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Diversity of Living Things 2.1 – Eubacteria and Archaea.

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Presentation on theme: "Diversity of Living Things 2.1 – Eubacteria and Archaea."— Presentation transcript:

1 Diversity of Living Things 2.1 – Eubacteria and Archaea

2 Characteristics of All Bacteria Prokaryotic and single-celled No membrane-bound organelles Contain 1 chromosome Reproduce asexually by binary fission

3 CharacteristicProkaryoticEukaryotic Meaning of namePro means before Karyon means nucleus Eu means true Karyon means nucleus KingdomsBacteria, ArchaeaAnimalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista SizeSmall (1-10 micrometre)Large (100-1000 micrometre) ComplexityLess complex (mostly unicellular) More complex (mostly multicellular) Structure of cell membraneNo nuclear membraneNuclear membrane present DNA structureCircular (usually one chromosome) Not circular (more than one chromosome) OrganellesUsually absentPresent ReproductionUsually asexual reproduction Usually sexual reproduction Oxygen requirementAnaerobicAerobic

4 Importance of prokaryotes Disease-causing bacteria (called pathogens) are responsible for many human diseases such as tuberculosis, strep throat, cholera and leprosy Ecological role: many are decomposers or producers Live in animals’ intestine and aid in digestion (in humans, they produce vitamin K and B 12 ) Commercial uses: production of cheese, yogourt, soy sauce, chocolate and antibiotics Genetic engineers have used bacteria to produce insulin and human growth hormone

5 Eubacteria Have lived on Earth for more than 3.5 billion years There are 6 important groups. See Table 1 on p. 48 for key features. Three of these major groups are photosynthetic, proteobacteria and green bacteria photosynthesize differently from plants

6 Characteristics of bacteria Structure Contain 1 chromosome in form of loop in area called nucleoid (some bacteria also have one or more small loops of DNA called plasmids ) Have one or more flagella for movement and small hair-like structures called pili See Figure 6 on p. 48 http://kconline.kaskaskia.edu/bcambron/Biology%20117/Cell s_files/image002.jpg http://home.biotec.or.th/NewsCenter/my_documents/my_pictures/F7AFD_plasmid. jpg

7 Characteristics of bacteria Structure (cont’d) Cell walls contain peptidoglycan which give it strength Some surrounded by capsule which provides protection

8 Characteristics of bacteria Shape: – coccus (pl. cocci) = round – bacillus (pl. bacilli) = rod-shaped – spirillum (pl. spirilla)= spiral http://shorewoodscience.com/images/bacteria_shapes.gif

9 Characteristics of bacteria Clusters (groupings) - Diplo- (pairs) - Staphylo – (grape cluster) - Strepto – (linear chain) See Figure 7 on p. 49

10 Characteristics of bacteria Metabolism - Some autotrophic (via photosynthesis or chemosynthesis), some heterotrophic Respiration - Some obligate aerobes (can’t live without oxygen); some facultative aerobes (can live with or without oxygen); some obligate anaerobes (can’t live with oxygen)

11 Characteristics of bacteria Reproduction - Binary fission (asexual reproduction) - In most cases, daughter cells are genetically identical to parent cell - Mutations occur occasionally (1000 times as much as eukaryotic gene) which creates genetically different offspring -Conjugation (sexual reproduction) - two cells join to exchange genetic information - copy of a plasmid is passed to another bacterium through a hollow pilus

12 Conjugation http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0a/Bacterial_Conjugation_en.png

13 Characteristics of bacteria Reproduction cont’d - Transformation - when bacteria takes in and uses pieces of DNA from its environment (if DNA came from other species, called horizontal gene transfer) http://www.bio.davidson.edu/Courses/Molbio/MolStudents/spring2003/Siegenthaler/fig2.gif

14 Characteristics of bacteria Ability to survive: Endospores - Highly resistant structure which forms around nucleus during unfavourable environmental conditions http://www.apsnet.org/edcenter/illglossary/Pages/E-H.aspx

15 Bacterial Diseases Cause many diseases (range in severity of symptoms similar to viral diseases) – Ex. Cholera, diptheria, lyme disease, pertussis, tetanus, botulism Some cause disease by producing and releasing toxins (ex. Botulism) Some contain toxins that aren’t released until cell dies (ex. E. coli water contamination) See Table 2 on p. 51

16 Antibiotics and Antibiotic Resistance Antibiotics are substances used to destroy bacteria Antibiotic resistance is caused when antibiotics are overused or used improperly http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f6/Antibiotic_resistance.svg/300px-Antibiotic_resistance.svg.png

17 Archaebacteria Live in extreme environments, most without oxygen Cell structure is very resistant to physical and chemical disruption Not very well understood yet http://facstaff.uww.edu/wentzl/blacksmoker.jpg

18 Archaebacteria (cont’d) 4 major groups: – Methanogens – Halophiles – Extreme thermophiles – Psychrophiles

19 Archaebacteria (cont’d) Methanogens -produce methane -live in low-oxygen environments: swamps, marshes, digestive tracts of mammals

20 Archaebacteria (cont’d) Halophiles -live in extremely salty environments

21 Archaebacteria (cont’d) Thermophiles -live in extreme heat, 70 to 95 degree Celsius

22 Archaebacteria (cont’d) Psychrophiles -live in extreme cold, -10 to -20 degree Celsius


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