Archaebacteria Flashcards
What is archae bacteria?
- They are known as ancient bacteria
- Some of the firsts are discovered in Yellow park’s hot springs and geysers
- They live in extreme and normal environment
- All are unicellular
What are the similarities btw archaea and bacteria
- Same shape, size, and appearance
- They reproduce by binary fission
- They move primarily by means of flagella
- Morphological similarities makes it difficult to visually tell them apart
- Archie are more phylogenetically similar to eukaryotic than bacteria
Difference
- Unlike bacteria, archaea cell walls does not contain peptidoglycan
- They have various types including pseudopeptidoglycan. (no D amino acid)
- membrane lipids have ether bond instead of ester bond
- Have 70S ribosome but in a different shape
- Have more complex RNA polymerase
What are methanogens?
Archaea that produces methane (CH4) as part of energy metabolism
They occupy :
- Marshes and swamp
- Hydrothermal vents
- Animal digestive tracts
- Waste Management facilities
What are the types
- Methanogens
- Thermoacidophiles
- Halophiles
What are thermoacidophiles
- they live in dark, without oxygen
-like to live in superheated water with temp. less than 750deg F - prefers acidic env. pH1-3
- like to live in env. of hydrogen sulfide and dissolved minerals (rotten egg smell)
What are inclusion body?
- within the cytoplasm of prokaryotic cells are several kinds of reserve deposit known as inclusions.
- cells may accumulate certain nutrients when they are plentiful and use them when environment is deficient.
What are metachromatic granules ?
- Metachromatic granules are large inclusions that stain red with certain blue dyes such as methylene blue.
- Volutin- a reserve of inorganic phosphate that can be used for the synthesis of ATP
- Phosphate rich environment
- Metachromatic granules are found in algae, fungi and protozoa
- Granules are characteristics of Corynebacterium diphtheriae
What are carboxysomes
Carboxysomes are inclusions that contain the enzyme ribulose I.5- diphosphate carboxylase
Photosynthetic bacteria uses C02 as their sole source of energy and required the enzyme for CO2 fixation
eg) Nitrifying bacteria, cyanobacteria and thiobacilli
What are magnetosomes ?
- prokaryotic organelle that serve as navigational devices in magnetotactic bacteria
and consist of a membrane-enclosed intracellular crystals of iron mineral
eg) magnetospirillum magneticum
What are gas vacuoles?
Hollow cavities found in many aquatic prokaryotes including anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria and halobacteria
- Each vacuole consists of rows of several gas vacuoles which are hollow cylinders covered by protein
- They maintain buoyancy so that the cells remain at the depth of water where they receive sufficient amount of oxygen, light and nutrients