Bacterial Taxonomy: Classification of Bacteria & Nomenclature
Bacterial Taxonomy: Classification of Bacteria & Nomenclature
Bacterial Taxonomy: Classification of Bacteria & Nomenclature
bacteria
&
Nomenclature
1. Phototrophs
2. Chemotrophs
3. Autotrophs
4. Heterotrophs
1. How the organism obtains carbon for synthesizing cell mass:
• Autotrpohic: carbon is obtained from carbon dioxide (CO2)
• Heterotrophic: carbon is obtained from organic compounds
• Mixotrophic: carbon is obtained from both organic compounds and
by fixing carbon dioxide
2. How the organism obtains reducing equivalents (hydrogen atoms or
electrons) used either in energy conservation or in biosynthetic
reactions:
• Lithotrophic: reducing equivalents are obtained from inorganic
compounds
• Organotrophic: reducing equivalents are obtained from organic
compounds
3. How the organism obtains energy for living and
growing:
• Phototrophic: energy is obtained from light
• Chemotrophic: energy is obtained from
external chemical compounds
1. Autotrophs
• Those bacteria which uses carbon dioxide (CO2) as sole
source of carbon to prepare its own food.
• Prepare food and gain energy by processes; photosynthesis
(in the presence of light) or chemosynthesis (gain energy
using chemical compounds)
• Autorophs further divided into:
1. Photoautotrophs:
2. Chemoautotrophs
2. Phototrophs:
• Those bacteria which gain energy from light
1. Photo-organotrophs:
• obtain energy from light
• carbon and reducing equivalents for biosynthetic reactions from organic
compounds, such as succinate.
2. Photo-lithotrophs:
• obtain energy from light and carbon from the fixation of carbon dioxide
• using reducing equivalents (hydrogen and electron source) from
inorganic compounds, such as H2S as electron source.
• Examples: Cyanobacteria (H2O as reducing equivalent as hydrogen
donor), Chromatiaceae (hydrogen sulfide (H2S) as hydrogen
donor), Chloroflexus (H2 as reducing equivalent donor)
3. Chemotrophs
• Energy is obtained from external chemical compounds
• They utilize chemical compounds for assimilation of CO2
• They cannot carry out photosynthesis
1. Chemo-organotrophs:
• obtain energy, carbon, and hydrogen for biosynthetic reactions from organic
compounds, such as glucose and amino acids.
• Examples: most bacteria, e. g. Escherichia coli, Bacillus spp., Actinobacteri,
Pseudomonas pseudoflava
2. Chemo-lithotrophs
• obtain energy from the oxidation of inorganic compounds and carbon
from the fixation of carbon dioxide, such as NH3 as electron source.
• Examples: Nitrifying bacteria, sulfur-oxidizing bacteria, iron-oxidizing
bacteria,
4. Heterotrophs
• Those bacteria which uses organic compound as
carbon source
• They lack the ability to fix CO2
• Most human pathogenic bacteria
• Some heterotrophs are simple
• Some bacteria that require special nutrients for their
growth; known as fastidious heterotrophs.
Bacterial Classification based
on Environmental Factors
Classification of bacteria on the basis
of optimum temperature of growth
1. Psychrophiles
2. Mesophiles
3. Thermophiles
4. Hyperthermophiles
1. Psychrophiles:
• They grow at 0°C or below but
• the optimum temperature is 15 °C or below
• maximum temperature is 20°C
• have polyunsaturated fatty acids in their cell membrane
which gives fluid nature to the cell membrane even at
lower temperature.
• Examples: Vibrio psychroerythrus, vibrio marinus,
Psychroflexus
2. Mesophiles:
• grow best between (25℃ -40℃) but
• optimum temperature for growth is 37 ℃
• Most of the human pathogens are mesophilic
in nature
• Examples: E. coli, Salmonella, Klebsiella,
Staphylococci
3. Thermophiles:
• These bacteria best grow above 45 ℃.
• Thermophiles contains saturated fatty acids in
their cell membrane, so their cell membrane
does not become too fluid even at higher
temperature.
• Examples: Streptococcus thermophiles,
Thermus aquaticus
4. Hyperthermophiles:
• optimum temperature of growth above 80℃.
• Mostly Archeobacteria.
• Monolayer cell membrane of Archeobacteria is
more resistant to heat and
• they adopt to grow in higher temperature.
• Examples: Pyrolobus fumari, Thermotoga
Classification of bacteria on the basis of optimum pH of growth
1. Acidophiles
2. Alkaliphiles
3. Neutrophiles
1. Acidophiles:
• Those bacteria that grow best at acidic
pH
• The cytoplasm of these bacteria are
acidic in nature.
• Some acidophiles are thermophilic in
nature, such bacteria are called
Thermoacidophiles.
• Examples: Thermoplasma, Sulfolobus
2. Alkaliphiles:
• Those bacteria that grow best at alkaline pH
• optimum pH of growth is 8.2
• Example: vibrio cholerae:
3. Neutrophiles:
• Those bacteria that grow best at neutral pH
(6.5-7.5)
• Example: E. coli
Classification of bacteria on the
basis of Morphology
• It is divided into six classes.
– Coccus
– Bacilli
– Mycoplasma
– Spirochaetes
– Rickettsiae and Chlamydiae
– Actinomycetes
Rickettsiae and Chlamydiae