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Three Domains of Life Archaea – prokaryotes living in extreme habitats

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Presentation on theme: "Three Domains of Life Archaea – prokaryotes living in extreme habitats"— Presentation transcript:

1 Three Domains of Life Archaea – prokaryotes living in extreme habitats
Bacteria- Cyanobacteria and eubacteria Eukarya – Protozoans, fungi, plants, & animals

2 Structure and Function
Eubacteria Structure and Function

3 Prokaryotic & Eukaryotic Cells

4

5 Characteristics of Bacteria

6 Bacterial Structure Microscopic prokaryotes
No nucleus or membrane-bound organelles Contain ribosomes Single, circular chromosome in nucleoid region

7 Bacterial Cell

8 Protection Cell Wall made of Peptidoglycan
May have a sticky coating called the Capsule for attachment to host or other bacteria

9 Characteristics Unicellular
Most are heterotrophic (can’t make their own food) May be aerobic or anaerobic Identified by Gram staining

10 Gram Staining Developed in 1884 by Hans Gram
Bacteria treated with purple Crystal Violet & red Safranin stains Cell walls either stain purple or reddish pink

11 Gram Positive Have thick layer of peptidoglycan (protein-sugar complex) Single lipid layer Stain purple Can be treated with antibiotics

12 Gram Positive Bacteria
Lactobacilli (makes yogurt & buttermilk) Actinomycetes (make antibiotics) Clostridium (lockjaw bacteria) Streptococcus (strep throat) Staphylococcus (staph infections)

13 Gram Negative Bacteria
Thin layer of peptidoglycan in cell wall Extra thick layer of lipids Stain pink or reddish Hard to treat with antibiotics Some photosynthetic but make sulfur not oxygen Some fix nitrogen for plants

14 Gram Negative Rhizobacteria grow in root nodules of legumes (soybeans, peanuts) Fix N2 from air into usable ammonia

15 Gram Negative Rickettsiae are parasitic bacteria carried by ticks
Cause Lyme disease & Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

16 Flagella Bacteria that are motile have appendages called flagella
A bacteria can have one or many flagella

17 Monotrichous Lophotrichous Amphitrichous Peritrichous

18 Pili Short protein appendages Smaller than flagella
Adhere bacteria to surfaces Used in conjugation for Exchange of genetic information Aid Flotation by increasing buoyancy

19 Pili in Conjugation

20 Bacterial Shapes

21 Shapes Are Used to Classify
Bacillus: Rod shaped Coccus: Spherical (round) Vibrio: Comma shaped with flagella Spirillum: Spiral shape

22 Grouping of Bacteria Diplo- Groups of two Strepto- chains
Staphylo- Grapelike clusters

23

24

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26 Diplococcus

27 Streptococcus Causes Strep Throat

28 Staphylococcus

29 Bacillus - E. coli

30 Streptobacilli

31 Spirillum

32 Helpful & Harmful Some cause disease
Many act as decomposers recycling nutrients Used as a host to make medicines Some cause disease

33 Useful Bacteria Some bacteria can degrade oil
Used to clean up oil spills

34 Useful Bacteria Other uses for bacteria include making yogurt, cheese, and buttermilk.

35 Staphylococcus Bacterial

36 Reproduction Bacteria reproduce asexually by binary fission
Single chromosome replicates & then cell divides Rapid All new cells identical (clones)

37 Binary Fission E. coli

38 Reproduction Bacteria reproduce sexually by Conjugation
Form a tube between 2 bacteria to exchange genetic material Held together by pili New cells NOT identical

39 Conjugation

40 Spore Formation Form endospore whenever when habitat conditions become harsh (little food) Able to survive for long periods of time as endosperm Difficult to destroy (heat resistant)

41 Mutations Genetic change in bacteria May become antibiotic resistant

42 Identifing Bacteria Use the dichotomous key to identify 11 different colonies of bacteria.


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