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Naming and classifying microorganisms lecture 3 General microbiology 231 1 Dr. Samah Noor • Naming Microorganisms (Binomial nomenclature) was established by Carolus LInnaeus- in 1735 • Purpose: provide a means of international reference • Each organism was assigned a Latin or Latinized genus name (capitalized) and specific epithet (species) (follows and not capitalized) • Even when derived from a proper noun such as the name of a person or place, both parts are italicized. • Thus the binomial name of the e. coli is now written as E. coli • Latin was used because it was the language used by scholars General microbiology 231 2 Dr. Samah Noor naming microbes • Taxonomy: is the science of classification and systematic arrangement of organisms into groups-taxa • Microbial systematics: is classifying, naming, and identifying • Taxonomy orderly arrangement of units into groups of larger groups of increasing inclusiveness • Nomenclature: naming of units characterized and delineated by classification • Objective: group organisms so as to reflect similarities and differences General microbiology 231 3 Dr. Samah Noor naming microbes • Binomial nomenclature is now governed by various internationally agreed codes of rules, • Rules for naming protozoa and parasitic worms are in the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. • Rules for naming fungi and algae are in the International Code of Botanica Nomenclature. • Rules for naming newly classified bacteria are established by the International Committee ON Systematics Of Prokaryocytes and published in the International Bacteriological Code. • They are then included in the standard of reference for bacteria, Bergey’s Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. • General microbiology 231 4 Dr. Samah Noor naming microbes • New laboratory techniques, involving analysis of DNA and RNA, have caused some bacteria to be reclassified. • Sometimes organisms which have been in separate genera are combined into one genus; other times organisms previously in the same genus are split out into separate genera. • Even if the genus name is changed, the species name usually remains the same. General microbiology 231 5 Dr. Samah Noor TAXONOMIC HIERARCHY • This is the complete list of taxa (classification groups) which are used to classify living organisms: Domain (this is the relatively new one) Kingdom Phylum Division (this one may be used in place of phylum in botany) Class Order Family Genus Species General microbiology 231 6 Dr. Samah Noor CLASSIFICATION OF PROKARYOCYTES • Bergey’s Manual, the standard for classification of prokarocytes. • Two domains, Bacteria and Archaea, are included. • The taxon Kingdom is not used, so then each domain is divided into phyla, based on similarities in rRNA. • Organisms continue to be divided into taxa that are more and more specific until, eventually reaching the species level. • In eukaryocytes, a species is defined as a group of closely related organisms that breed among themselves. A bacterial species is defined as a population of cells with similar characteristics. • Members of the species are VERY similar to each other, but all may not be totally identical. • Strains are identified by numbers, letters, or names that follow the species name. General microbiology 231 7 Dr. Samah Noor CLASSIFICATION OF EUKARYOCYTES DOMAIN: EUKARYA---contains 4 kingdoms • KINGDOM: PROTISTA---unicellular eukaryocytes except yeasts & molds • KINGDOM: FUNGI---unicellular yeasts, multicellular molds, macroscopic fungi--these all absorb organic matter through their plasma membranes • KINGDOM: PLANTAE---plants--macroscopic algae, flowering plants--all are multicellular, all carry on photosynthesis • KINGDOM: ANIMALIA---animals--sponges, worms, insects, vertebrates--all ingest nutrients General microbiology 231 8 Dr. Samah Noor CLASSIFICATION OF VIRUSES • Virus classification is a mess. • Viruses are not composed of cells, so there are arguments about whether they are even really alive. • Alive: They have either DNA or RNA, which must mean they are living • Not alive: No cellular structure • No metabolism and no reproduction until they invade a living cell • Do not have DNA and RNA both—living things have both • Viruses are described as obligate intracellular parasites. • A viral species is a population of viruses with similar characteristics that occupies a particular ecological niche. (The ecological niche of a virus is its host cell). There are two hypotheses on the origin of viruses: 1. They arose from strands of DNA similar to plasmids 2. They developed from degenerative cells that lost their ability to function independently General microbiology 231 9 Dr. Samah Noor