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
BE101 Introduction to Biological Systems Dr. Michael Parkinson Lecture Structure • Lectures in QG15 & QG13 each week. • A round up of points and coverage of examination type questions on Monday evening @ 5:00 in QG15 • These overheads are available to view as powerpoint presentations at: webpages.dcu.ie/~parkinsm/teaching.htm • Any standard Biology text will do for reading around e.g. Mader Biology (all at 570 in the library). Schedule of topics • • • • • • • Evolution of eukaryotes and protists Fungi Plant Evolution Plant reproduction Plant Structure Plant growth and development Photosynthesis The origins of eukaryotic diversity Dr Michael Parkinson School of Biotechnology What I’m going to cover in this lecture • The origin of Eukaryotes • The classification of Protists • 3 of the more primitive groups of Protists – Archezoa – Euglenozoa – Alveolates 3 things that you should watch for in this lecture • The way that eukaryotes have evolved from primitive ancestors • The way that the organisms are classified and the factors that affect their classification • The ways that protists can affect public health Evolution of eukaryotes by serial endosymbiosis • Nuclear membrane and endoplasmic reticulum formed from invagination of plasma membrane akin to phagocytosis • Inclusion of organelles from phagocytosis of aerobic bacterium / cyanobacterium • The origin of microtubule structures (flagellae, cilia, cytoskeleton) is unknown 1. Nucleus formation Phagocytosis is a very common phenomenon in Protists. Invagination of the plasma-membrane is expected to give rise to: a double membrane covering around the nucleus, a system of membranes within the cell continuous with the nucleus and the plasma membrane. 2. Origin of organelles c.f. Forams Phagocytosis of an aerobic bacterium c.f. Archezoa Phagocytosis of cyanobacterium Heterotrophic eukaryote Photoautotrophic eukaryote Features of ‘Protists’ • All eukaryotes • Mostly unicellular • ‘Primitive’ and thought to have diverged early from a ‘universal ancestor’ • Very diverse Types of ‘Protist’ Archezoa Euglenozoa e.g Giardia Rhodophyta Plantae Alveolata Dinoflagellates Euglenoids Ciliates Kinetoplastids Red Algae Green Algae Apicomplexans (sporozoans) Stramenopila = Diatoms+Golden Algae+Brown algae+Water moulds Evolutionary relations • For many years, all organisms that did not conveniently fit into other groups were placed into the ‘Protists’. • Classification is in a very active and dynamic state. • Recently, molecular phylogeny based on similarity in DNA + electron microscopy has led to reclassification to give MONOPHYLETIC groups - organisms are grouped if they have a common ancestor. Summary of evolutionary relations Animals Fungi Plants Green algae Red algae Stramenopila Distance apart Alveolates Euglenozoa Archezoa time ARCHEZOA (from Greek Arkhaios meaning ancient) • Considered to be the most primitive of all eukaryotes • No mitochondria (some engulf bacteria) • Mostly parasitic (e.g. Giardia) • 3 Sub-groups – Diplomonads (includes Giardia) – Trichomonads (e.g. Trichomonas) – Microsporidians Giardia • An important parasite • Transmitted by both water and animals • Probably the most important source of holiday diarrhea Trichomonas • An STD EUGLENOZOA • Flagellates • 2 sub-groups – euglenoids Photosynthetic but may be heterotrophic or mixotrophic – Kinetoplastids Symbiotic or parasitic e.g. Trypanosoma, Leishmania Trypanosoma • Causes sleeping sickness in cattle and man in Africa transmitted by the Tsetse Fly • In Americas, Chagas disease Chagas disease / Sleeping Sickness Leishmania • The life cycles of members of the genus involve a vertebrate host (e.g., the human) and a vector (a sand fly) that transmits the parasite between vertebrate hosts Cutaneous Leishmaniasis ALVEOLATA • All have small membrane bound cavities (Alveoli) beneath the cell surface. • • • • 3 subgroups Ciliates Apicomplexans Dinoflagellates Ciliates • All have cilia for locomotion and feeding • Reproduce by binary fission Trichodina sp. • This genus contains many species, perhaps as many as 200, most of which are found as commensals or facultative or obligate parasites on aquatic invertebrates, fish, • and amphibians. Apicomplexans (Sporozoa) • All parasites of animals • All have a complex at the apex of the cell for penetrating host tissues (Apicomplex) • ‘Relict’ plastids possibly related to dinoflagellates with 4 bounding membranes • Plasmodium falciparum • Pneumocystis carinii (Pneumonia) • Toxoplasma gondii (toxoplasmosis) • Cryptosporidium parvum (cryptosporidosis) Apicoplast (plastid of Apicomplexan) • 4 membranes • Genome of circular plasmid • Smallest genome of any plastid (35kb) • Codes for a number of genes • Provides a means of attacking the parasite Malaria - Plasmodium/mosquito Malaria - infection with an Apicomplexan, Plasmodium Dinoflagellates • Abundant components of the phytoplankton • Blooms cause red tides in coastal waters • Can be an important symbiont in coral reefs