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B a c t e r i a.

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Presentation on theme: "B a c t e r i a."— Presentation transcript:

1 B a c t e r i a

2 Characteristics Bacteria are smallest living organisms
Bacteria consist of a single cell Bacteria are nearly 3.5 billion years old. They are among the earliest forms of life that appeared on Earth.

3 Bacterial Cell Bacterial cells are prokaryotic – they have
no nucleus or other membrane-bound organelles Bacterial cells have a single chromosome – a circular DNA molecule Bacterial cells have a cell wall Most bacteria reproduce by binary fission

4 Classification Bacteria fall into a category of life called the Prokaryotes. Prokaryotes' genetic material, or DNA, is not enclosed in a cellular compartment called the nucleus. Bacteria and archaea are the only prokaryotes. All other life forms are Eukaryotes, creatures whose cells have nuclei.

5 What they look like? There are thousands of species of bacteria, but all of them are basically one of three different shapes. 3. Spirilla are helical or spiral in shape Cocci are shaped like little balls 2. Bacilli are rod- or stick-shaped

6 What they eat? Autotrophs
photosynthetic bacteria can make their own food from carbon dioxide using sunlight, just like plants. chemosynthetic bacteria produce their own organic compounds from inorganic substances such as iron or sulfur. Heterotrophs needs organic substances that have already been assembled by autotrophs.

7 Where they live? Bacteria live just about everywhere: in the soil, water and air; in animals, plants, rocks and even in us! Bacteria from boiling water of hot springs in Yellowstone National Park Bacteria on our teeth

8 Spores Spore (or endospore) is a dormant cell. It has a tough shell that insulates and protects the genes and basic cell parts. Spores are resistant to heat and cannot be readily destroyed, even by boiling. In 2000, scientists revived bacteria that had lain in suspended animation for 250 million years.

9 Role of bacteria Negative: Bacteria can cause illnesses: Diarrhea
Lyme disease Botulism Leprosy How can you protect yourself and others from contamination by pathogenic bacteria? Wash up!

10 Role of bacteria, cont. Positive:
There are many important jobs bacteria do. They are used to make medicine. They break down oil from oil spills. They make about half of the oxygen we breath. They are the foundation of the food chain that feeds all life on earth

11 Our Friends Bacteria do many good thins for us:
Escherichia coli: one of many kinds of microbes that live in your gut. Wanted for helping you digest your food every day. Pseudomonas putida: one of many microbes wanted for cleaning wastes from sewage water at water treatment plants. Lactobacillus acidophilus: one of the bacteria gang wanted for turning milk into yogurt. Streptomyces: soil bacteria wanted for making streptomycin, an antibiotic used to treat infections.

12 Questions What kind of medication are antibiotics?
Why it is necessary to boil water before drinking? Why hospitals sterilize instruments in autoclaves? Escherichia coli is a normal resident of the mammalian gut. What is its role? Can bacteria sense and move? What are the cell shapes of Lactobacillus, Staphylococcus, Spirochaeta?

13 Answer 1 Antibiotics fight diseases that are caused by bacteria.
Bacteria are constantly changing and developing antibiotic-resistant strains. We need new antibiotics that can fight resistant strains of bacteria.

14 Answer 2 Drinking-water may be contaminated by a range of microbes that may pose risks to health 1.8 million people die every year from diarrheal diseases (including cholera); 90% are children under 5, mostly in developing countries. High temperature kills the majority of pathogenic bacteria

15 Answer 3 Boiling temperature is not enough to kill bacteria spores.
An autoclave is designed to produce temperatures and pressures that will completely sterilize objects.

16 Answer 4 E.coli : enhances digestion
Impedes colonization of the gut by a variety of pathogens Can cause diarrhea (E.coli is the leading cause of infant mortality for most of the human population)

17 Answer 5 Bacteria sense light, detect the presence of oxygen and other chemical compounds. Magnetotactic bacteria have a chain of magnetite particles in their cytoplasm that serves as a tiny compass. Some bacteria move about their environment by means of long, whip-like structures called flagella.

18 Answer 6 Lactobacillus Staphylococcus Spirochaeta

19 Interesting facts about bacteria
Bacteria can live in temperatures above the boiling point and in cold that would freeze your blood. There's even a species of bacteria—Deinococcus radiodurans—that can withstand blasts of radiation 1,000 times greater than would kill a human being. They "eat" everything from sugar and starch to sunlight, sulfur and iron.

20 Biggest Bacterium The colossus among bacteria is a single-celled giant that lives in the ocean and is named Thiomargarita namibiensis , which means "sulfur pearl of Namibia." It was found in the ocean floor off the coast of Namibia in Africa. T. namibiensis’s ball-shaped cells can grow to almost 1 millimeter or 1/25th of an inch in diameter. That’s about as big as the period at the end of a sentence.

21 Millions of them… Your body is home to trillions of microbes. Run your tongue over your teeth—you're licking thousands of microbes that normally live on your teeth. Millions of them live on your tongue, too. A large part of "you" (that is, the mass of your body) is actually something else: bacteria, viruses and fungi. Isn't that a weird thought? A single teaspoon of that soil contains over 1,000,000,000 bacteria,

22 Bacteria on Mars? Some scientists even believe there is the possibility bacteria may have once lived on Mars. This photograph shows what some scientists believe may be the fossils of tiny bacteria in a rock that formed on Mars about 4.5 billion years ago.

23 Find more interesting facts about bacteria


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