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Types of Microorganisms

This document provides information on types of microorganisms including bacteria, viruses, fungi and protozoa. It discusses key figures and discoveries in microbiology such as Anton van Leeuwenhoek discovering microorganisms under his microscope, Louis Pasteur disproving spontaneous generation, Robert Koch establishing the germ theory of disease, and Alexander Fleming discovering penicillin. It also covers classification of microbes, bacterial structure and reproduction, and the three domains of life - bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
149 views69 pages

Types of Microorganisms

This document provides information on types of microorganisms including bacteria, viruses, fungi and protozoa. It discusses key figures and discoveries in microbiology such as Anton van Leeuwenhoek discovering microorganisms under his microscope, Louis Pasteur disproving spontaneous generation, Robert Koch establishing the germ theory of disease, and Alexander Fleming discovering penicillin. It also covers classification of microbes, bacterial structure and reproduction, and the three domains of life - bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes.

Uploaded by

hyvas
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Types of Microorganisms

• Bacteria
– Gram positive & gram negative
• Viruses
– RNA & DNA
• Fungi
– Yeasts & molds
• Protozoa
History
Anton van Leeuwenhoek
– Made lenses or simple microscopes
• Magnification about 300x
– Discovered protozoa in drop of water
– Bacteria in plaque of teeth
– Father of Bacteriology & Protozoology
Spontaneous Generation
• Abiogenesis-living matter arising from
nonliving matter
• Redi –maggots & meat
• Pasteur disproved abiogenesis
– Fermentation
• Yeast ferment grape juice –alcohol
• Bacteria ferment grape juice-acids
• Pasteurization
Germ Theory of Disease
• Koch
– Proved microbes caused disease
– Koch’s postulates
– Developed pure culture techniques
• Gelatin to broth
Epidemiology
• Study of source, cause, mode of
transmission of diseases
• Semmelweis
– Puerperal fever related to lack of hand
cleansing
• John Snow
– Cholera outbreak traced to sewage
contaminated street pump
Immunology/Chemotherapy
• Jenner and smallpox vaccine
– Used cowpox virus
• Fleming & penicillin
Binominal Nomenclature
• Genus - collection of species
– Members have common characteristics
– species can be subdivided into strains
• Strains have small genetic differences
– Nutrition
– Antibiotic resistance
– Toxins
Classification
• Both genus & species underlined or
italicized
• Strain-subdivision of species
– ID by name, number or letter
– Example- Escherichia coli- E. coli K12
• Plasmids
• E. coli 0157:H7
Early Classification
5 kingdoms
– Plants- photosynthetic, multicellular
– Animals-engulf & digest food, multicellular
– Fungi- non photosynthetic, enzymes for
absorption, unicellular & multicellular
– Protista- unicellular with nucleus
– Monera or Prokaryote- unicellular with no
nucleus
Prokaryotes

They’re almost everywhere!!


Prokaryotic Phylogeny
• Groups reflect derivation from common
ancestors
– Molecular data
– Sequence of RNA, DNA, proteins
• Evolutionary relatedness
– Reflects actual evolution & biology of
organisms
Diverse Adaptations of Form
and Function
Prokaryotes - single celled organisms, although some
occur as aggregates, colonies, or simple multi-cellular
forms.
three most common shapes are spherical (cocci) , rod
shaped (bacilli), and helical forms
Nearly all have external cell walls - protect and shape
the cell and prevent osmotic bursting
-Cell walls of eubacteria typically contain the
polymer peptidoglycan
Gram-positive and gram-negative
bacteria differ in the structure of their walls and other
surface layers.
Classification into Domains
• Carl Woese-1980s
• Based upon modern techniques
– Sequence of rRNA in ribosomes
– tRNA - differentiate the Proteobacteria into 5
divisions (alpha, gamma, beta, delta, epsilon)
– Plasma membrane lipid structure
– Sensitivity to antibiotics
– High and low GC base pairs
Prokaryotic DNA
• The prokaryotic genome consists of a
single circular DNA molecule in a
nucleoid region unbounded by a
membrane.
• Many species also possess smaller
separate rings of DNA called plasmids,
which code for special metabolic
pathways and resistance to antibiotics.
Prokaryote ADAPTATIONS
• Many species secrete sticky substances that form capsules.

• Some have surface appendages called pili outside the cell wall.

