Prokaryotes & Viruses Types of Prokaryotes Classwork 1. What are the two major categories of prokaryotic organisms? 2. Why would a doctor recommend that you consume a probiotic while taking antibiotics to fight an infection? 3. What is an extremophile? 4. Which group of prokaryotes is most likely to contain extremophiles? 5. Explain why scientists believe that archaeans are more closely related to eukaryotes than bacteria. Homework 6. Identify two ways in which bacteria can be helpful to the human body. 7. Provide two reasons why bacteria greatly outnumber mammals in number and diversity on Earth. 8. What characteristics of archaea would allow them to be categorized as extremophiles? 9. Taking into account the recent categorization of archaeans, explain why science is often times a malleable subject. Structure & Function Classwork 10. Describe what the name Streptococcus would indicate to you regarding the shape and organization of a specific bacterium. 11. Identify one external cellular feature that distinguishes bacteria from animal cells. 12. Would a bacterium with a capsule, or without a capsule, more closely resemble a gel-coated Tylenol pill? Why? 13. Explain the behavior you would observe in a bacterium exhibiting chemotaxis. What organelle would most likely be involved in this process? 14. Compare fimbriae in bacterium to another object seen in nature or an artificial object used in everyday life. 15. Explain how pili allow for stimulating genetic diversity in bacteria. 16. In what area of a bacterium would you most likely find peptidoglycan? 17. Explain how the presence of an “F” factor could affect the lifestyle of a prokaryote. Homework 18. Describe what the name Staphylococcus would indicate to you regarding the shape and organization of a specific bacterium. 19. Explain the similarities between cellulose and peptidoglycan. 20. Explain the behavior you would observe in a bacterium exhibiting phototaxis. 21. What is the difference between fimbriae and sex pili? 22. What impact would a lack of sex pili have on the bacteria gene pool? www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses 23. How would you identify bacteria that carried an R plasmid amongst a population exposed to an antibiotic? Reproduction & Gene Expression Classwork 24. What information would the ‘locus’ of a gene reveal to an observer? 25. Reproduction in prokaryotic cells is called ________________________. 26. Taking into account the structure or bacterial chromosomes, explain why a replication bubble exists during bacterial chromosome replication. 27. Is binary fission an example of sexual or asexual reproduction? Explain your answer. 28. What is an operon? 29. Explain why the existence of operons in prokaryotic cells helps to demonstrate a characteristic of living organisms. 30. Explain how the lac operon helps prokaryotic organisms conserve energy. 31. What molecule plays the role of inducer in the lac operon? 32. What role does tryptophan play in the activation or inactivation of the trp operon? 33. How does the presence of tryptophan impact the transcription of the gene that allows for the production of tryptophan in an organism that utilizes the trp operon? 34. Explain the role of each of the following in the utilization of operons: operator, promoter, gene. 35. What type of symbiotic relationship is exhibited in the following scenario? Explain your answer. A clownfish receives protection from an anemone via its stinging tentacles, and the anemone receives food and is cleaned by the clownfish. 36. What type of symbiotic relationship is exhibited in the following scenario? Explain your answer. A specific strain of bacteria lives in your small intestine. This bacteria absorbs nutrients from your body, and occasionally, when gathered in abundance, may cause you to become sick. 37. Why would natural selection favor bacteria that are living in close proximity to other bacteria, as opposed to bacteria living in relative isolation? Homework 38. Describe prokaryotic chromosomes. 39. How many replication forks exist during prokaryotic chromosome duplication? Explain your answer. 40. Where does transcription occur in a prokaryotic cell? 41. What role do repressors play in operon function? 42. In what way is using the lac operon similar to turning off the lights when you are not in a room? 43. What is the difference between an inducible operon and a repressible operon? 44. Why would the body benefit from the inactivation of the tryptophan gene when tryptophan is present in the body? 45. Define symbiosis. www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses 46. What type of symbiotic relationship is exhibited when one organism benefits and another organism is negatively affected in a relationship? 47. Provide an example of how two bacteria, living in close proximity to each other, may create a mutualistic relationship. Genetic Variation Classwork 48. Explain why mutation is more likely to increase genetic diversity at a rapid rate in prokaryotes than in other organisms. 49. Briefly explain how Fredrick Griffith’s experiment demonstrated the process of bacterial transformation. 50. What is the difference between sexual reproduction and conjugation exhibited in bacteria? 51. What role do viruses play in the process of transduction? 52. Can a virus reproduce without the presence of another organism? Explain your answer. 53. It is often said that viruses ‘infiltrate’ host cells. Explain why scientists use this terminology to explain the life cycle of viruses. 