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Chapter 23 Bacteria: The Low G + C Gram Positives 1 Low G + C Gram-Positive The phylum Firmicutes divided into 3 classes – Mollicutes – Clostridia – Bacilli 2 Figure 23.1 3 4 Class Mollicutes (The Mycoplasmas) • Lack cell walls and are pleomorphic – cannot synthesize peptidoglycan precursors • penicillin resistant – sterols may stabilize plasma membrane – most nonmotile; some have gliding motility – smallest bacteria capable of self-reproduction 5 Table 23.1 6 Figure 23.3 7 Growth of Mycoplasmas 8 Figure 23.4 9 More about Mycoplasma • Genomes – less than 1000 genes – one of the smallest found in procaryotes 10 Metabolism of Mycoplasmas • Chemoorganotrophs – some produce ATP by glycolysis and lactic acid fermentation – some catabolize amino acids and urea – some have functional pentose phosphate pathway – none have complete TCA cycle – deficient in a number of biosynthetic pathways 11 Important pathogens • Mycoplasma mycoides – bovine pleuropneumonia in cattle • Mycoplasma gallisepticum – chronic respiratory disease in chickens • Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae – pneumonia in swine • Mycoplasma pneumoniae – primary atypical pneumonia in humans • Ureaplasma urealyticum – premature birth, neonatal meningitis and pneumonia • spiroplasmas – pathogenic in insects, ticks, and a variety of plants 12 Bacillus and Clostridium • Production of endospores is a hallmark of the key genera Bacillus and Clostridium. • Gram-positive Bacteria are major agents for the degradation of organic matter in soil, and a few species are pathogenic. 13 Endospores • Have a complex structure containing a coat, cortex, and inner spore membrane surrounding the protoplast • Dipicolinic acid is present • Heat resistant • dormant and viable for long periods of time 14 Figure 23.6 15 Class Clostridia 16 Genus Clostridium • Fermentative metabolism – ferment amino acids using Stickland reaction • oxidation of one amino acid using another as electron acceptor 17 Important species of Clostridium • C. botulinum – food spoilage (especially canned foods); botulism • C. tetani – tetanus • C. perfringens – gas gangrene • C. acetobutylicum – manufacture of butanol 18 Figure 23.7 19 Figure 23.8 20 21 Class Bacilli • Large variety of gram-positive organisms • Contains two orders, Bacillales and Lactobacillales , 17 families and over 70 genera 22 Bacillus subtilis • Used as model organism for cellular differentiation, division and other processes • Its genome was one of first to be sequenced • has families of genes expanded by gene duplication • 10 integrated prophages or remnants of prophages • Various species produce antibiotics 23 Other important species of Bacillus • B. cereus – food poisoning • B. anthracis – anthrax • B. thuringiensis and B. sphaericus – used as insecticide – parasporal body – solid protein crystal that contains toxin 24 Figure 23.9 25 endospore parasporal body Figure 23.10 (a) 26 Genus Thermoactinomyces • Historically classified as actinomycete • More recently, phylogenetic analysis places it with low G+C microbes in order Bacillales, family Thermoactinomycetaceae • Commonly found in high temperature environments such as composts 27 Figure 23.11 28 FamilyStaphylococcaceae • Facultatively anaerobic, nonmotile, gram-positive cocci • Usually form irregular clusters • Normally associated with warm blooded animals in skin, skin glands and mucous membranes 29 Figure 23.13 30 Pathogenic Staphylococcus • Staphylococcus epidermidis – common skin resident – sometimes responsible for endocarditis and for infections of patients with lowered resistance • e.g., wound infections, surgical infections, and urinary tract infections 31 Antibiotic Resistant Staphylococci • Resistance to methicillin – Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) • obtained from genetic elements received from other organisms • Resistance to vancomycin, the “drug of last resort” 32 Staphylococcus aureus • Produces the virulence factor coagulase – causes blood plasma to clot • Produces a-hemolysin – toxin which lyses cells • major cause of food poisoning – recently >1,000 school children in Texas had staphylococcal food poisoning caused by eating improperly handled chicken • Found on nasal membranes and skin, and in gastrointestinal and urinary tracts 33 Order Lactobacillales • Also called lactic acid bacteria • Morphologically diverse – nonsporing – usually nonmotile • Ferment sugars for energy – lack cytochromes – fastidious • contains several important genera 34 Order Lactobacillales • Largest genus - Lactobacillus – grow optimally in slightly acidic conditions (pH 4.5 to 6.4) – carry out either homolactic fermentation (via glycolytic pathway) or heterolactic fermentation (via pentose phosphate pathway) 35 Genus Lactobacillus • Widely distributed in nature – on plant surfaces – in dairy products, meat, water, sewage, beer, fruits, and other materials – normal flora of mouth, intestinal tract, and vagina • usually not pathogenic 36 Figure 23.14 37 Importance of lactobacilli • Fermented vegetable products (sauerkraut, pickles, and silage) • Fermented beverages (beer, wine, juices) • Sour dough bread • Swiss cheese and other hard cheeses • yogurt • Sausages • spoilage of beer, milk, and meat 38 Streptococci • nonmotile • facultative and strict anaerobes • homolactic fermentation 39 Lancefield grouping system – based on polysaccharide and techoic acid antigens in cell wall or between cell wall and plasma membrane Table 23.5 a-hemolysis – incomplete lysis of red blood cells – seen as greenish zone around colony on blood agar b-hemolysis – complete lysis of red blood cells – seen as clear zone around colony on blood agar 40 Figure 23.17 41 Enterococci and lactococci 42 Figure 23.18 43 Important streptococci, enterococci, and lactococci • Streptococcus pyogenes – streptococcal sore throat, acute glomerulonephritis, and rheumatic fever • Streptococcus pneumoniae – lobar pneumonia and otitis media • Streptococcus mutans – dental caries • Enterococcus faecalis – opportunistic pathogen (urinary tract infections and endocarditis) • Lactococcus lactis – production of buttermilk and cheese 44