bacteria Flashcards
1
Q
prokaryotes
A
- smaller, simpler type of cell that DOES NOT have a membrane-bound nucleus
- all bacterial cells
2
Q
eukaryotes
A
- larger, complex type of cell that does have a membrane-bound nucleus
- plants, animals, fungi and protists
3
Q
archaebacteria
A
- oldest of all living organisms on earth
- hypothesized to be the ancestors to all of life’s kingdoms: can thrive in hot/acidic/salty conditions – conditions that scientists think existed on earth billions of years ago
- can inhabit Earth’s most inhospitable regions
4
Q
why do archaebacteria get their own kingdom?
A
- chemical properties of their cell wall and membrane are different from eubacteria
- out of 1700 genes more than 50% are different than eubacteria
5
Q
phyla of archaebacteria
A
- anaerobic methanogens: live in animal gut/bottom of marsh where all methane gas on earth is produced
- halophiles: live in salty conditions, like the dead sea
- thermophiles: can tolerate hot/acidic conditions, like hot spings
6
Q
eubacteria
A
- single chromosome forms a loop or small piece of floating DNA called a plasmid
- cell wall: complex carbs, protection
- cell membrane
- flagella: locomotion and transportation
- pili: important for replication
7
Q
eubacteria colony shapes
A
coccus: spherical
bacillus: rod
spirillum: spiral/worm-like
mono: one
diplo: two
strepto: chain
staphylo: clump
8
Q
binary fission
A
- bacterial cells grow at an exponential rate when given the right type and amounts of nutrients.
- their mode of reproduction is asexual, by doubling themselves: can translate into a doubling of the population every 20 minutes
9
Q
binary fission steps
A
- chromosomes duplicate and copies get separated
- cell elongates and copies of chromosomes move towards the poles
- cell divides into two daughter cells
10
Q
plasmids
A
- small, circular DNA (in addition to bacterial chromosomes)
- often carry genes with advantages (like resistance to antibiotics)
- can transfer plasmids to other bacteria through conjugation
11
Q
conjugation steps
A
- F+ cell (donor) with plasmid makes contact with F- cell (recipient) via their tubule pilus
- conjugation tube form at site of contact bridging the 2 cells
- single-stranded DNA of the plasmid gets transferred to the recipient cell
- conjugation tube disconnects. Single-stranded DNA from each cell duplicates making both F+ cells and DNA is the same
12
Q
binary Fission vs. conjugation
A
conjugation increases population diversity due to the transfer of genes
13
Q
antibiotics
A
- compounds used to kill or harm specific bacteria (example: pneumonia, tuberculosis, meningitis, etc)
- approx. 100 different antibiotics now
- bacteria are living things and reproduce quickly and is easy for them to become resistant to antibiotics
14
Q
how antibiotics work
A
- antibiotics are specific to types of bacteria
- some inhibit cell’s ability to turn glucose into energy
- some inhibit a cell from constructing cell wall
- all results in death of bacterium (no reproduction of new bacterium)
- only affect certain parts of a cell
15
Q
antibiotic resistance
A
antibiotics kill all bacteria except the ones that are resistant, then the resistant ones reproduce and become the majority