• Both structures help the cells adhere to one another, and some
pili are specialized for conjugation (bacteria sex!)
Prokaryote Adaptations

• Motile bacteria propel themselves by flagella,


• or use flagella-like filaments positioned inside
the cell wall (spirochetes) or glide on slime
secretions.
Prokaryote Adaptations

• Prokaryotic cells are not


compartmentalized by endomembranes.
-- invaginations of the plasma
membrane provide internal membrane
surface for specialized functions (such as
cell respiration)
• Endospores –

– Allows bacteria to persist until favorable


conditions
– Oldest endospore found to be 250 myo
REPRODUCTION
• Bacteria reproduce asexually.
• The type of cell division by which these
prokaryotes reproduce is called binary
fission.
• During binary fission, each dividing
daughter cell receives a copy of the
single parental chromosome.
Prokaryotic reproduction

• Asexual reproduction
via binary fission
– Exponential growth
Bacterial genetics
• Nucleoid:
region in bacterium
densely packed with
DNA (no membrane)
• Plasmids:
small circles of DNA
• Reproduction:
binary fission (asexual)
Bacterial DNA-transfer
processes
• Transformation: genotype alteration by
the uptake of naked, foreign DNA from
the environment (Griffith expt.)
• Transduction: phages that carry
bacterial genes from 1 host cell to
another •generalized~ random
transfer of host cell chromosome
•specialized~
incorporation of prophage DNA into host
chromosome
• Conjugation: direct transfer of genetic
material; cytoplasmic bridges; pili;
sexual
Bacterial Plasmids
• Small, circular, self-replicating DNA separate from the bacterial
chromosome
• F (fertility) Plasmid: codes for the production of sex pili (F+ or F-)
• R (resistance) Plasmid: codes for antibiotic drug resistance
• Transposons: transposable genetic element; piece of DNA that can
move from location to another in a cell’s genome (chromosome to
plasmid, plasmid to plasmid, etc.); “jumping genes”
OPERONS
a group of key nucleotide sequences
includes:
- operator - enables transcription
- promoter- regulates activity of
structural genes
-one or more structural genes that are
controlled as a unit to produce
messenger RNA (mRNA).
Def: Unit of genetic function – i.e., clusters of
Operons genes with related functions (transcription unit)

• Repressible (trp operon):


• tryptophan (a.a.) synthesis
• promoter: RNA polymerase binding
site; begins transcription
• operator: controls access of RNA
polymerase to genes (tryptophan
not present)
• repressor: protein that binds to
operator and prevents attachment of
RNA polymerase ~ coded from a
regulatory gene (tryptophan present
~ acts as a corepressor)
• transcription is repressed when
tryptophan binds to a
regulatory protein
VARIATION
• Genetic variation occurs in prokaryotes
through mutation and gene transfer --
“conjugation”
• All major types of nutrition and
metabolism evolved among
prokaryotes.
• The evolution of prokaryotic
metabolism was both cause and effect
of changing environments on Earth.
Metabolism and energy
( anaerobic or aerobic respiration )

• Autotroph; An organism able to use CO2 as sole source of carbon

• Chemoorganotroph; An organism obtaining its energy from the


oxidation of organic compounds

• Chemolitotroph; An organism obtaining its energy from the


oxidation of inorganic compounds
Metabolism
• The following use oxygen or sulfur as electron acceptor:
• Iron bacteria - oxidize ferrous iron (Fe2+) into ferric iron (Fe3+)
• Nitrifying bacteria - oxidize ammonia (NH3) into nitrite (NO−2)
or, alternatively, nitrite (NO−2) into nitrate (NO−3).
• Purple sulfur bacteria and some chemolithotrophs oxidize
sulfide (S2−) into sulfur (S0) (oxygen is the electron acceptor).
• Sulfur bacteria use oxidized sulfur compounds to produce
sulfide. They also can grow on a number of oxidized or partly
oxidized sulfur compounds (sulfur is the electron acceptor)
• Hydrogen bacteria oxidize hydrogen to water.
• Carboxydotrophic bacteria oxidize carbon monoxide to carbon
dioxide.
Metabolism
• The following use compounds other than oxygen as an
electron acceptor:
• Methanogens (Archae) capable of oxidising hydrogen,
reducing carbon dioxide to methane.
• Thiobacillus denitrificans - a sulfur bacteria, oxidizes
reduced sulfur compounds with nitrate instead of
oxygen.
• The recently discovered Anammox bacteria oxidize
ammonia with nitrite as electron acceptor to produce
nitrogen gas.
• Phosphite bacteria oxidize phosphite into phosphate.
use sulfate as electron acceptor, and reduce it into sulfide.
Growth conditions
• Oxygen
– Strict aerobes
• Require oxygen
– Strict anaerobes
• Oxygen is toxic
– Facultative anaerobes
• Use oxygen when available
• Can grow without oxygen
– Aerotolerant anaerobes
• Can’t use oxygen but not toxic
– Microaerophilic
• Need low concentrations of oxygen
Three Domains of Life
Three Domains
• Domains are above Kingdom level
– Plants, animals, fungi, protists, bacteria
• I) Bacteria or Eubacteriae
– Prokaryotes with peptidoglycan in cell wall
– Divide by binary fission
– Motile by flagella or cilia
– Sensitive to antibiotics
II) Archaeabacteriae
• Ancient prokaryotes
– Cell wall present, not peptidoglycan
– Live in extreme environments
– Have unusual metabolic processes
– Not sensitive to antibiotics
• Include:
– Methanogens -strict anaerobes
• Produce methane from CO2 + H2
• Live in anaerobic mud lakes
• Intestine of cows
Archaea
• Include:
Halophiles
• Require high concentration of salt
– Maintain cell wall
• Spoilage of food-salted fish
• Salt lakes
Thermophiles
Live in hot sulfurous waters or acidic water
• Nucleic acids/proteins do not function at low temperatures
• Volcanic vents in ocean
archae and microbial evolution

