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Prokaryotes and Viruses

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Presentation on theme: "Prokaryotes and Viruses"— Presentation transcript:

1 Prokaryotes and Viruses
Biology I

2 16.1 Prokaryotic life began on a young Earth
Stromatolites= Ancient fossils found in dome-shaped rocks Used as evidence bacteria were present 3.5 billion years ago.

3 How did life begin? Origin of small molecules
1953 Stanley Miller, simulated conditions on early Earth Formation of Organic Polymers How did polymers form? Heat and clay help bind organic monomers together Lightening was energy source

4 Formation Cont. What was the original process of inheritance?
RNA, short strands could replicate without the use of enzymes Formation of Pre-Cells Early organic materials and RNA became encased in membranes

5 Supports 4 stage process:
First, small organic molecules, such as amino acids and nucleotides Second, these small molecules joined together into larger ones such as proteins and nucleic acids. Third, molecules that could copy themselves provided a basis for the inheritance of molecular information. In the last stage, these various organic molecules became packaged within membranes and separated from their surroundings. In other words, they formed pre-cells.

6 Where did life begin? Shallow waters and moist sediments such as clay
Deep-sea thermal vents

7 16.2 Diverse prokaryotes populate the biosphere
Diversity of Prokaryotic Life -found EVERYWHERE

8 Archaea “ancient” bacteria Extremophiles: Consists of three types
Thermophiles – heat lovers Halophiles – salt lovers Methogens – live anaerobic environment, produce methane gas DNA evidence indicates closer relationship to eukaryotes than bacteria

9 Differences between Archaea and Bacteria
Differences in RNA and DNA information Enzymes that catalyze RNA are different Bacteria lack introns Antibiotics effective only to Bacteria Archea cell walls lack petidoglycan

10 Structure and Function of Bacteria
Bacteria is identified and distinguished based partly on three characteristics. Cell Shape –cocci (round) bacilli(rod) spiral(spirochetes)

11 Structure and Function of Bacteria
Cell Wall Structure Two types of cell walls Determined by a Gram stain Gram positive bacterium (purple) Gram negative bacterium (pink)

12 Structure and Function of Bacteria
Motility Flagella Pili Slimy threads

13 Asexual Reproduction Binary fission Rapid reproduction
Cloning of the parent Can have mutations, antibiotic resistance

14 Sexual Reproduction Transformation – bacterium takes up free DNA from the environment Conjugation – two bacterial cells temporarily join and directly transfer genetic material between them Transduction – virus phage inserts genetic material Endospore Formation – dormant bacteria with highly resistant outer wall

15 Genetic Variation

16 Modes of Nutrition

17 Cyanobacteria and Oxygen
Believe to be the first photoautotrophs. Helped bring oxygen in the atmosphere Revolutionized the evolution of aerobic organisms and cellular respiration.

18 16.3 Prokaryotes perform essential functions in the biosphere
Chemical recycling– help in breaking down or decomposing, organic waste products and dead organisms e.g. carbon locked in organic compounds returned to atmosphere as CO2 Used in nitrogen gas conversion through legumes

19 Nitrogen Cycle

20 Human uses of bacteria Use of organisms to remove pollutants from water, air and soil – bioremediation Used in sewage treatment, oil clean up, mining clean up, genetic exploration PCB clean up

21 16.4 Some Prokaryotes cause disease
Pathogen – bacteria or other microorganism that cause a disease. Bacteria can invade the cell and destroy it Develop toxins Secrete toxins from the bacterial cell Exotoxins can destroy the cell or interfere with cell function Cause digestive problems or paralysis Toxin is a component of the bacterial cell wall Endotoxins Causes the body to respond (immune system) with fever, aches, weakness, or can lead to shock.

22 Diseases and Methods of Transmission
Inhalation Anthrax Tuberculosis Sexual Syphilis Gonorrhea Bites Lyme disease Improperly stored or prepared foods Botulism salmonella

23 Bacterial Diseases Tuberculosis Invades tissues and destroys cell
Engulfs white blood cells

24 Bacterial Diseases caused by poisons
Closstridium botulinum –botulism 1 gram of pure toxin could kill 1 million people Staphylococcus aureus –Staph infection Secretes a poison by the bacterial cells Proteins secreted cause the illness

25 Diseases caused by bacteria
Salmonella – Is a component of the cell wall that causes the illness Can also cause typhoid fever

26 Defense against bacteria
Hygiene –wash your hands, stay clean Clean drinking water Don’t get run down, weakens the immune system Antibiotics, resistance to antibiotics

27 16.5 Viruses infect cells by inserting genes
Virus is not a cell, cannot reproduce on its own. Structure of a virus Protein coat Genetic material, either RNA or DNA

28 Virus reproduction Two reproductive cycles Lytic cycle
1. Host cell produce virus parts 2. Virus parts assemble 3. Host cell bursts, releasing hundreds of complete, functioning viruses Lysogenic cycle 1. Viral DNA combines with host DNA 2. Host cell replicates as normal 3. Then converts to lytic cycle

29 Viral reproduction

30 Viruses and Disease Viruses have an outer envelop that help the virus enter and leave a cell Contain RNA as genetic material Common cold, flu, measles, mumps, polio, AIDS Contain DNA as genetic material Hepatitis, herpes infections Antibiotic do not work against viruses

31 HIV– A retrovirus Retrovirus – uses RNA as genetic material versus DNA

32 Defense against Viruses
Vaccines –dead or disabled pieces of virus that fool immune system, form future resistance First vaccine –Edward Jenner, small pox vaccine Some may not work as the virus mutate too quickly for a vaccine to work (HIV)


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