Chapter 10: ID & Classification of Prokaryotes Important Point: Principles of Taxonomy “Taxonomy is the science that studies organisms in order to arrange them into groups; those organisms with similar properties are grouped together and separated from those that are different.” “Taxonomy can be viewed as three separate but interrelated areas: Identification--the process of characterizing organisms Classification--the process of arranging organisms into similar or related groups, primarily to provide easy identification and study Nomenclature--the system of assigning names to organisms.” We’ll consider each in turn. Taxonomy: Identification We’ll spend quite a bit of time in this chapter and in lab on methods of bacterial identification. In practical terms, bacterial identification usually is done for reasons of health, either in the course of treating infectious disease or to prevent disease e.g., to identify fecally contaminated water. e.g., to identify organisms associated with food spoilage or contamination. e.g., to identify pathogens in the clinical microbiology laboratory. It is important to keep in mind that the appropriate tests to employ will depend on the organisms likely present plus time, skills of the tester, and budgetary concerns. In the clinic patient symptoms help to define what organisms of interest are likely present. Taxonomy: Classification The goal of classification is to determine genetic similarity, though in the past genetic similarity had to be inferred based on phenotypic similarity. As a consequence of the sequencing of organism genomes, the science of classification is very much in flux (classifications are changing often) as phenotype-based classification is replaced by genotype-based classification. All is not happy even with genotype-based classification, however, since horizontal gene transfer greatly complicates estimations of genetic similarity, with different parts of genomes displaying different levels of genetic similarity between organisms. Note that though classification can be considered strictly in terms of genetic similarity, traditionally in genetics similarity is considered to be an indication of “similarity by decent,” a.k.a., of blood relatedness, a.k.a., of evolutionary relatedness. Taxonomic Rank Strain O157:H7 One difficulty is deciding how different two isolates must be before one describes them as different species rather than as different strains. Taxonomic Rank Note that not all groupings of microorganisms have taxonomic meaning: e.g., lactic acid bacteria, endospore-formers, or enteric pathogens. These are examples of classifying “mistakes” due to phenotypic similarity that results from convergent evolution. Strain O157:H7 One difficulty is deciding how different two isolates must be before one describes them as different species rather than as different strains. Taxonomy: Nomenclature Nomenclature: “Bacterial names may originate from any language, but they must be given a Latin suffix.” (i.e., they must be Latinized). Strain O157:H7 Recall Binomial Nomenclature. Three-Domain Classification Line lengths are based on genetic distances, i.e., longer lines reflect greater differences. Three-Domain Classification Note that majority of genetic diversity is among singlecelled organisms Methods of Identification Note existence of other methods of visualization beyond Gram stain... Note Phenotype- vs. Genotypebased classification. Phenotypic Characteristics Microscopy: Gram stain, acid-fast stain, cell morphology, cell arrangements. Colony morphology: size, color, border shape, etc. Growth on Differential media: blood agar, MacConkey agar, etc. Growth on Selective/Differential media: MacConkey agar, EMB agar, etc. Biochemical tests: “Most biochemical tests rely on a pH indicator or chemical reaction that results in a color change [or gas production] when a [specific] compound is degraded.” Keep in mind that to do well in lab it is important to gain some reasonable understanding of how the various biochemical tests work. Note that “because each test often requires an incubation period… it [is] too time-consuming to proceed one [phenotypic characterization] step at a time.” Gas Generation: Catalase Test Durham Tube: Gas Production Color Change: Urease Test Commercial Biochemical Test Kits Dichotomous Key Don’t worry about the specific details of this key but do keep in mind how it is organized. Typing of Strains Biovar, Biotype (syn) Serovar, Serotype (syn) Typing via RFLP analysis Ribotype (RFLP of rRNA) Also Phage Type Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) Analysis 1 2 3 4 5 Genomic DNA is isolated, cut using specific restriction enzymes, run out on a gel, and then Southern Blotted with specific DNA probes. Can you tell me which lanes contain bacteria that are clonally related? What is an RFLP? (fig. 9.9) What is an RFLP? (fig. 9.9) Different strains have recognition sites in different places due to genotypic differences. Note resulting differences in restriction fragment length. Southern Blotting (Fig. 9.8) RFLP generation. Gels separate DNA by size. This is a post-probe detection blot. Ribotyping Clonally related strains should have same RFLP type (i.e., same band pattern). These are two strains that have been differentiated based on RFLP analysis. Why care about clonal relatedness? Is a contamination problem due to fault in your aseptic technique? Or is there just a particularly invasive bug making the rounds? Phages are viruses of bacteria. Phage Typing This is a “Soft-Agar Overlay.” The clear spots are due to bacteria killing (lysis). “Phage” = “Bacteriophage” The disks are impregnated with specific antibiotics. Antibiogram The streaks make up a bacterial “lawn”. These two strains have different antibiotic-resistance patterns. Numerical Taxonomy Numerical Taxonomy is a method of classification that pools phenotypic characteristics. The key to numerical taxonomy is that no one trait (e.g., ability to ferment glucose) is elevated in importance above any other trait (e.g., Gram staining characteristics). Instead, all traits are weighted equally. Classification in numerical taxonomy is expressed in terms of a Similarity Coefficient found between two compared strains. It is equal to: [# pos both strains]/[# pos one or both strains] by “pos” I mean that the characteristic is present, e.g., ferments glucose or has pili, etc. Greater similarity coefficient, closer relatedness is inferred. Greater than ~70% and inference is that two compared bacteria are of the same species. Numerical Taxonomy Similarity Coefficients Rearranged into two distinct species... G-C Content (DNA Base Ratio) dsDNA is distinguished from ssDNA based on UV absorbance. Different species have different DNA melting temps. G-C Content (DNA Base Ratio) Helix has higher stability with greater fraction GC vs. A-T pairing. Higher melting points therefore correspond to greater G-C content DNA-DNA Hybridization DNA-DNA Hybridization Similarity is in terms of nucleotide sequence between the two compared organisms. 16S rRNA Sequence Comparison 16S rRNA Link to Next Presentation