54. Explain the difference between the lytic and lysogenic cycles. 55. Explain how temperate phages are different from viruses that utilize the lytic cycle. 56. What does the term ‘host range’ mean in terms of viral reproduction? Homework 57. Explain how the process of transformation can lead to genetic diversity in prokaryotes. 58. How do sex pili allow for an increase in genetic diversity in prokaryotes? 59. Are viruses considered to be living organisms? Explain your answer. 60. Explain how viruses utilize host cells to reproduce. 61. Some scientists believe that viruses evolved in tandem with other cells. Use what you know about virus life cycles to support this statement. 62. How could a virus that utilizes the lysogenic cycle spread throughout an organism without immediately killing host cells. 63. Explain the term ‘obligate intracellular parasite.’ Biotech: Recombinant DNA Classwork 64. List all the steps of the recombinant DNA process and their associated technologies (if any). 65. Explain how the process of gel electrophoresis can be useful in determining the identity of a gene of interest after restriction enzymes have been utilized. 66. Explain why the fact that DNA is a universal code allows scientists to produce recombinant DNA. www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses Homework 67. Why is polymerase chain reaction an important step in the genetic engineering process? 68. Suppose you are examining a gel produced through the electrophoresis process. How could you determine which segments of DNA contain more or fewer bases than the others? 69. Suppose that instead of DNA being universal among all life, that each new species utilized different nucleotides in their DNA. How could this affect the process of genetic engineering? Free Response 1. Compare and contrast the lac and trp operons by responding to the following prompts: a. Identify the lac operon and the trp operon as either an inducible operon or a repressible operon. b. Identify which type of operon is typically on (inducible or repressible). c. Identify which type of operon is usually off (inducible or repressible). d. Explain the steps that occur with a repressible operon (identify the factors or molecules that alter the typical state of a repressible operon as well as the following terminology: co-repressor and operator) 2. The illustration below represents how antibiotic resistant can develop within a bacterial population. All of the circles represent a bacterial colony with varying level of antibiotic resistance. Explain this process by responding to the prompts below: www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses a. Explain what occurs within the first circle, “Before antibiotics” that leads to the results in the second circle, “After antibiotics”. b. Explain what happens within the second circle, “After antibiotics”, that leads to the third circle, “Final population”. c. Describe the final population of bacteria. 3. The illustration below shows a type of virus that infects bacterial cells. a. What is the name for this type of virus? b. Label the parts of the virus shown on the illustration. c. Describe the sequence of events that occur within the lytic cycle from attachment of the virus to a bacterial cell through the release of new viruses. 4. There are four phases to bacterial growth, as shown in the graph below. http://www.smccd.edu/accounts/case/biol230/growth For each of the four phases labeled on the graph above, describe the following: a. the activities of the bacterial cells b. the state of the resources available to the bacteria www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses 5. An experiment was performed to determine the effectiveness of various antibiotics on a particular species of bacteria. The plating results are shown below. http://loudoun.nvcc.edu/vetonline/vet132/micro/microbiology_unit_lesson5.htm Use the results shown on the image above in responding to the prompts below: a. Two disks, C and E, have zones of inhibition. Explain what this result indicates and why these circles are clear. b. The bacteria cells surrounding disk A grew at a rapid rate once they were plated onto the agar. This area of the plate began with 100 bacterial cells. This species of bacteria has a generation time of 60 minutes. The plates were placed into a 37oC incubator for 48 hours. When the plates were removed and viewed, approximately how many bacterial cells had grown around disk A? Prokaryotes www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses Answer Key 1. Prokaryotes are organized into bacteria and archaea. 2. Antibiotics kill bacteria in your body. Some of these bacteria are necessary for the proper digestion of food, probiotics help augment the loss of the helpful bacteria in your body. 3. Extremophiles are archaeans that live in extreme physical environments. 4. Archaea 5. The genetic portfolio and gene expression process of archaeans is more similar to that of eukaryotes than bacteria. 6. Bacteria aid our bodies in digestion, and some helpful bacteria attack harmful forms of bacteria. 7. Bacteria are extremely small, and they evolved much earlier than eukaryotes and have had millions of more years to develop greater levels of diversity. 8. The fact that archaeans live in environments with extreme physical conditions. 9. Until recently, archaeans were considered to be more closely related to bacteria than eukaryotes. New scientific evidence and techniques refuted this idea. As scientists discover new evidence and develop new techniques, former ideas are challenged and refined. 