Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The First Single-Celled Creatures Chapter 13 Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Outline • • • • • Structure of Bacteria Bacterial Reproduction Bacterial Metabolism Bacterial Lifestyles Viruses Structure Reproductive Cycles HIV Disease Viruses Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies The Simplest Organisms • Bacteria have been plentiful on earth for over 3.5 billion years. For at least 2 billion years, bacteria were the only organisms that existed. - Play key role is material recycling. - Photosynthetic bacteria were partly responsible for introduction of oxygen into earth’s atmosphere. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Structure of Bacterium • • Small, simply organized, single cells lacking an organized nucleus. Rod shaped (bacilli) Spherical (cocci) Spirally coiled (spirilla) Classified by presence / absence of lipid polysaccharide membrane. Gram-positive (no outer membrane) Gram-negative (possess outer membrane) Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Structure of Bacteria • Many bacteria possess threadlike flagella to aid in movement. Shorter outgrowths (pili) act as docking cables and help in attachment. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Bacterial Reproduction • Binary Fission - individual cell increases in size and divides in two. Some bacteria can pass plasmids from one cell to another (conjugation). Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Comparing Bacteria to Eukaryotes • Bacterial Metabolism Autotrophs - Obtain energy from inorganic carbon dioxide. Heterotrophs - Obtain carbon from organic molecules such as glucose. Photoautotrophs - Use sunlight to build organic molecules from carbon dioxide. Chemoautotrophs - Obtain energy by oxidizing inorganic substances. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Bacterial Metabolism Photoheterotrophs - Use light as source of energy but obtain carbon from organic materials. Chemoheterotrophs - Obtain both carbon and energy from organic molecules. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Importance of Bacteria • • • Material Recycling Carbon Nitrogen Genetic Engineering Diseases Anthrax Plague Pneumonia Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Kinds of Bacteria • • Over 4,800 named species of bacteria. Separated into archaebacteria and eubacteria kingdoms. Differ in fundamental ways: - Cell walls - Plasma membrane - Gene translation machinery - Gene architecture Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Bacterial Lifestyles • • Archaebacteria Methanogens - Use hydrogen gas to to reduce carbon dioxide to methane. Thermoacidophiles - Occupy hot, acidic habitats. Eubacteria (Most common) Hetrotrophic and Photosynthetic - Cyanobacteria (photosynthetic) Heterocysts - nitrogen-fixing cells Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Discovery of Viruses • Viruses are parasitic segments of DNA or RNA wrapped in a protein coat. Non-living and can only reproduce in cells. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Structure of Viruses • • • Capsid - Protein sheath around nucleic acid core. Envelope - membrane-like structure surrounding capsid. Bacteriophages - Bacterial viruses. Very complex Animal and Plant Viruses Helical - Rod-shaped Isometric - Spherical Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Bacterial Structure Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Bacteriophages Enter Cells • Lytic Cycle Tail fiber contacts lipoproteins of host bacterial cell wall. Head contents injected into host cytoplasm. Viruses multiply within infected cell. Rupture cell wall and spread to other cells. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Bacteriophages Enter Cells • Lysogenic Cycle Integrate nucleic acid into genome of infected host cell. - Prophage May later exit genome and initiate virus replication. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Lytic and Lysogenic Cycles Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Animal Viruses Enter Cells • Human Immunodeficiency Virus Clinical symptoms of AIDS do not begin to develop until generally eight to ten years after infection with HIV. Attachment - Virus circulates throughout entire body but will only infect certain cells (macrophages). Uptake and recycle organic debris. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Human Immunodeficiency Virus • Gp120 protein spikes found on HIV surface. When gp120 contacts cell surface marker matching its shape, it adheres to the cell and infects it. - Fits CD4 marker on macrophages. After docking onto CD4, HIV requires second receptor protein CCR5 to pull itself across plasma membrane. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Human Immunodeficiency Virus • Once inside macrophage, HIV sheds protective coat, releasing RNA. Reverse transcriptase enzyme binds to tip of viral RNA and synthesizes DNA matching contaminating viral RNA. - Produces many new mutations. Eventually, HIV alters gene for gp120 and causes it to produce a new form that binds to CXCR4 receptors on T cells. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies HIV Infection Cycle Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Disease Viruses • Influenza RNA animal viruses - Types A ,B and C Subtypes - Differ in protein spikes. - hemagglutinin - neuraminidase Readily re-assorted by genetic recombination. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Disease Viruses • Smallpox Caused by inhaling variola virus. - Characteristic fever and skin rash symptoms appear after about 12 days. 15 million cases worldwide in 1967. Still exists in two high-security laboratories. Bioterrorist threat ? Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Disease Viruses • Emerging Viruses - Originate in one organism and pass to another. Represent considerable threat in age of rapid transportation. - Filamentous viruses attacking human connective tissue. Ebola. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Prions and Viroids • • • Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE’s) are fatal brain disease causing small cavities as neurons die producing marked spongy appearance. Mad Cow Creutzfeldt-Jakob Caused by protein “proteinaceous infectious particle.” Viroids - naked molecules of RNA important infectious disease agents in plants. Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Review • • • • • Structure of Bacteria Bacterial Reproduction Bacterial Metabolism Bacterial Lifestyles Viruses Structure Reproductive Cycles HIV Disease Viruses Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies