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Prokaryotes and Viruses
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Characteristics of Prokaryotic Cells
Single-celled bacteria and archaeans No nucleus or membrane-bound organelles Smallest, most widely distributed, numerous, and metabolically diverse organisms Autotrophs and heterotrophs
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Prokaryote Cell Shapes
Spheres (cocci), rods (bacilli), spirals (spirilla)
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Prokaryote Cell Structures
Typical surface structures Cell wall Outermost protective capsule or slime layer One or more flagella Pili
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A Prokaryotic Cell
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Flagella and Pili
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Prokaryotic Fission
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Prokaryotic Cell Characteristics
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The Bacteria The most common and diverse prokaryotes
Some are pathogens (cause disease in a host)
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Food Poisoning
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Bacterial Diversity: Cyanobacteria
Oxygen-releasing photoautotrophs Chloroplasts probably evolved from ancient cyanobacteria by endosymbiosis
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Bacterial Diversity: Gram-Positive Bacteria
Have thick walls Endospores resist heat, boiling, irradiation, acids and disinfectants Some are human pathogens
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Bacterial Diversity: Chlamydias
All are intracellular parasites of animals Obtain ATP from host cells Some sexually transmitted diseases (C. trachomatis)
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Bacterial Diversity: Spirochetes
Spring-shaped Live on their own or in hosts Some are pathogens
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Archaean Physiology Halophiles (salt lovers), extreme thermophiles, and methanogens (methane makers)
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Archaeans in Extreme Environments
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The Viruses Viruses are noncellular infectious particles that cannot reproduce on their own Viruses infect a host cell; their genes and enzymes take over the host’s mechanisms of replication and protein synthesis
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Viral Structures
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Prion Infections Prions
Proteins that occur naturally in the vertebrate nervous system, but can cause fatal disease when they misfold
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Antibiotic Resistance
Use of antibiotics favors antibiotic-resistant bacteria Genes that convey drug resistance can arise by mutation, may spread among members of the same or different species by conjugation
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Protists – The Simplest Eukaryotes
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An Evolutionary Road Map
Protists The simplest eukaryotes Most are single-celled Some are multicelled and large
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Protist Structure Protist cells have a nucleus (eukaryotes)
Most have one or more mitochondria Many have chloroplasts that evolved from cyanobacteria or from another protist Dominant stage of life cycle: Haploid or diploid
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Protist Evolutionary Tree
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Comparing Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
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Key Concepts: SORTING OUT THE PROTISTS
Protists include many lineages of single-celled eukaryotic organisms and their closest multicelled relatives Gene sequencing and other methods are clarifying how protist lineages are related to one another and to plants, fungi, and animals
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Ancient Flagellates Flagellated protozoans
Single-celled heterotrophs with flagella Unwalled cells, pellicle retains shape Most euglenoids live in freshwater Some have chloroplasts that arose by secondary endosymbiosis from a green alga Contractile vacuoles expel excess water
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Disease-Causing Flagellates
Trichomonas vaginalis Trypanosoma brucei
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Shelled Amoebas Foraminiferans and radiolarians
Single-celled heterotrophs with a secreted shell Many openings for pseudopods
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Alveolates All alveolates have tiny sacs (alveoli) beneath the plasma membrane All single-celled Examples: Ciliates, dinoflagellates, and apicomplexans
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Ciliates Aquatic predators and parasites with many cilia
Example: Paramecium
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Dinoflagellates Aquatic heterotrophs and autotrophs with a cellulose covering Photosynthetic protists cause algal blooms in nutrient-rich water
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Apicomplexans Heterotrophs: Parasites living in animal cells
Cell-piercing structure made of microtubules Reproduce sexually and asexually in host cells Only gametes have flagella Example: Plasmodium (malaria)
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Malaria Plasmodium species cause malaria
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Single-Celled Stramenopiles
Two flagella, one with hairlike filaments Oomycotes Heterotrophs (decomposers and parasites) that grow as a mesh of absorptive filaments Some parasitic species are important plant pathogens
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Photosynthetic Stramenopiles
Diatoms, coccolithophores, and golden algae Often part of the phytoplankton Photosynthetic cells (contain fucoxanthin) Hard parts accumulate as mineral deposits Coccolithophores (calcium carbonate plates): Chalk and limestone Diatoms (silica shells): Diatomaceous earth
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Stramenopiles of the Phytoplankton
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Brown Algae Multicelled, photosynthetic stramenopiles
Include microscopic strands and giant kelps (the largest protists; ecological and commercial value)
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Green Algae Chlorophytes (most green algae) and charophytes (closest relatives of plants) Have chloroplasts with chlorophylls a and b Store carbohydrates as starch grains
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Red Algae Most red algae are multicelled
Cultivated for commercial products
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Amoebozoans Amoebas (single cells) and slime molds (“social amoebas”)
Heterotrophic, free-living
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Slime Molds Plasmodial slime molds Feed as a multinucleated mass
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