10. Strep means that the bacteria are organized into a line, coccus is spherical shape 11. Bacteria have cell walls and often times capsules. Animal cells have neither of these. 12. The one with the capsule. The capsule works very similar to the gel coat of the Tylenol. 13. The bacteria would move in response to the presence of a chemical. A flagellum would likely be involved in the movement. 14. Fimbriae are like the burrs on a seed or like Velcro, anything that aids in external attachment to a foreign surface. 15. Pili are used to transfer genetic information from one bacterium to another. 16. The peptidoglycan is found in the cell wall. 17. The “F” factor allows for the existence of a sex pilus which would allow the bacterium to spread its genetic material to another bacterium. 18. Staph means the bacteria forms clusters, coccus means spherical. 19. Cellulose and peptidoglycan are both tough carbohydrates used in the construction of cell walls. 20. The bacterium would move in a reaction to light. 21. While both are stiff extensions extending from the exterior surface of a bacterium, fimbriae are used for attachment, sex pili are used for transferring genetic material. 22. The diversity would not be as great in the gene pool in the absence of pili. 23. The bacterium that carries the R plasmid would be more likely to survive and exhibit resistance to an antibiotic than bacteria lacking the plasmid. 24. The locus of a gene would indicate where on a chromosome the gene was located. 25. Binary fission www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses 26. The bacterial chromosome is circular and double stranded, so during replication when the chromosome is split, the bubble appears. 27. Binary fission is asexual reproduction. It is the splitting of an individual bacterium. 28. An operon is a system of molecules that is used to regulate gene expression. 29. Operons allow prokaryotes to regulate their gene expression in response to changes in the environment. Environmental response is one of the characteristics of living organisms. 30. The lac operon allows the prokaryote to save energy by not producing lactase in the absence of lactose. Since lactase is basically useless in the absence of lactose, the organism saves energy by not producing it when it is not needed. 31. Lactose 32. Tryptophan is the repressor in this operon. 33. Since this is a repressible operon, tryptophan deactivates the transcription of the gene that would initiate its production in the organism. 34. The operator essentially activates or deactivates the operon, the promoter is the region of DNA that attracts the enzymes to begin transcription and the gene is the segment of DNA that codes for a protein that is affected by the operons activation or deactivation. 35. Mutualism. Both organisms are benefited from this relationship. 36. Parasitism. The bacteria is positively affected, your body is negatively affected. 37. These bacteria will benefit each other by utilizing different substances produced by each type of bacteria. These bacteria will be more likely to live longer and reproduce more frequently than bacteria living in isolation. 38. Prokaryotic chromosomes are singular and circular. 39. Two. There is one replication fork at each end of the replication bubble. 40. Transcription occurs in the cytoplasm. 41. Repressors bind to the operator region of a gene and turn off transcription. 42. Both actions conserve energy. Turning off the lights conserves electricity, the lac operon conserves cellular energy by not unnecessarily producing lactase. 43. Inducible operons are usually off and can be turned on, repressible operons are usually on and can be turned off. 44. The body does not have to unnecessarily produce the amino acid tryptophan if it is already present in the environment. 45. Symbiosis is an interaction between two organisms providing benefit to at least one organism. 46. Parasitism. 47. The bacteria have access to products produced by each other that they may not be able to produce on their own. 48. Prokaryotes are more numerous and reproduce more quickly than other organisms, which will naturally create a higher mutation rate, leading to increased genetic diversity. 49. Griffith proved that a non-virulent strain of bacteria could gain virulence simply through exposure to dead individuals of a virulent strain. 50. Sexual reproduction involves donation of genetic material from two individuals to create a genetically unique offspring. www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses 51. Viruses transfer genetic information from one bacterium to another as it incorporates host DNA and infects future bacteria. 52. No. The virus needs to inject its genetic material into a host cell and utilize the cellular machinery of the host cell in order to reproduce. 53. Viruses inject their genetic material into a cell, and the cell copies the viral DNA and produces the protein coat for the viral ‘offspring.’ 54. The lytic cycle results in immediate host cell death, whereas in the lysogenic cycle the viral DNA is incorporated but may remain dormant for an undetermined amount of time. 55. Temperate phages may use the lytic or lysogenic cycle. 56. Host range is the number of hosts that a specific virus may successfully infect. A virus may only successfully reproduce in one of these host cells. 