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Bacteria

Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

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Page 1: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria

Page 2: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria General Information

• Prokaryotes- (no membrane bound

organelles), contain ribosomes

• Unicellular

• Found Everywhere

• 2 Kingdoms:

Archaebacteria & Eubacteria

Page 3: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 5: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Euryarchaota

1. Methanogens - O2 free and produce

methane

Ex: marshes; digestive tracts of

mammals; sewage treatment plants

2. Extreme Halophiles - high salt

concentrations

Ex: Great Salt Lake and Dead Sea

3. Thermoacidophiles - hot, acidic sulfur

springs

Ex: hot springs

Page 6: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacterial Structure

Page 7: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacterial Structure Composed Of:

• cell wall containing peptidoglycan

• a cell membrane

• cytoplasm

• a single circular piece of DNA located in a region

called the nucleoid

• ribosomes

• sometimes plasmids

– Plasmids – smaller circular pieces of DNA

• some are covered by pili, hairlike projections

• some are covered by glycocalyx, sticky sugars

– Loose layer is called a slime layer

– Firm layer is a capsule

• locomotion by flagella that rotate (not made of

microtubules)

– Movement based on taxis, response to stimuli

Page 8: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 9: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Cell Wall Characteristics

• cell wall to provide protection (two

types are identified by gram staining)

Gram Positive - stain purple (thick)

Gram Negative - stain pink (thin)

staining colors differ because of the

thickness of the peptidoglycan layer

Page 10: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Cell Wall Characteristics

Page 11: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 12: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Eubacteria Classification • 6 Phylums:

1. Cyanobacteria- abundant

2. Spirochaeles- (spirochetes), corkscrew shape

3. Firmicutes- low GC gram positives

4. Actinobacteria- high GC gram positives

5. Chalmydiales- intracellular parasites

6. Proteobacteria- diverse, 5 groups (α,β,γ,δ,ε)

2

3

6 2

5

4

Page 13: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Firmicutes

Page 14: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Chalmydiales

Page 15: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 16: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Eubacteria Classification

• 3 shapes

– bacilli (rod)

• vibrios (bent rods)

– cocci (sphere)

– spirila (spiral)

Page 17: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Eubacteria Classification Growth Patterns

• grow in characteristic patterns

– strepto- chains of cells

– staphylo- resembles grapes

– diplo- paired arrangement of cells

Page 18: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Eubacteria Naming • The two names are put together

to name bacteria

– Growth Pattern + Shape = NAME

• Rod & Pairs

• Round & Clusters

• Spiral & Chains

Page 19: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Eubacteria Classification

Energy Acquisition

• Photoautotrophic

– Perform photosynthesis

– Often called cyanobacteria

• Made aerobic respiration possible

• Chemoautotrophic

– Derive energy from chemical reactions that

break down inorganic molecules

– Chemolithotrophs vs chemoorganotrophs

• Heterotrophic

– Feed on organic substances

– Can create symbiotic relationships

Page 20: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacterial Reproduction

Asexual

Reproduction

BINARY FISSION

Vertical Gene Transfer

Page 21: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacterial Reproduction Asexual Reproduction

BINARY FISSION-

1. the bacteria copies its chromosome

2. the 2 copies of the chromosome

attach to the plasma membrane

3. cell grows and separates

Page 22: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria Reproduction

Sexual

Reproduction

Horizontal Gene Transfer

1. Conjugation

One bacteria transfers all

or part of its chromosome

to another cell through a

bridge-like structure called

a pilus/conjugation tube.

Page 23: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 24: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 25: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria Reproduction Sexual

Reproduction

Horizontal Gene Transfer

2. Transduction – genetic exchange occurs via a viral vector

Page 26: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria Reproduction Sexual

Reproduction

Horizontal Gene Transfer

3. Transformation –

bacteria take up

naked DNA without

cell to cell contact

Page 27: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Ways to Gain Resistance

Transformation-

bacterial cells take

in DNA from the

environment

Transduction- a virus

carries a bacterial

gene to another

bacteria

Page 28: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 29: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 30: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria Vocabulary • Obligate aerobes- need O

2 to survive

Ex: Mycobacterium tuberculosis

• Obligate anaerobes- killed by O2, require anoxic

environments Ex: Clostridium tetani

• Facultative anaerobes- can live with or without

oxygen Ex: E.coli & Salmonella

• Saprophytes- heterotrophic bacteria that feed

on dead and decaying material

Page 31: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Bacteria Survival

• Bacteria produce endospores during

rough times

– An endospore is a tiny structure that

contains the bacteria’s DNA and a small

amount of cytoplasm and enzymes which is

encased by a tough outer covering.

• During this period of rest, the bacteria

is protected from drying out and harsh

chemicals

• When conditions are favorable again,

the bacteria will reproduce

• Bacteria can remain viable for

thousands of years

Page 32: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes
Page 33: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes

Root Nodules

Page 34: Bacteria208.93.184.5/~jones/bio161/bact.pdf · Archaebacteria & Eubacteria Archaebacteria •Archaebacteria (4 types) – live in extreme habitats – unusual lipids in their membranes