Bacterial Identification and Classification. How would you classify humans or a protist (protozoa) But this system doesn’t work for bacteria.

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Presentation transcript:

Bacterial Identification and Classification

How would you classify humans or a protist (protozoa) But this system doesn’t work for bacteria

4 Methods in bacterial identification 1.Microscopic morphology - Gram Staining, Shapes, arrangements, motility 2.Macroscopic morphology – colony appearance, motility 3.Physiological / biochemical characteristics – aerobic, anaerobic, photosynthetic, growth on selective media 4.Chemical analysis – e.g.peptides and lipids in cell membranes 5.Phage Typing – which phage infects the bacterium 6.Serological analysis – what antibodies are produced against the bacterium 7.Pathogenicity – what diseases does the bacterium cause. 8.Genetic & molecular analysis G + C base composition DNA analysis using genetic probes Nucleic acid sequencing & rRNA analysis

5 Methods for identifying bacteria and establish relationships between them Pg to 1.24 Lecture notes a.Molecular Approach 1.Via Genome i.DNA Homology ii.DNA hybridization iii.Biologic hybridization iv.Nucleotide Sequencing 2.Protein similarity 3.Phage Typing 4.Serology 5.Pathogenicity b.Diagnostic Approach c.Classification Schemes

6 Major Taxonomic Groups of Bacteria per Bergey’s manual Mendosicutes – Archaea - primitive prokaryotes with unusual cell walls & nutritional habits Eubateria – All true bacteria –Gracilicutes – gram-negative cell walls, thin-skinned –Firmicutes – gram-positive cell walls, thick skinned –Tenericutes – lack a cell wall & are soft For details on classification beyond this point, refer to your Microbiology Lecture Notes

7 species –a collection of bacterial cells which share an overall similar pattern of traits in contrast to other bacteria whose pattern differs significantly strain or variety – a culture derived from a single parent that differs in structure or metabolism from other cultures of that species (biovars, morphovars) type – a subspecies that can show differences in antigenic makeup (serotype or serovar), susceptibility to bacterial viruses (phage type) and in pathogenicity (pathotype).

Table 4.7

Table 4.6a

Table 4.6b

Procaryotes with unusual characteristics

12 Rickettsias very tiny, gram-negative bacteria most are pathogens that alternate between mammals and fleas, lice or ticks obligate intracellular pathogens cannot survive or multiply outside of a host cell cannot carry out metabolism on their own Rickettsia rickettisii – Rocky Mountain spotted fever Rickettsia prowazekii – epidemic typhus Coxiella burnetti – Q fever

13 Chlamydias tiny obligate intracellular parasites not transmitted by arthropods Chlamydia trachomatis – severe eye infection and one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases Chlamydia psittaci – ornithosis, parrot fever Chlamydia pneumoniae – lung infections

14 Mycoplasmas Smallest free living bacteria naturally lack a cell wall stabilized by sterols, resistant to lysis extremely small range in shape from filamentous to coccus or doughnut shaped Mycoplasma pneumoniae – atypical pneumonia in humans

15 Free-living nonpathogenic bacteria Photosynthetic bacteria –Cyanobacteria –Green & purple sulfur bacteria Gliding, fruiting bacteria Appendaged bacteria –produce an extended process of the cell wall in form of a bud, stalk or long thread

16 Archaea: the other procaryotes constitute third Domain Archaea seem more closely related to Domain Eukarya than to bacteria contain unique genetic sequences in their rRNA have unique membrane lipids & cell wall construction live in the most extreme habitats in nature, extremophiles adapted to heat salt acid pH, pressure & atmosphere includes: methane producers, hyperthermophiles, extreme halophiles, and sulfur reducers