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Intro bacteriology

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11 The Prokaryotes: Domains Bacteria and Archaea
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Page 1: Intro bacteriology

11The Prokaryotes:Domains Bacteria and Archaea

Page 2: Intro bacteriology

The Prokaryotes

Page 3: Intro bacteriology

Domain Bacteria Proteobacter

ia From the

mythical Greek god, Proteus, who could assume many shapes

Gram-negative

Page 4: Intro bacteriology

The Alphaproteobacteria

Human pathogens Bartonella

B. hensela: Cat-scratch disease Brucella: Brucellosis Ehrlichia: Tickborne

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The Alphaproteobacteria Obligate intracellular parasites

Ehrlichia: Tickborne, ehrlichiosis Rickettsia: Arthropod-borne, spotted fevers

R. prowazekii: Epidemic typhus R. typhi: Endemic murine typhus R. rickettsii: Rocky Mountain spotted fever

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The Alphaproteobacteria

Figure 11.1

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The Alphaproteobacteria

Chemoautotrophic Oxidize nitrogen for energy Fix CO2

Nitrobacter: NH3+ NO2

Nitrosomonas: NO2– NO3

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The Betaproteobacteria

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The Betaproteobacteria Thiobacillus

Chemoautotrophic, oxidize sulfur: H2S SO42–

Sphaerotilus Chemoheterotophic, form sheaths

Figure 11.5

Page 10: Intro bacteriology

The Betaproteobacteria Neisseria

Chemoheterotrophic, cocci

N. meningitidis N. gonorrhoeae

Spirillum Chemoheterotrophi

c, helical

Figures 11.4, 11.6

Page 11: Intro bacteriology

The Betaproteobacteria Bordetella

Chemoheterotrophic, rods B. pertussis

Burkholderia: Nosocomial infections Zoogloea: Slimy masses in aerobic

sewage-treatment processes

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The Gammaproteobacteria

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The Gammaproteobacteria Pseudomonadales

Pseudomonas Opportunistic

pathogens Metabolically

diverse Polar flagella

Azotobacter and Azomonas: Nitrogen fixing Moraxella: Conjunctivitis

Figure 11.7

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The Gammaproteobacteria Legionellales

Legionella Found in streams,

warm-water pipes, cooling towers

L. pneumophilia

Coxiella Q fever transmitted

via aerosols or milk

Figure 24.15b

Page 15: Intro bacteriology

The Gammaproteobacteria Vibrionales

Found in coastal water Vibrio cholerae

causes cholera V. parahaemolyticus

causes gastroenteritis

Figure 11.8

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The Gammaproteobacteria Enterobacteriales (enterics)

Peritrichous flagella, facultatively anaerobic Enterobacter Erwinia Escherichia Klebsiella Proteus Salmonella Serratia Shigella Yersinia

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The Gammaproteobacteria

Figure 11.9

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The Gammaproteobacteria

Pasteurellales Pasteurella

Cause pneumonia and septicemia Haemophilus

Require X (heme) and V (NAD+, NADP+) factors

Francisella Chemoheterotrophic, tularemia

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The Deltaproteobacteria

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The Epsilonproteobacteria

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The Epsilonproteobacteria Campylobacter

One polar flagellum Gastroenteritis

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The Epsilonproteobacteria Helicobacter

Multiple flagella Peptic ulcers Stomach cancer

Figure 11.12

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The Nonproteobacteria Gram-Negative Bacteria

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Firmicutes

Low G + C Gram-positive

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Clostridiales Clostridium

Endospore-producing Obligate anaerobes

Epulopiscium

Figures 11.15, 11.16

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Bacillales Bacillus

Endospore-producing rods

Figure 11.17b

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Bacillales Staphylococcus

Cocci

Figure 11.18

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Lactobacillales Generally

aerotolerant anaerobes, lack an electron-transport chain Lactobacillus Streptococcus Enterococcus Listeria

Figure 11.19

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Mycoplasmatales Wall-less, pleomorphic 0.1 - 0.24 µm M. pneumoniae

Figure 11.20a–b

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Actinobacteria High G + C Gram-positive

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Actinobacteria Actinomyces Corynebacterium Frankia Gardnerella Mycobacterium Nocardia Propionibacterium Streptomyces

Figure 11.21b

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Chlamydias Chlamydia trachomatis

Trachoma STD, urethritis

Chlamyiophila pneumoniae Chlamydophila psittaci

Causes psittacosis

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Chlamydias

Figure 11.23a

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Chlamydophila

Figure 11.23b

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Spirochaetes Borrelia Leptospira Treponema

Figure 11.24

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Bacteroidetes Anaerobic

Bacteroides are found in the mouth and large intestine

Cytophaga: Cellulose-degrading in soil

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Fusobacteria Fusobacterium

Are found in the mouth.

May be involved in dental diseases.

Figure 11.25

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10Classification of Microorganisms

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Taxonomy

Taxonomy The science of classifying organisms Provides universal names for organisms Provides a reference for identifying

organisms

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The Three-Domain System

Table 10.1

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The Three-Domain System

Figure 10.1

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Identification Methods Morphological

characteristics:

Useful for identifying

eukaryotes

Differential staining:

Gram staining, acid-

fast staining

Biochemical tests:

Determines presence

of bacterial enzymes

Figure 10.8

Page 43: Intro bacteriology

Figure 10.7

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Numerical Identification

Figure 10.9

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Serology Combine known

antiserum plus unknown bacterium

Slide agglutination

ELISA Western blot

Figure 10.10

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Western Blot

Figure 10.12

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Phage Typing

Figure 10.13

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Flow Cytometry Differences in

electrical conductivity between species

Fluorescence of some species

Cells selectively stained with antibody plus fluorescent dye

Figure 18.12

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Genetics DNA base composition

Guanine + cytosine

moles% (GC)

DNA fingerprinting

Electrophoresis of

restriction enzyme

digests

rRNA sequencing

Polymerase chain

reaction (PCR)Figure 10.14

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Nucleic Acid Hybridization

Figure 10.15

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Nucleic Acid Hybridization: DNA Probe

Figure 10.16

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Nucleic Acid Hybridization: DNA Chip

Figure 10.17

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Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization (FISH)

Figure 10.18a–b

Add DNA probefor S. aureus

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Table 10.5

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Dichotomous Key

PLAY Animation: Dichotomous Keys

UN 10.2

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Cladogram

Figure 10.19, steps 1–2

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Cladogram

Figure 10.19, step 3


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