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Evolution of Microbial Life: Prokaryotes and Protista. Prokaryotes Bacteria Archaea Protists. Prokaryotes have inhabited earth for billions of years. Fossil record shows prokaryotes abundant 3.5 bya Currently, collective biological mass is at least 10 times that of eukaryotes
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Evolution of Microbial Life: Prokaryotes and Protista • Prokaryotes • Bacteria • Archaea • Protists
Prokaryotes have inhabited earth for billions of years • Fossil record shows prokaryotes abundant 3.5 bya • Currently, collective biological mass is at least 10 times that of eukaryotes • There are tens of thousands of species (many of which have not been described)
Prokaryotes come in a variety of shapes • Coccus: spherical • Streptococcus, staphloylococcus • Bacillus: rods • Spirillum: curly Q
Prokaryote External Structures • Gram + • Simple walls with thick peptidoglycan • Gram – • Complex walls with little peptidoglycan, outer membrane
Prokaryote External Structures • Capsule • Sticky layer of polysaccharides • Fimbriae • Hairlike appendages, help anchor bacteria • Motility: • Many have flagella (lacks microtubules)- protein structure
Reproduction and Adaptation • Most reproduce in 1-3 hours • Some can form endospore: protection in harsh environment (Bacillus anthracis)- can remain dormant for centuries
Internal Organization • Some have specialized membranes that perform metabolic functions • Circular DNA, different ribosomes, etc.
Autotrophs • Produce their own carbon molecules • Photoautotrophs: photosynthesis • Chemoautotrophs: inorganic chemicals
Heterotrophs • Obtain carbon from other sources • Photoheterotrophs: can do photosynthesis • Chemoheterotrophs: obtain energy and carbon from exterior sources
Prokaryotes obtain nourishment in a variety of ways • Some are individualists (obtain their own food, energy) • Some are cooperative (some cells perform some processes, while other cells perform other processes) • Biofilms: cells in a colony adhere to each other and their substrate (function as one) • Some cross-species cooperation possible
Prokaryotes help clean up the environment • Natural situations: many prokaryotes recycle nitrogen, etc. through natural systems • Bioremediation: remove pollutants from soil, air, or water with help of organisms • Prokaryotes help clean up oil spills, clean sewage
Bacteria and Archaea • Two kinds of prokaryotes: bacteria and archaea • Current theory: Archaea and Eukaryotes have evolved from the same ancestor • Differences: cell wall components (bacteria has peptidoglycan, archaea doesn’t have peptidoglycan); different plasma membrane lipids, etc.
Archaea thrive in extreme environments- and in other habitats • Extreme halophiles: salt lovers • Salt-lake • Extreme thermophiles: heat lovers • Hot springs, deep ocean vents (over 100 C) • Methanogens: anaerobic conditions • Mud at bottom of lakes (swamp bubbling) • Almost everywhere else, too!
Methanogens Thermophiles
Bacteria • Proteobacteria: gram-negative • 5 of the 9 groups • Gram-positive bacteria
Bacteria • Cyanobacteria • Plant-like, oxygen producing photosynthesis • Chlamydias
Bacteria • Spirochetes: helical (syphilis, Lyme disease)
Some bacteria cause disease • Pathogenic bacteria cause about ½ of all human diseases • Most produce poison • Exotoxin: secreted by bacterial cell (Staphlococcus aureus, E. coli O157:H7) • Endotoxin: components of outer membrane of gram- bacteria (Salmonella) • Sanitation has reduced threat, as has education
Bacteria can be used as biological weapons • Millionth of a gram of Bacillus anthracis can kill a person (anthrax) • Gram of aerosolized botulinum toxin can kill 1.5 million people (Clostridium botulinum)
The eukaryotic cell probably originated as a community of prokaryotes • Widely accepted view: two processes • Membrane infolding: • Created endomembrane system • Endosymbiosis: • Mitochondria and chloroplasts were at one time free-living prokaryotes (they are very similar to modern day prokaryotes) • Were engulfed by eukaryotic cells (explains extra membranes)
Protists are an extremely diverse assortment of eukaryotes • Probably not 1 kingdom • Algae: photosynthesis • Protozoans: heterotrophic • Most are aquatic, unicellular • Have membrane enclosed organelles, cilia and flagella have 9+2 microtubule arrangement
Chromalveolates • Autotrophs: • Diatoms: unicellular algae with glassy walls • Dinoflagellates: usually photosynthetic, unicellular, cause red tide • Brown algaes: multicellular, called seaweed, kelp
Chromalveolates • Heterotrophs: • Water molds: unicellular, decomposers • Ciliates: move, feed using cilia
Rhizarians • Amoebas: • Use pseudopods for movement, feeding • Some have internal or external structures that are rigid or semi-rigid
Excavata • Have an excavated feeding groove • Many lack functional ETC in mitochondria, so use anaerobic pathways • Many are human pathogens, parasites
Unikonts • More amoebas (free-living, test free) • Slime molds • Plasmodial: huge, but unicellular; bright colors • Cellular: start as amoeboid cells, form glob that produces spores
Archaeplastids • Most are autotrophic, colored algaes • Red algae: some have hard outer parts, others commercially important • Green algae: unicellular to multicellular, very similar to plants (NOT plants)
Multicellularity evolved several times in eukaryotes • Unicellular organisms: all of life’s activities occur within a single cell • Multicellular organisms: specialized cells for specialized processes • Process: • Ancestral colony formed • Cells in colony become specialized • Specialization continues until formation of sex cells