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Published byPreston Lang Modified over 9 years ago
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Viruses and Bacteria
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Pathogen Any living organism or particle that can cause an infectious disease
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Virus vs. Bacteria A virus is an infectious particle made only of a strand of DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat. Bacteria are one-celled microorganisms that can also cause infection.
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Viruses
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Are viruses living things? Characteristics of Living Things: – Reproduce, use nutrients and energy, grow and develop, respond to their environment and made of genes
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Are viruses living things? Viruses: – Respond to their environment – Made of genes – Can reproduce but NOT ON THEIR OWN Require living things to help them reproduce and make proteins Viral Replication-virus invades healthy cell, when cell divides the virus is passed to the daughter cells Virus can also replicate inside a host cell and cause the cell to burst, which releases new viruses. THEY ARE NOT LIVING ORGANISMS!!!!!!
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Viral Structure Viruses have a simple structure. – genetic material – capsid, a protein shell – maybe a lipid envelope, a protective outer coat Capsid give viruses a variety of shapes: – Enveloped – Helical – Polyhedral
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capsid DNA tail sheath tail fiber
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Viruses enter host cell in different ways: Bacteriophages pierce host cells – Viruses that prey on bacteria – Example: Escherichia coli Viruses of eukaryotes enter by endocytosis Viruses of eukaryotes also fuse with membrane
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Viral Diseases Some viral diseases can be prevented with vaccines. – Substance that stimulates the body’s own immune response against invasion by microbes. There are many examples of viral infections: – common cold – Influenza – SARS – HIV The body has natural defenses against viruses but viral diseases can be hard to cure because: – viruses replicate quickly – some viruses mutate
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Bacteria Kingdom Eubacteria and Kingdom Archaebacteria
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Bacteria and Archaea (Prokaryotes) The most widespread and abundant organisms on Earth. Live in just about every habitat on Earth, including the air.
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Grouped based on need for oxygen: Obligate anaerobe-cannot live in the presence of oxygen Obligate aerobes-require oxygen in their environment Facultative aerobe-can live with or without oxygen
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Kingdom Eubacteria (true bacteria) Unicellular Prokaryotes Cell walls made of peptidoglycan Include both autotrophs and heterotrophs Classified by shape: – Coccus – Bacillus – Spirillum Example: E. coli bacteria-found in your intestine and helps you digest food.
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Kingdom Archaebacteria Unicellular Prokaryotes Do not have peptidoglycan in their cell walls Includes both autotrophs and heterotrophs Can live in extreme environments – Very hot or cold – Water with high salt concentrations – Deep ocean water Archaebacteria that live here are autotrophs, they make their food through chemosynthesis
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Eubacteria and Archaea Structural Similarities Small Single-celled Cell walls Plasma membranes Lack a nucleus (Prokaryotes) and other membrane bound organelles Plasmids-small piece of genetic material that can replicate Flagellum used for locomotion Pili-help prokaryotes stick to surfaces and other prokaryotes
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flagellum pili plasmid cell wall chromosome plasma membrance This diagram shows the typical structure of a prokaryote. Archaea and bacteria look very similar, although they have important molecular differences.
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Eubacteria and Archaea have molecular differences: Archaea contain lipids that are not found in any other type of organism Bacteria have a polymer called peptidoglycan in their cell walls, archaea do not! Differences in RNA Because of these differences bacteria and archaea are not closely related.
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