Nitrogen fixation Recycling Cleaning up

Page 33: Bacteria and Viruses

Recycling Dead Matter Life could not exist without bacteria since they recycle dead matter..

Page 34: Bacteria and Viruses

Nitrogen Fixation Plants need nitrogen

to grow. Nitrogen makes up

78% of the air. Nitrogen fixing

bacteria take oxygen from the air and change it into a form that plants can use.

Page 35: Bacteria and Viruses

Cleaning Up Bacteria and other

microorganisms are also used to fight pollution.

Bioremediation means using microorganisms to change harmful chemicals into harmless ones.

Page 36: Bacteria and Viruses

Good for People Bacteria is also good for people in many

ways.

Bacteria in food Making Medicines Insulin Genetic Engineering

Page 37: Bacteria and Viruses

Bacteria in your Food Yogurt, buttermilk

and sour cream are all made with bacteria.

Lactic-acid producing bacteria break down the sugar in milk, which is called lactose, and change it into lactic acid.

Page 38: Bacteria and Viruses

Making Medicine Antibiotics are

medicines used to kill bacteria and other microorganisms.

Many antibiotics are made by bacteria.

Page 39: Bacteria and Viruses

Insulin The human body

needs insulin to break down and use sugar and carbohydrates.

People who have diabetes do not make enough insulin.

Scientists put genes into bacteria so they will make insulin.

Page 40: Bacteria and Viruses

Genetic Engineering When scientists

change the genes of any living thing it is called genetic engineering.

In 1973 they put genes from a frog into bacteria that then began to make copes of the frog genes.

Page 41: Bacteria and Viruses

Harmful Bacteria Pathogenic bacteria

cause disease by getting inside a host organism and taking nutrients from the host’s cell and harming the host.

People cam get vaccines to protect against disease.

Page 42: Bacteria and Viruses

Diseases in other Organisms Pathogenic bacteria

attack plants, animals, protists, fungi and other bacteria.

Scientists have genetically engineering plants to be resistant to disease causing bacteria.

Page 43: Bacteria and Viruses

Viruses A virus is a

microscopic particle that gets inside a cell and often destroys the cell.

Many viruses cause diseases, such as the common cold, flu and AIDS.

Page 44: Bacteria and Viruses

Viruses Viruses are smaller than the smallest

bacteria. About 5 billion virus particles could fit in

a single drop of blood. Viruses can change rapidly. This makes

them hard to fight.

Page 45: Bacteria and Viruses

Are Viruses Living? Viruses contain protein and genetic material. They can’t eat, grow, break down food or use

oxygen. They cannot function on their own. It can only reproduce inside a living cell that

serves as a host. A host is a living thing that a virus or parasite

live on or in. The virus forces the host to make viruses

rather than healthy new cells.

Page 46: Bacteria and Viruses

Classifying Viruses Viruses are classified by Their shape The type of disease they cause The kind of genetic material they

contain.

Page 47: Bacteria and Viruses

Crystal shaped viruses like the Polio Virus cause disease.

Page 48: Bacteria and Viruses

Sphere shaped VirusesInfluenza viruses look like spheres.HIV is another virus that has this structure

Page 49: Bacteria and Viruses

Cylinder shaped Viruses The tobacco

mosaic virus is shaped like a cylinder and attacks tobacco plants.

Page 50: Bacteria and Viruses

Spacecraft One group of

viruses attacks only bacteria.

Many of these look like spacecraft.

Page 51: Bacteria and Viruses

Virus Every virus is

made up of genetic material inside a protein coat.

The protein coat protects the virus and helps it to enter a host cell.

Page 52: Bacteria and Viruses

Genetic Material in Viruses The genetic material

in a virus is either RNA or DNA.

Most RNA is made of one strand of nucelotides.

Most DNA is made up of two strands of nucleotides.

Page 53: Bacteria and Viruses

Viruses and Sickness The viruses that

cause warts and chicken pox contain DNA.

The viruses that cause colds and the flu contain RNA.

The virus that causes AIDS contains RNA.

Page 54: Bacteria and Viruses

The Lytic Cycle The viruses attack

living cells and make more of themselves.

This cycle is called the Lytic Cycle.

Page 55: Bacteria and Viruses

The Lysogenic Cycle Some viruses don’t go straight into the

lytic cycle. These viruses put their genetic material

into the host but remains inactive. When a virus is in a resting phase this

known as the lysogenic cycle.

Page 56: Bacteria and Viruses

Treating a Virus Antibiotics do not kill

viruses. Scietitst have

developed antiviral medicines which stop viruses from reproducing.

Vaccinations keep you from getting a viral infection, such as chickenpox.