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THE PROKARYOTES.

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Presentation on theme: "THE PROKARYOTES."— Presentation transcript:

1 THE PROKARYOTES

2 Systematics Focus on animals and plants How to classify prokaryotes?
History limited to 20% of evolutionary time How to classify prokaryotes? Limited in morphological characters

3 Carl Richard Woese , USA; Developed system based on 16S rRNA in 1977

4 Carl Woese and George Fox

5 rRNA Emile Zuckerkandl ( ); Austria & USA. Molecular biology and molecular clock Linus Carl Pauling ( ) USA Founder of fields like quantum chemistry and molecular biology Suggested that a tree of life might be generated by comparing sequences of biopolymers like RNA Zuckerkandl and Pauling

6 Flow of information in a cell…

7 When DNA is transcribed, the result is an RNA molecule
DNA molecule Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3 DNA strand Transcription RNA Translation Codon Polypeptide Amino acid Figure 10.10

8 When DNA is transcribed, the result is an RNA molecule
RNA is then translated into a sequence of amino acids DNA molecule Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3 DNA strand Transcription RNA Translation Codon Polypeptide Amino acid Figure 10.10

9 A typical prokaryotic cell
Ribosomal Function A typical prokaryotic cell may have 10,000+ ribosomes

10 Where does rRNA enter the picture?

11 Ribosomal Structure Two subunits

12 Ribosomal subunits= rRNA molecules + proteins

13 Prokaryotes Eukaryotes

14 What’s the ‘S’? Svedberg units: a measure of how quickly particles sediment in an ultracentrifuge

15 What’s the ‘S’? Svedberg units: a measure of how quickly particles sediment in an ultracentrifuge Larger the particle, the greater its S value Smaller subunit of a ribosome sinks slower than the larger subunit

16 Why then does 5S + 23S = 50S?

17 Why then does 5S + 23S = 50S? Shape AND size determine sedimentation rate…

18 Ribosomal RNA Molecules
Components of the ribosomes of ALL ORGANISMS Changes in nucleotide sequence indicative of evolutionary history “highly conserved molecules”… What does this mean?

19 Ribosomal Function PROTEIN SYNTHESIS Not much room for error!
Disruption of ribosome structure likely to disrupt protein synthesis… Life threatening!

20 Practical applications…
Some antibiotics (e.g. erythromycin and streptomycin) work by targeting the 70S ribosomes Alter shape and prevent bacteria from synthesizing proteins needed to survive Why are our own ribosomes not affected by the same drugs???

21 A modification of Woese from Brock et al. (1994).

22 Two different supertrees generated by ML methods for complete genomes of 45 taxa. Daubin et al. 2002

23 Ciniglia et al. 2004

24 Lang et al. 2013 Using 24 genes and 3000 taxa

25 Gram Stain and Structure

26 Eubacteria >9 Kingdoms Same type of ribosomes
Polysaccharide of outer wall made of murein Most groups involved in global nutrient cycling Many of economic importance Disease Other functions (e.g. antibiotic producers)

27 Proteobacteria Disparate functional groups joined by molecular sequences Likely the source of mitochondria

28 Alphaproteobacteria Rikettsias (typhus Rocky Mtn spotted fever
Rhizobias (N-fixing bacteria) Likely the ancestor of mitochondria was from this group

29 Gammaproteobacteria Usually small rods or cocci
Causative agents of Bubonic Plague, Tuleremia, Legioner’s Disease, Cholera Includes Escherichia coli

30 Spirochaetae

31 Spirochaetae Spiraled with internal flagella Many are free-living
Causative agents of Lyme disease, syphilis, yaws, and relapsing fever

32 Cyanobacteria

33 Cyanobacteria Like free-living chloroplast
Group from which chloroplasts appeared Form filaments, colonies Very large for bacteria Some produce toxins Many are nuisance algae in over-fertilized waters Source of most atmospheric oxygen, especially prior to eukaryotes

34 Firmicutae Lack second outer membrane of Eubacteria Gram positive

35 Aphragmabacteria Tiny, smallest genome of any non-virus No walls
Obligate parasites One causes pneumonia; many plant pathogens

36 Anoxybacteria Obligate anaerobes
Causative agents of botulism and tetanus Botox Common in soil and animal digestive systems

37 Endosporobacteria Produce resistant spores
Many major human pathogens, including anthrax, staph (including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), strep Includes Lactobacillus

38 Actinobacteria Many are slow-growing and fungus-like
Antibiotic sources (e.g. streptomycin, actinomycin) Causative agents of leprosy and tuberculosis; diptheria Bacteria which cause holes in Swiss cheese Bifida, a necessary commensal in our lower bowel

39 Deinococcobacteria Thermophiles
Deinococcus withstands 6,000 rads (and up to 1500 megarads) Thermus, found at Yellowstone, enzymes used for PCR

40 Archaea Differ from the Eubacteria Form of ribosomes No murein
Different lipids Different RNA polymerase

41 Crenarchaea These are the hyperthermophiles
They tend to inhabit very hot environments that are rich in sulfur

42 Euryarchaeota Halobacteria Methanobacteria Thermoplasmobacteria

43 Viruses Non-cellular Usually nucleic acid and protein Types
DNA (ss & ds) RNA (ss & ds) DNA RT RNA RT Prions

44

45 Some Human Viral Diseases
Herpes Smallpox Hepatitis (B, C, D) Yellow Fever Dengue fever West Nile HIV Ebola Rabies Chicken Pox /Shingles Rubella (German Measles) Influenza Polio Mumps Measles Epstein-Barr Hemorrhagic fever Rota Rhinovirus Transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE)

46 Theories on Origin of Viruses
Regressive Hypothesis: cellular parasites of larger cells that became simplified Cellular Origin Hypothesis: pieces of living cells that can replicate (e.g. strands of nucleic acids like plasmids or transposons) Coevolution Hypothesis: evolved together with the first cells as their parasites


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