57. Transformation allows a prokaryote to assimilate genetic material from another prokaryote, thus increasing genetic diversity. 58. Sex pili allow a bacterium to transfer genetic material to another bacterium. 59. No. Viruses do not satisfy the requirements of living organisms. They do not have cells, no metabolism, cannot reproduce on their own. 60. Viruses inject their DNA/RNA into a host cell and use the organelles of the host cell to replicate their DNA/RNA and produce new viruses. 61. Since viruses require other cells in order to reproduce, and viruses only use specific host cells, it makes sense that they would evolve in relationship with their host cells. 62. The lysogenic cycle allows a virus to incorporate its genetic material into the host cell, allowing it to replicate and be transferred to new host cells without becoming activated and destroying the host cell. 63. Obligate- require other cells; Intracellular- within cells; Parasite- benefits while negatively affecting host cell 64. Find DNA (DNA sequencer) – Cut DNA (restriction enzymes) – Isolate DNA (gel electrophoresis) – Amplification of DNA (PCR) – Create Plasmid (restriction enzymes) – Insert into host – Collect Protein Product 65. Gel electrophoresis separates segments of DNA by length that have been cut using restriction. By applying a charge to the gel, the segments of DNA move from one end to the other, and the lighter segments, which contain fewer bases, will move further than the longer, heavier regions 66. The universality of DNA allows it to be transferred between different species of organisms and still be read by the new organisms. If the structure of DNA changed between species, exchanging DNA between species would not be possible 67. PCR allows DNA to produced at a much more rapid rate than could be conducted using natural processes 68. The segments that have moved the furthest away from the starting point contain the fewest bases, the segments closest to the start contain the most bases 69. Genetic engineering would be much more complicated, because segments of DNA would not be compatible between two organisms of a different species. Genes of interest would have to be translated, and then replicated using the DNA www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses format of a different organism. This would be a much more complicated and time consuming process. 1. Question 1 a. the lac operon is an inducible operon; the trp operon is a repressible operon. b. Repressible operons are ones that are typically “on”. c. Inducible operons are ones that are typically “off”. d. A repressible operon is typically on. When the concentration of a corepressor becomes high enough, it attaches to a repressor. The repressor is then able to attach to the DNA at a site called the operator. When the repressor is in this position, the gene cannot be transcribed, disrupting the production of the protein. Therefore, the protein that was initially steadily produced, is not being produced. 2. Question 2 a. Before antibiotics there is a somewhat diverse population of bacteria, with regard to antibiotic resistance. The bacteria range from low resistance to high resistance. Antibiotics are introduced which changes the bacterial population. b. After antibiotics shows the bacteria remaining after antibiotics have been introduced into the environment. The bacteria that had low to moderate antibiotic resistance are no longer in the environment. Only those bacteria that are highly resistant have survived. The remaining highly resistant bacteria survive and reproduce leading to “final population”. c. The population that once existed has been entirely changed to bacteria with high antibiotic resistance. If the same antibiotics were introduced into this new environment it would likely have very little effect on these bacteria; they would continue to grow and increase in number. 3. Question 3 a. Bacteriophage b. From top to bottom: Head; Sheath; Tail; Base c. 1. A virus particle attaches to a host cell. 2. The particle releases its genetic instructions into the host cell. 3. The injected genetic material recruits the host cell's enzymes. 4. The enzymes make parts for more new virus particles. 5. The new particles assemble the parts into new viruses. 6. The new particles break free from the host cell. 4. Question 4 a. Lag phase: bacteria are reproducing and growing in number; Exponential growth phase: bacteria are rapidly dividing, doubling with each generation; Stationary phase: bacteria are reproducing at a sustainable level. No increase in population overall; Logarithmic decline: more bacteria are dying that are being replaced. Population numbers rapidly decreasing b. Lag phase: more resources than current population can utilize; Exponential growth: abundant resources supporting the population increase; Stationary phase: resources become limiting; Logarithmic www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses decline: resources decreasing with each generation; unable to support any population growth, bacteria dying 5. Question 5 a. Zones of inhibition indicate that no bacteria grew in these areas, in this case around disks A and E. The disks were dipped into antibiotics. Therefore, the bacteria plated onto the agar are susceptible to antibiotics C and E and not susceptible to antibiotics A, B, or D. The circles around C and E are clear because there is no bacterial growth. b. 2.81 x 1016 estimated bacterial cells www.njctl.org PSI Biology Prokaryotes & Viruses