1 / 21

Unit 6 – Organismal Biology Part 1: Bacteria and Viruses

Unit 6 – Organismal Biology Part 1: Bacteria and Viruses. Domains of Life. Archaea. More closely related to eukaryotes than bacteria Extremophiles Extreme halophiles (high saline environments; Great Salt Lake, Dead Sea)

fausto
Download Presentation

Unit 6 – Organismal Biology Part 1: Bacteria and Viruses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 6 – Organismal BiologyPart 1: Bacteria and Viruses

  2. Domains of Life

  3. Archaea • More closely related to eukaryotes than bacteria • Extremophiles • Extreme halophiles (high saline environments; Great Salt Lake, Dead Sea) • Extreme thermophiles (very hot environments; special DNA/proteins adaptations; volcanic springs, deep-sea vents

  4. Archaea • Methanogens • Strictly anaerobic; use CO2 to oxidize H2 and release methane as a waste product (swamps, marshes)

  5. Bacteria – Majority of Prokaryotes • Proteobacteria (large group, diverse) • Chlamydias (animal cell parasites) • Spirochetes (heterotrophs; syphilis, Lyme disease)

  6. Bacteria – Majority of Prokaryotes • Cyanobacteria (photoautotrophs; base of food chain in aquatic ecosystems; endosymbiosis leading to eukaryotic chloroplasts) • Gram-positive bacteria (simple cell walls; large group, highly diverse; tuberculosis, anthrax)

  7. Prokaryotic Cells • Primarily unicellular • Less complex than eukaryotic cells • No membrane-bound organelles • Lack a nucleus

  8. Prokaryotic Cell Structure • Cell wall (peptidodoglycan or other proteins/carbohydrates) • Capsule: Sticky covering of the cell wall(protection, attachment) • Fimbriae & sex pili (pilus): Hair-like proteins (attachment, pull cells together)

  9. Prokaryotic Cell Structure • Flagella (motility, taxis) • Specialized membranes (metabolic functions) • DNA • Chromosome located in nucleoid region • Plasmids (small rings of DNA)

  10. Prokaryotic Cell Shapes Bacilli (rods) Spirals Cocci (spheres)

  11. Metabolic Diversity • Photoautotrophs • Use sunlight energy to convert inorganic carbon • Chemoautotrophs • Oxidize chemicals (H2S, Fe) to convert inorganic carbon

  12. Metabolic Diversity • Photoheterotrophs • Use sunlight energy but need carbon in organic form • Chemoheterotrophs • Must consume organic molecules for energy and carbon source

  13. High Genetic Diversity (1) Rapid Reproduction • Asexual • Binary fission (offspring genetically identical to parent) • High mutation rate due to fast reproduction – New alleles

  14. High Genetic Diversity (2) Genetic Recombination • Combining DNA from two sources, 3 ways this happens…

  15. High Genetic Diversity • Transformation: • Uptake of foreign DNA from surroundings • Cell surface proteins recognize external DNA

  16. High Genetic Diversity • Transduction: • Horizontal gene transfer • DNA carried by bacteriophages (viruses)

  17. High Genetic Diversity • Conjugation: • Two cells joined by sex pilus • Mating bridge forms • Plasmid and chromosomal DNA can be transferred

  18. Roles in the Biosphere • Chemical recycling (decomposers) • Ecological interactions • Mutualism (N-fixing bacteria in root nodules) • Commensalism (e.g. 150 species live on your body surfaces  You provide food, they don’t harm) • Parasitism

  19. Impacts on Humans • Pathogenic bacteria • Cause about half of all human diseases • Produce poisons that cause illness • Exotoxins (secreted proteins) • Cholera • Botulism • Endotoxins (components of outer member; released when cell dies) • Salmonella

  20. Impacts on Humans – Not all bad!! • Research and Technology • Dairy industry (convert milk to cheese, yogurt) • Transgenic organisms  Genetic engineering • Bioremediation (removing pollutants from soil, water, air) • Used to make natural, biodegradable plastics • Produce hormones, antibiotics, vitamins

More Related