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INVADERS Chapter 24: Viruses Objectives: • Summarize the discovery of viruses • Describe why viruses are not considered living organisms • Describe the basic structure of viruses • Compare the lytic and lysogenic cycles of virus replication • Summarize the origin of viruses Virus -nonliving particle made of nucleic acid surrounded by a protein or lipoprotein coating - not made of cells, do not have cytoplasm, ribosomes, or mitochondria -Can replicate only by using host cell “machinery” Structure: Capsid - protein coat surrounding nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) Envelope – protective coating some viruses have. - made of lipids, proteins or carbohydrates. - usually has projections (attachment sites) which attach to the cell they will infect Classification criteria: Identification of nucleic acid: RNA or DNA 4 basic shapes – polyhedral - multifaceted geometric appearance mosaic (helical) – tightly coiled like a spring filovirus – no distinct shape; some thread-like binal – has two distinct regions; capsid and tail Host cells infected: Bacteria viruses (bacteriophages); Plant viruses; Animal viruses This is due to receptor site forming to specific proteins on cell wall or membrane Way they behave in the cell: DNA viruses make new RNA and make viral proteins RNA viruses invade and then make proteins Retroviruses contain enzyme (reverse transcriptase)to make DNA from RNA Lytic Cycle – followed when virus is virulent (active) 1. virus particle attaches to a host cell (ADSORPTION). 2. The particle injects its genetic instructions (DNA or RNA) into the host (ENTRY). 3. injected genetic material ‘hi-jacks’ the cell’s machinery and recruits the host’s enzymes. 4. enzymes make parts for the new virus particles (REPLICATION). 5. new particles assemble the parts into new viruses (ASSEMBLY). 6. Cell explodes (lyses) releasing new viruses which search for a new host cell (RELEASE). Lysogenic Cycle - followed when virus is in latent or temperate state The steps of the lysogenic cycle: 1) Viral nucleic acid enters cell 2) Viral nucleic acid attaches to host cell nucleic acid, creating a prophage 3) Host cell enzyme copies viral nucleic acid 4) Cell divides, and virus nucleic acid is in daughter cells 5) At any moment when the virus is "triggered", the viral nucleic acid detaches from the host cell's DNA and enters stage 2 of the lytic cycle. Common symptoms that appear to "trigger" the viral DNA are hormones, high stress levels (adrenaline), and free energy within the infected cell. Viral Diseases • Vector – intermediate host that transfers a pathogen or parasite to another organism – Ex: mosquitos, ticks, fleas. • Human viral diseases - chickenpox, shingles, viral hepatitis, AIDS, etc… • Protease inhibitors – drugs that block virus reproduction • Oncogenes – viral genes that cause cancer by messing with cell division checkpoints • Proto-oncogene – controls cell growth Prevention and Treatment Vaccine – weakened sample of virus or virus parts which triggers your body’s immune system Attenuated virus – weakened virus that cannot cause disease Inactivated virus – unable to replicate in host Natural immunity - antibodies are specialized proteins formed in B cells of immune system - antibodies block attachment sites of viruses http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/bioterror/vaccines.html Disease causing particles even smaller than viruses Viroids – short single strand of RNA without a capsid - interfere with cell processes and cause new viroids to be made - are found only in plants Prions - glycoprotein particle - able to reproduce in mammalian cells - Prion diseases: mad cow disease; Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease & kuru (degenerative nerve diseases of the brain) Genetic engineering Genetic engineers use viruses to carry desirable genes from one cell to another Improved agriculture – herbicide tolerant soybeans; rot resistant tomatoes; fast growing fish; meatier chickens Correcting genetic disorders - experimental; only done in animal with success; not allowed in humans Pest control – insert genes of plants that create chemical to resist insects into crop plants such as corn Manufacturing of medicine - human insulin & clotting factors 8 & 9 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/harvest/engineer/transgen.html Chapter 23: Bacteria Archaea and Bacteria Kingdom Archaebacteria – the most primitive organisms (archae = ancient) live in harsh conditions including - acidic hot springs - very salty water - environments with no oxygen - near undersea volcanic vents - different from other bacteria - cell wall composition (pseudomurien) - Cell membrane - rRNA Phyla 1: Methanogens: - obligate anaerobes (oxygen kills them) - metabolizes hydrogen gas and CO2 to methane gas - live in the bottom of swamps, sewage, and inside the digestive tracks of many animals Helps - grazing animals process cellulose - termites process wood - in industry to treat sewage, purify water. Phyla 2: Thermoacidiphiles - can live in extremely hot and acidic water or deep in the ocean near hydrothermal vents in the ocean floor - Ex: hot springs of Yellowstone Natl Park, ice of Iceland - chemotrophs = process sulfur compounds to produce energy Phyla 3: Halophiles: - live in extremely salty (saline) environments, ex: Dead Sea - use the salt to generate ATP. Phyla 4: Psychrophiles - live in temperatures below 15C - Found mostly in the Arctic and Antarctic oceans sea ice. Kingdom Eubacteria (Eu = true) “Germs” • Found almost every where on Earth • Characteristics: – peptidoglycan in cell wall – may have an outer covering of sticky sugars called glycocalyx that prevents cells from drying out Characteristics used for classifying: 1) Composition of the cell wall – identified with Gram staining technique Gram positive – stains purple – thick outer layer of peptidoglycan Gram negative – stains pink/red – lipid layer covering thin layer of peptidoglycan 2. Method of getting energy autotroph – chemotroph or phototroph heterotroph - free living or parasite saprophytes – break down other organisms into nutrients 3) Type of metabolism obligate aerobe – must have oxygen; dies without it obligate anaerobe – dies if exposed to oxygen; processes ATP by fermentation facultative anaerobe – uses oxygen when it can but doesn’t need it 4) Shape of bacterial cells round coccus (cocci) rod shaped bacillus (bacilli) spiral shaped spirillus 5) How cells grow (prefixes are added to coccus) a) staphylo – cells grow in clumps b) strepto - cells grow in chains c) diplo - cells grow in pairs 6) Motility – movement a) flagellated – move with flagellum or flagella b) slime layer allows gliding c) spirochete - cork-screw rotation Phyla groups: Gram positive - thick outer layer of peptidoglycan (stains purple) - may be beneficial or cause disease - may be used to make yogurt, pickles, and buttermilk - or to make medicines using biotechnology Ex. Strep throat ; staph infections; tuberculosis Phyla groups: Gram negative taxa A) Proteobacteria • may have symbiotic lifestyle • ex. Nitrogen fixing bacteria inside legumes (peas, beans, alfalfa, and clover) • In human and animal intestines, help break down foods (enteric bacteria) • Some in soil or fresh water and process iron and other minerals as an energy source (chemotrophs) B) Gram-positive bacteria - most are gram-positive - ex: botulism, Lactobacilli (yogurt), C) Cyanobacteria • Gram-negative • contain chlorophyll (but not chloroplasts), perform a plant-like photosynthesis releasing oxygen as a byproduct • Ex. Filamentous bacteria (grow in stagnant water) D) Spirochetes - gram negative - spiral shaped E) Chlamydia (no peptidoglycan) - gram negative - round shape - are parasites to animal cells Reproduction – 2 types Asexual - most common Binary fission – chromosome replicates cytoplasm, membrane and wall divide into two new cells Sexual – exchanges genetic info giving variation a) conjugation – two bacterial cells get side by side and hair-like “pili” connect to provide tube to pass info b) transformation – living bacterial cell absorbs dead related bacterial DNA and incorporates it into genome c) transduction – a virus transfers DNA from one bacterium to another Endospores - special dehydrated cells formed by some bacteria to survive bad living conditions - ex: high temperatures, harsh chemicals, radiation, lack of moisture - dormant as endospore - when conditions improve cell is revived - ex. Anthrax Bacteria and Disease Toxins – poisons produced by some bacteria 1) endotoxin - created inside the bacterial cell and released as the cell dies; usually Gram negative bacteria 2) exotoxin – secreted by living bacterial cell into surrounding environment (host); usually Gram-positive bacteria 3) enzymes – some bacteria secrete enzymes that break down the surrounding tissue and damage it Pathogens – bacteria that cause disease Antibiotics – chemicals that kill bacteria by interfering with cellular functions such as protein or cell wall synthesis Gram positive bacteria that cause disease need different antibiotics than Gram negative bacteria Broad spectrum antibiotics affect a wide variety of bacteria within the taxa Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria • most of the population dies, some survive • Survivors reproduce and are no longer affected by antibiotic • Occurs when antibiotics are overused or used improperly Vocabulary list for honors Taxonomy binomial nomenclature phylogeny Dichotomous key phylogenetic chart binary fission Virus capsid antibiotics Envelope lytic cycle endospore Lysogenic cycle vaccine conjugation Natural immunity morphology pathogen Viroids prions tranformation Methanogens thermoacidiphiles transduction Halophiles obligate aerobes saprophyte Obligate anaerobes facultative anaerobes endotoxin Chemotrophs phototrophs exotoxin Kingdom Protista Basic Characteristics: - eukaryotes - most are unicellular - most are heterotrophs - Habitats: aquatic habitats or moist soil Characteristics used for classification • energy – heterotrophic; autotrophic; saprophytic • cell number – unicellular or multicellular • Motility – ability to move and movement structures Reproduction Asexual (most common): - Binary fission (unicellular) - Multiple fission (divide into more than 2 cells) Sexual: - Conjugation (genetic information is swapped and stored in a 2nd nucleus) Protozoans – “animal-like” protists Characteristics: