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Published byBarry Rodgers Modified over 9 years ago
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Microbiology Unit 1
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BacteriaArchaeaFungi ProtozoaAlgaeViruses Multicellular Animal Parasites
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Unicellular Prokaryotes (no nucleus) Shapes: Bacillus (rodlike) Coccus (spherical) Spiral (corkscrew)
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Cell walls composed of peptidoglycan Reproduce by binary fission (dividing into two cells) Some autotrophs, some heterotrophs Many can “swim” using flagella
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Prokaryotes Cells walls lack peptidoglycan Extreme environments Methanogens: produce methane as a waste product of respiration Extreme halophiles: extremely salty environments Extreme thermophiles: hot sulfurous water Not known to cause human disease
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Eukaryotes (cells have a nucleus & organelles) Unicellular or multicellular Unicellular: yeast Multicellular: mushrooms, molds Cell walls composed of chitin Reproduce sexually or asexually heterotrophs
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Unicellular Eukaryotic Move by Pseudopods (false feet): amoebas Long flagella Numerous short cilia Can live either free or as parasites (derive nutrients from a living host) Reproduce sexually or asexually
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Photosynthetic Eukaryotes Sexual and asexual reproduction Cell walls composed of cellulose (like plants) Unicellular (for microbiology purposes)
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Living??? Acellular (not cellular) Most only seen with electron microscope Made of a core of DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat Can only reproduce using the cellular machinery of other organisms
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Helminths (parasitic worms) Two major groups: Flatworms and roundworms Microscopic in size during some stages of their life cycle
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