MICROBIOLOGY Chapter 4 PROKARYOTIC DIVERSITY PowerPoint Image Slideshow NONPROTEOBACTERIA GRAM-NEGATIVE BACTERIA AND PHOTOTROPHIC BACTERIA • Spirochetes – Long (up to 250 μm) – Spiral-shaped bodies – Very thin – Very difficult to culture – highly motile, using their axial filament to propel themselves FIGURE 4.13 The flagella found between the inner and outer membranes of spirochetes wrap around the bacterium, causing a twisting motion used for locomotion. (credit “spirochetes” micrograph: modification of work by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; credit “SEM/ TEM”: modification of work by Guyard C, Raffel SJ, Schrumpf ME, Dahlstrom E, Sturdevant D, Ricklefs SM, Martens C, CFB Group – Share some similarities in the sequence of nucleotides in their DNA – Rod-shaped bacteria – Anaerobic environments (ie. gums, gut, and rumen) – Fermenters (ie. process cellulose in rumen, thus enabling ruminant animals to obtain carbon and energy from grazing) Cytophaga – Motile aquatic bacteria that glide • Fusobacteria – Inhabit the human mouth and may cause severe infectious diseases • Bacteroides – Largest genus of the CFB group – Species are prevalent inhabitants of the human large intestine FIGURE 4.14 Bacteroides comprise up to 30% of the normal microbiota in the human gut. (credit: NOAA) GRAM-NEGATIVE BACTERIA AND PHOTOTROPHIC BACTERIA • Phototrophic bacteria: – Large and diverse group – Use solar energy to synthesize ATP through photosynthesis • Oxygenic - produce oxygen during photosynthesis (Cyanobacteria) • Anoxygenic (green/purple sulfur and nonsulfur bacteria) FIGURE 4.16 Purple and green sulfur bacteria use bacteriochlorophylls to perform photosynthesis. Phototrophic bacteria: • Cyanobacteria-produce oxygen during photosynthesis • Blue-green color from the chlorophyll in their cells • Many Fix nitrogen • Many habitats FIGURE 4.17 (a) Microcystis aeruginosa is a type of cyanobacteria commonly found in freshwater environments. (b) In warm temperatures, M. aeruginosa and other cyanobacteria can multiply rapidly and produce neurotoxins, resulting in blooms that are harmful to fish and other aquatic animals. (credit a: modification of work by Dr. Barry H. Rosen/U.S. Geological Survey; credit b: modification of work by NOAA) GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA • Thick peptidoglycan cell wall- retain purple stain in Gram staining • Two groups: – Actinobacteria: high G+C (more than 50% guanine and cytosine nucleotides in their DNA) – Bacilli: low G+C (less than 50% of guanine and cytosine nucleotides in their DNA) ACTINOBACTERIA: HIGH G+C GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA • Very Diverse • Often pleomorphic; branching filaments • Often common inhabitants of soil • Majority are aerobic FIGURE 4.18 (a) Actinomyces israelii (false-color scanning electron micrograph [SEM]) has a branched structure. (b) Corynebacterium diphtheria causes the deadly disease diphtheria. Note the distinctive palisades. (c) The gramvariable bacterium Gardnerella vaginalis causes bacterial vaginosis in women. This micrograph shows a Pap smear from a woman with vaginosis. (credit a: modification of work by “GrahamColm”/Wikimedia FIGURE 4.19 Clostridium difficile, a gram-positive, rod-shaped bacterium, causes severe colitis and diarrhea, often after the normal gut microbiota is eradicated by antibiotics. (credit: modification of work by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) FIGURE 4.20 (a) A gram-stained specimen of Streptococcus pyogenes shows the chains of cocci characteristic of this organism’s morphology. (b) S. pyogenes on blood agar shows characteristic lysis of red blood cells, indicated by the halo of clearing around colonies. (credit a, b: modification of work by American Society for Microbiology) ACTINOBACTERIA: HIGH G+C GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA • Actinomyces • Actinomyces spp. play an important role in soil ecology, and some species are human pathogens FIGURE 4.23 M. tuberculosis grows on Löwenstein-Jensen (LJ) agar in distinct colonies. (credit: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Actinomyces • Mycobacterium – Outermost layer of mycolic acids that is waxy and water-resistant – Often slow-growing – Important cause of diverse infectious diseases: • M. tuberculosis causes tuberculosis • M. leprae causes Hansen’s disease (leprosy) Actinomyces • Corynebacterium – Majority are nonpathogenic – C. diphtheriae causes diphtheria LOW G+C GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA • Clostridia • Clostridium – Endospore-producing – Obligate anaerobes – Clostridium spp. produce more kinds of protein toxins than any other bacterial genus, and several are human pathogens: – C. tetani, C. botulinum, C. perfringens (food poisoning and gangrene), and C. difficile LOW G+C GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA • Lactobacillales – Lactobacillus, Leuconostoc, Enterococcus, and Streptococcus • Aerotolerant anaerobes ('tolerate' oxygen but do not grow in it) •Produce lactic acid from simple carbohydrates • Lactobacillus colonize the body and are used commercially in food production Lactobacillales • Streptococcus • Spherical in chains • Produce enzymes that destroy tissue • Beta-hemolytic streptococci hemolyze blood agar; includes S. pyogenes - bacterial pharyngitis (strep throat) and skin infections (mild to life threatening) • Non-beta-hemolytic streptococci include S. pneumoniae (diplococci)- pneumonia and other respiratory infections and S. mutans, which causes dental caries Bacilli • Morphologically diverse class that includes bacillus shaped and coccus-shaped genera • Bacillus are bacillus in shape and can produce endospores – Aerobes or facultative anaerobes – Some are used in various industries: • production of antibiotics • enzymes (BamH1 restriction endonuclease) • detergents FIGURE 4.21 (a) In this gram-stained specimen, the violet rod-shaped cells forming chains are the gram-positive bacteria Bacillus cereus. The small, pink cells are the gram-negative bacteria Escherichia coli. (b) In this culture, white colonies of B. cereus have been grown on sheep blood agar. (credit a: modification of work by “Bibliomaniac 15”/Wikimedia Commons; credit b: modification of work by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Bacilli • Clinically important Bacillus: • B. anthracis causes anthrax, a severe disease that affects wild and domesticated animals and can spread from infected animals to humans • B. cereus may cause food poisoning – Colonies appear milky white with irregular shapes when cultured on blood agar Bacilli • Staphylococcus also belongs to the class Bacilli, even though its shape is coccus (grape-like clusters) • Facultative anaerobic, halophilic, and nonmotile • Most studied species are: – S. epidermidis: found on human skin, opportunistic pathogen, infections associated with intravenous catheters – S. aureus: skin infections, wound infections, can produces an enterotoxin, food poisoning, toxic shock syndrome, is often antibiotic resistant EXERCISE 48 (FIGURE 4.29) (credit: modification of work by Janice Haney Carr/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) ARCHAEA • Very diverse, are found in any habitat • Some are mesophiles, and many are extremophiles (conditions hostile to most other living forms) • They can produce methane • Few found in human microbiomes and no known human pathogen