• Archea: adaptation to environmental extremes which probably


existed on early Earth
• Many Archea (especially hyperthermophiles) evolved at slower rate
than Bacteria
• Slow evolution rate in hyperthermophillic Bacteria: Thermotoga and
Aquifex
• Extreme environments => Strong evolution pressure => slow
evolutionary clocks
III) Eukarya
• All eukaryotes
• Cell wall varies in composition
• Not sensitive to antibiotics
• Fungi-yeasts and molds
• Protists-slime molds, protozoa, & algae
• Plants & animals
Endosymbiotic Theory
• Eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotes
• 1.4 billion years ago
• Supported by similarities between
prokaryotes & organelles in eukaryotes
• Mitochondria & chloroplasts same size as
prokaryote cell
– Contain DNA, 70S ribosomes
• Endosymbiont-organism that lives within
another
Support for Theory
» Prokarya Eukarya Mitoch & Chloro

• DNA circular linear circular


• Histones No Yes No
• Ribosomes 70S 80S 70S
• Growth binary mitosis binary
• Cyanophora
Viruses
• Obligate intracellular parasites
• Not “cells”, so non-living agent
• No ribosomes
• Classification is different
Viral structure
• Virus: “poison”
(Latin); infectious
particles consisting
of a nucleic acid in a
protein coat
• Capsid; (viral
envelopes); DNA or
RNA
• Bacteriophages
(phages)
Structure of viruses
-Proteinous coat either in the form of a
capsid or capsomere
-Genetic element – RNA or DNA
-Single stranded OR Double Stranded
-ssRNA, dsRNA, ssDNA, dsDNA
-Viral envelope – a membrane in some
viruses
-Glycoproteins for recognition
Viral reproduction: Lytic Cycle
• Host range: infection of a
limited range of host cells
(receptor molecules on the
surface of cells)
• The lytic cycle:
1- attachment
2- injection
3- hydrolyzation
4- assembly
5- release
• Results in death of host cell
• Virulent virus (phage
reproduction only by the lytic
cycle)
Viral reproduction: Lysogenic Cycle
• Genome replicated w/o
destroying the host cell
• Genetic material of
virus becomes
incorporated into the
host cell DNA
(prophage DNA)
• Temperate virus
(phages capable of
using the lytic and
lysogenic cycles)
• May give rise to lytic
cycle
Lysogenic Cycle
RNA viruses
• Retroviruses: transcribe
DNA from an RNA
template (RNA--->DNA)
• Reverse transcriptase
(catalyzing enzyme)
• HIV--->AIDS
Retrovirus (HIV)
HIV cycle
Viroids & Prions
• Viroids
– Single short piece of RNA
– Cause disease in plants
– ? In humans
• Prions
– “naked” Protein
– Cause neurodegenerate diseases
– Humans & animals
– mad cow
Viroids and prions
• Viroids: tiny, naked
circular RNA that infect
plants; do not code for
proteins, but use
cellular enzymes to
reproduce; stunt plant
growth
• Prions: “infectious
proteins”; “mad cow
disease”; trigger chain
reaction conversions; a
transmissible protein
New Challenges
• Antibiotic resistance
• Emerging diseases
– SARS & Avian Influenza
• Bioterrorism
– Anthrax, smallpox, plague, botulism

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