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Chapter 13: Prokaryotes and Viruses Prokaryotes • Oldest organisms on Earth • The most dominant and successful forms of life • Great metabolic diversity and rapid rate of growth • Escherichia coli double in size every 20 min. Prokaryotes • • • • Occur in icy areas of Antarctica Dark depths of the ocean Near-boiling waters of hot springs Can survive without free oxygen What is the basic structure of a prokaryotic cell? • Lack an organized nucleus • Plasma membrane and cell wall • Nucleiod region- Singular circular or continuous DNA molecule (non-histone protien) • May contain smaller extrachromosomal pies of circular DNA – plasmids • Ribosomes and inclusions • Cynobacteria is an exception contains many thylakoids (structure found in chloroplast responsible for photosynthesis) A filamentous actinomycete Streptomyces scabies Bacterium found in soil causes potato scab disease Thermophilic prokaryotesaerial view of a Hot spring Yellowstone National Park Wyoming Halophiles- salt loving Archaea Extreme thermophiles- archaea YNP HS rich Bacterial effects on Plants Flagella on Pseudomonas marginalis- soil bacterium Causes soft rot disease found in fleshy vegetables Three major forms of prokaryotes Bacilli- rod shaped bacterium Cocci- sphere shape Spirilla- long curved or spiral rods Bacillus-Clostridium botulinum- deadly food poisoning Bacillus can form Endospores • Certain species of Bacteria (Bacillus and Clostridium) can form endospores • Endospores- dormant bacterial cells when food supply is low, resist heat, radiation, chemicals, • Protoplast is dehydrated • Can remain viable for many years • Viable endospore obtained from a 25-40 million year old Extinct Bee gut Mature Endospore- Bacillus Megaterium Cocci- Micrococcus luteus- and others that cause Milk to sour and oxidizes ammonia to nitrites Spirilla- Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum Another form of BacteriaSlime Bacteria Fruiting body of myxobacterium (Chrondomyces crocatus) A gliding bacterium produces fruiting Bodies, each containing 1 million Cells (Slime Bacteria). Reproduction and Gene Exchange • Most prokaryotes reproduce by simple cell division called Binary Fission • Produce ‘clones’ Slime bacteria - Psuedonomonas • Pseudomonas corrugata • Pith Necrosis of Tomato Binary fission Cell division in a bacterium Mutation does occur and are responsible for evolutionary adaptability Adaptability of Bacteria • Provided by the genetic recombinations that take place in conjugation, transformation, and transduction Conjugation • The prokaryotic version of sex • Donor cell produces a ‘pilus’ and comes in contact with the recipient cell Pilus Donor cell Recipient cell Metabolic Diversity • Some Prokaryotes are autotrophs- self feeding – Photosythetic Sunlight (Energy)+ 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 – Chemosythetic (chemolithotroph) 6{CO2}+6{H2O}+3{H2S} C6H12O6+3{H2SO4} Beggiatoa gigantea sewage Filamentous sulfur oxidizing bacteria Heterotrophs • Most are Heterotrophs- require organic compounds • Vast majority are the saprophytes (saprosrotten) obtain from dead material • Saprophytic bacteria and fungi responsible for decomposition Prokaryotes world ecosystem • Fixing nitrogen- incorporating nitrogen gas into nitrogen compounds • Autotrophic bacteria major contributor to global carbon balance (more than 90% other than that associated with human activity comes from bacteria and fungi) • Decomposers (natural and toxins)patroleum, pesticides, mercury, and dyes- Prokaryotes cause disease • Both animal and plants • Humans (TB, cholera, anthrax, gonorrhea, botulism, syphilis, tetanus, ulcers) Prokaryotes used commercially Antibiotics Amino acids Dairy products Cyanobacteria • • • Important in Carbon and nitrogen cycles Photosynthetic cyanobacteria have chlorophyll a, carotenoids and phycobilins. Important lineage of bacteria and eukaryotic cells Hotsprings Yellowstone Limestone Cyanobacteria Cyanobacteria electron micrograph Cyanobacteria Genera Oscillatoria Cyanobacteria Genera Calothrix Cyanobacteria Genera Nostoc commune Stromatolites- flourishing colonies of cyanobacteria Bind calcium carbonate into domed structures Plankton • Cells of cyanobacteria living in freshwater or marine habitats • Plankton commonly contain bright irregularly shaped structures – gas vesicles • Gas vesicles provide bouancy • When not able to regulate they float and form mass “blooms” • Red sea- Trichodesmium Nitrogen fixation • Some cyanobacteria can fix nitrogen converting nitrogen gas to ammonium • A form which the nitrogen is available for biological reactions • Occurs in Heterocyst-specialized enlarged cells Heterocyst Filament of anabaena Filament of Anabaena with heterocyst Rice Planting Malaysia- Anabaena allow for continuous Growing w/o fertilizer Spiroplasmas- motile bacteria that cause corn stunt disease And stubborn disease Mycoplasmiclike organism devestated a grove of Coconut palms Mycoplasmalike Organisms- slow weakening General life cycle of a virus Two stages 1. Replication inside host 2. Spread to new host Tobacco Mosaic Virus Streaked flowers of Rembrant tulips Viral infection eventually weakens plant Wound tumor virus Tumor produced in sweet clover Electron Microscope Tumor virus particles