3. Prokaryotes Flashcards

Lecture 3

1
Q

What are the prokaryotic features

A
  • lack a membrane bound nucleus, organelles and cytoskeleton
  • different cell walls (peptidoglycan)
  • different rRNA sequences (therefore different ribosomes)
  • may be heterotrophic or autotrophic
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2
Q

Heterotroph

A

requires pre-formed organic molecules for growth

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3
Q

Autotroph

A

Can exclusively on inorganic matter + an energy source

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4
Q

Earliest prokaryote?

A

Chemoautotroph

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5
Q

What was the environment like when first prokaryote emerged?

A
  • hot
  • saline
  • high UV (no ozone)
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6
Q

what are cyanobacteria and when did they emerge?

A
  • oxygenic bacteria
  • contain chlorophyll, photosynthetic
  • created the o2 atmosphere

called cyanobacteria and appeared 3.5 billion years ago

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7
Q

What is nitrification?

A

Nitrogen fixers convert N2 to ammonia while nitrifers convert ammonia to nitrate

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8
Q

Saprophytes

A

a plant, fungus or micro-organism that lives on dead or decaying organic matter

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9
Q

What is unique about the membranes of archaea?

A

• Phospholipids are from ether linkages in Archaea vs ester linkages in Bacteria

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10
Q

What are the differences between bacteria and Archaea?

A

Bacteria has:
• cell wall composition (most have peptidoglycan)
• membrane lipids (ester linked)
• sensitivity to toxins and antibiotics
• some noted pathogens and model organisms

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11
Q

Bacterial reproduction

A
  • asexual

* some species produce spores

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12
Q

Steps in genetic exchange between bacteria

A
  • conjugation - partial genome transfer
  • transformation - partial genome transfer by DNA uptake
  • transduction with bacteriophage
  • enables transfer of genes across genera - issue with spread of antibiotic resistance
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13
Q

3 main shapes of bacteria

A
  • cocci - round
  • bacilli - rods
  • filamentous
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14
Q

Gram negative and positive

A

Gram-positive bacteria
• have a very thick cell wall made of a protein called peptidoglycan.
• blue/purple stain

Gram-negative bacteria
• have a very thin peptidoglycan layer that is sandwiched between an inner cell membrane and a bacterial outer membrane.
• pink stained

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15
Q

What are mycoplasma?

A
  • smallest known cells
  • smallest genomes
  • lack cell walls (no peptidoglycan (so penicillin/antibiotic resistant)
  • parasites
  • cause of pneumonia in humans
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16
Q

What is the damage-response framework

A
  • interaction between host and microbe

* suggests that the host’s response to a microbe governs the outcome of the interaction

17
Q

how does toxin synthesis cause damage to the host?

A
  • Bacterium is not where most damage is caused

* it releases toxins which may enter the bloodstream and then the CNS

18
Q

Virulence properties of mycobacterium tuberculosis

A
  • no toxins
  • slow growing - division once a day
  • disease is slow to progress - takes weeks for symptoms
  • may enter latent state
  • does produce mycolic acids that are hydrophobic and protect against antimicrobials, host defenses, pH changes etc
  • inhibits the fusion between phagosome and lysosome
  • antibacterial treatment lasts nine months
19
Q

What are the effects of diphtheria?

A
  • infection leads to inflammation and formation of a pseudomembrane on the pharynx
  • exotoxin is disseminated in the blood stream where it can cause damage to the heart, kidney or nervous system
  • toxin inhibits protein synthesis
  • symptoms are upper respiratory tract>paralysis>death
20
Q

What causes diphtheria and what is it?

A

A highly contagious respiratory disease caused by corynebacterium diphtheriae

21
Q

What is streptomycin?

A

The first drug effective against tuberculosis

22
Q

What causes tuberculosis?

A

Mycobacterium - free-living saprophytes