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Published byDylan Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
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Phylogeny of bacteria
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Nonproteobacteria gram-negative bacteria Many gram-negative bacteria belong to diverse phyla which differ from the proteobacteria Some belong to the oldest branches of bacteria while others have arisen more recently
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Aquificae and Thermotogae The two oldest branches of bacteria Both are hyperthermophilic
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Deinococcus-Thermus Species belonging to the genus Deinococcus are best studied Very resistant to radiation and desiccation T. aquaticus Taq polymerase
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Deinococcus Often associate in pairs and tetrads Stain gram + although cell wall is similar to gram cells
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Photosynthetic nonproteobacteria
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Phylum Chloroflexi Also contains nonphotosynthetic bacteria Are the green nonsulfur bacteria Can be isolated from neutral to alkaline hot springs
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Photosynthetic nonproteobacteria Phylum Chlorobi Composed of 1 class, 1 order and 1 family Are the green sulfur bacteria Use sulfur and sulfur-containing compounds as electron sources
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Photosynthetic nonproteobacteria Phylum Cyanobacteria Largest and most diverse group of photosynthetic bacteria Photosynthetic system resembles that of eukaryotes Employ a variety of reproductive mechanisms (e.g. binary fission, multiple fission, budding and fragmentation)
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Photosynthetic nonproteobacteria Phylum Cyanobacteria Vary greatly in shape and appearance
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Phylum Planctomycetes Spherical or oval bacteria that lack peptidoglycan Reproduce by budding In some species the nuclear body is membrane-bound
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Phylum Chlamydiae Originally grouped with the rickettsias (rickettsias now in -proteobacteria) Both are small obligate intracellular parasites Genus Chlamydia is the best studied
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Phylum Chlamydiae Three species are important human pathogens Cell walls lack peptidoglycan Osmotic stability achieved by cross-linking of outer membrane proteins with disulfide bonds
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Chlamydial life cycle
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Phylum Spirochaetes Distinguished by their structure and mechanism of motility Slender long bacteria with a helical shape Many are too thin to be seen using phase-contrast or dark-field microscopy
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Phylum Spirochaetes
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Ecologically diverse Some are free-living (soil and freshwater) Others live in symbiotic relationships with other organisms (insects, mollusks and mammals)
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Phylum Spirochaetes
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Some species are human pathogens e.g.Treponema pallidum (Syphilis) Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease)
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Phylum Spirochaetes Cells are bound by flagella called endoflagella (or axial fimbrils or periplasmic flagella) Complex of flagella called axial filaments Filaments bound by a sheath
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Phylum Spirochaetes Motility likely due to rotation of filaments Rotation causes corkscrew-like movement of the cell
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Phylum Bacteroidetes Very diverse phylum Closely related to Chlorobi Anaerobic rods of various shapes
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Phylum Bacteroidetes
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Grow in the oral cavities and intestinal tracts of animals They are often beneficial to their host B. fragilis is the cause of anaerobic infections in humans
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