unicellular; heterotrophs Phlya Groups: Sarcodinians – feed and move with pseudopods (streaming cytoplasm) freshwater- amoebas; marine – forminiferans and radiolarians Ciliaphorans – feed and move using cilia (small whisker –like structures) Ex. Paramecium, stentor Zooflagellates (Sarcomastigophora) - move with one or more flagella - may be free-living or parasitic and cause disease - Ex. Trichonympha, trypanosoma, giardia Sporazoans (Apicomplexa) • • • • no motility structures all animal parasites spore-formers have complex life cycles with two or more host organisms – ex. Plasmodium Algae – “plant-like” protists Characteristics: unicellular or multicellular All are phototrophs with chloroplasts and pigments Unicellular phyla are grouped together under the heading phytoplankton Phlyum 1:Dinoflagellates • • • • Unicellular Marine some bioluminescent (light producing) some produce toxins (Gonyaulax) - “red tide” Euglenophytes (Euglenophyta) have two flagella no cell wall;cell membrane has flexible pellicle; all freshwater habitat; Ex. Euglena Diatoms (Bacillariophyta) have 2 sided cell walls made of silica (glass) that fit into each other like a petri dish; may have circular, triangular (mostly marine)or rectangular (mostly freshwater) body shapes Gold Algae (Chrysophyta) contain gold pigments(carotenoids) as well as chlorophyll; most unicellular but some species form colonies Green algae (Chlorophyta) contain chlorophyll a & b; have cell walls composed of cellulose;unicellular, colonial, and multicellular species; freshwater and marine habitats as well as moist land Ex. Ulva (sea lettuce), volvox, spirogyra Red algae ( Rhodophyta) contain red pigment as well as chlorophyll; most species tropical marine; all multicellular; may live in deep water habitats because red pigment helps absorb red lower energy light ex. seaweeds Brown algae (Phaeophyta) All cold water marine; all multicellular; include sargassum and kelp Slime Molds – “Fungi-like” protists Characteristics: all saprophytes; live in moist soil or moist organic matter plasmodial slime molds - 2 stage life cycle feeding stage – (plasmodium) very large digesting mass of cytoplasm that creeps along the decaying material reproducing stage (fruiting body) stalked structures that hold haploid spores which fuse when living conditions are good or stay dormant if living conditions are bad Cellular slime molds – 2 stages feeding – single haploid cells that creep along like an ameoba; pseudoplasmodium – matting of individual cells in a colony to share nutrients during bad living conditions; they eventually form fruiting bodies that produce more haploid spores which become individual organisms Water molds Grow in filaments called hyphae which break down organic matter Some are parasitic to animals like fish or plants like blight on potatoes Fungi Kingdom · Eukaryotes · Heterotrophic: - most saprophytes - some parasites · Most multicellular; one is unicellular · Most sessile Structure: • Cell walls made of chitin (tough, flexible carbohydrate) Multicellular fungi are made up of hyphae (small tubules filled with cytoplasm and nuclei) Hyphae form an interconnected mass called the mycelium and cytoplasm of all cells flow between the hyphae Hyphae may have walls called septa which still have holes for the cytoplasm to flow through Hyphae produce enzymes that are secreted into the environment and then nutrients are reabsorbed through hyphae Asexual Reproduction: 3 ways depending on structure • Multi-cellular –regeneration; (single celledmitosis & cell division) Budding - new organism forms from small piece of mycelium Asexual spore formation from fruiting bodies Spores spread by wind, water, animals (*most common) Sexual reproduction – positive and negative hyphae fuse together to form spores - is possible in the common molds, club fungi, and sac fungi only Classification: Classified by structures used for reproduction Group names are divisions not phyla (used to be classified as plants): Common molds Club fungi (Zygomycota) (Basidiomycota) Sac Fungi ( Ascomycota) Imperfect fungi (deuteronomycota) 1. Common molds (Zygomycota) No septa in hyphae Asexual reproduction - most common Sexual reproduction spores formed in sporangium Examples: bread mold, fruit molds 2 Club fungi (Basidiomycota) Reproduce sexually by producing spores in basidium Located in gills under the cap Examples: mushrooms, bracket fungi, shelf fungi, Puffballs 3. Sac Fungi ( Ascomycota) reproduce sexually by means of ascus, bulb like projections that form from the hyphae examples: yeasts, truffles, morels, powdery mildews 4. Imperfect fungi (Deuteronomycota) no sexual reproduction; asexual only examples: the fungus that cause ringworm, athete’s foot, nail infections Impact: environment - help to eat up or break down dead organisms symbiosis a) lichen live with cyanobacteria; fungus offers protection, cyanobacteria offer food b) plant growth – fungus grows on root tips of some plants; plants get benefit of all ready broken down nutrients as well as extra support; fungus get nutrition from plant human help as food sources, medicines (penicillin), food processing, genetic engineering of proteins disease destroy plants and trees property damage to wood structures human infection