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Published byGerald Conley Modified over 9 years ago
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Structure and Function of Bacteria
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Kingdom Archaebacteria Extreme environments Methanogens – Make methane gas, anerobic Halophiles – salt loving, use salt to make ATP Thermoacidophiles – extreme acid & temperature environments.
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Kingdom Eubacteria Cell walls composed of peptidoglycan.
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Shapes of Bacteria Coccus – Round Bacillus – rod shaped Spirillum – spiral shaped
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cocci rod helical spirillum
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Cell Wall Structure Two types of cell walls 1.Composed mainly of peptidoglycan 2. Less peptidoglycan with an additional outer membrane.
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How do we distinguish between types of cell walls? Gram Staining – Purple: Gram Positive. Have peptidoglycan Pink: Gram negative have an outer membrane and some peptidoglycan
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Motility Flagellum Pili – help bacteria stick together. Secrete slime to help anchor bacteria to a surface and glide.
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Binary Fission Makes an exact copy of the cell. Many bacteria can copy themselves every 20 minutes!
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Prokaryotes are asexual, so they lack the genetic recombination obtained through meiosis. However, there are three other mechanisms of genetic recombination in Prokaryotes: 1) Transformation - genes taken up from outside environment (dead bacteria) 2) Conjugation- genes transferred directly from one prokaryote to another 3) Transduction- genes are transferred between prokaryotes by viruses
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Transformation
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Conjugation
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Antibiotic Resistance The conjugative transfer of antibiotic resistant plasmids between bacteria is a major problem facing the medical profession today
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Transduction
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Summary 3 characteristics used to classify bacteria Shape Round Rod Spiral Cell Wall Structure Mostly peptidoglycan Peptidoglycan surrounded by a membrane Motility Reproduction – Binary Fission
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