Bacteria and Archaea

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Bacteria and Archaea
By: Jared Fearby and Israel Florentino
Outline
How did life begin to diversify
how are prokaryotes successful
what are the different groups of prokaryotes
how do prokaryotes affect their environment
How did life begin to diversify
prokaryotes were the first organisms to show up on earth
two lineages of prokaryotes diverged early in earth's life: Bacteria and Archaea
the merging of these two prokaryotes is thought to be how eukaryotes first showed
up on earth
how are multicellular eukaryotes similar to prokaryotes
Some similarities between multicellular eukaryotes and prokaryotes
both conduct glycolysis
DNA is used as the genetic material that encodes proteins
both replicate DNA semiconservatively
both have plasma membranes and ribosomes
the differences between multicellular eukaryotes and prokaryotes
some of the significant differences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells
prokaryotic cells lack a cytoskeleton and a nucleus
The DNA in prokaryotic cells are not organized in a nucleus
prokaryotes don't have any membrane enclosed organelles
Archaea v.s. Bacteria
Archaea, and bacteria have evolved to become very different from each other some of
the differences between them are
bacteria has peptidoglycan in cell wall
the membrane lipids in archaea are branched while it's not in bacteria
bacteria has three common shapes: coccus(spheres),bacilli(rods) and helical
Archaea has less known about its shapes but some have been known to be spheres,
rods, triangular, and square shaped.
how are the prokaryotes successful
prokaryotes are to most successful organism on earth in terms of numbers
they reproduce commonly by binary fission
prokaryotes tend to live in colonies even though each cell can be independent
prokaryotic cell walls
unlike the cell walls of plants, algae and fungi bacteria contains peptidoglycan
Archaeal cell walls differ from bacteria in that it contains a lot of protein
one group of archaea had pseudopeptidoglycan which is similar to peptidoglycan
two different types of bacteria walls, gram positive and gram negative
many antibiotics like penicillin interfere with the synthesis of peptidoglycan
prokaryotes reproduction
binary fission is the most common way prokaryotes reproduce
genetic recombination can occur through transformation,conjugation and
transduction but this is not directly related to reproduction
some prokaryotes can reproduce once every 10 minutes while other will wait more
than a century to divide
prokaryotes and their metabolism
prokaryotes are very diverse in metabolic diversity
obligate anaerobes are organisms that have an anaerobic metabolism
obligate aerobes are the opposite of anaerobic and will die without oxygen
facultative anaerobes can switch between anaerobic and aerobic metabolisms
photoautotrophs use light as an energy source
chemolithotrophs oxidize inorganic substances to obtain their energy
photoheterotrophs use light as their energy but obtain carbon atoms from organic
compounds
what are the different groups of bacteria
spirochetes
chlamydias
cyanobacteria
endospores
staphylococci
mycoplasmas
the largest group of bacteria is proteobacteria
five groups of proteobacteria alpha, beta gamma, delta, and epsilon
different groups of Archaea
there are two principle groups of archaea, Euryarchaeota and Crenarchaeota
two more groups were recently discovered, Korarchaeota and Nanoarchaeota
most Crenarchaeota live in hot or acidic places
Euryarchaeota are found in many different places. Some of these include the ocean
floor, the digestive system, salty environments like the dead sea
some can even live in water with a pH of 11.5
Korarchaeota are known only by DNA isolated directly from hot springs
Nanoarchaeota lives by attaching itself to a type of Crenarchaeota called ignicoccus
How do prokaryotes affect their environment
prokaryotes are important in element cycling
prokaryotes are decomposers
prokaryotes live on and in other organisms
very few bacteria are actually pathogens
bacteria that helps you are called probiotics
References
https://www.thinglink.com/scene/507594641277714432
https://www.boundless.com/biology/textbooks/boundless-biology-textbook/the-study-of-life-1/themes-and-concepts-of-biology49/the-diversity-of-life-270-11403/
http://biology.clc.uc.edu/courses/bio106/bacteria.htm
http://spot.pcc.edu/~jvolpe/b/bi234/lec/4_growth/lecture_4L.htm
https://sharon-taxonomy2009-p3.wikispaces.com/Bacteria
https://www.haikudeck.com/good-and-bad-bacteria-education-presentation-lHMyVqcBzw
Sadava, David E. Life. the Science of Biology. New York: W.H. Freeman, 2010. Print.
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