Kinetics I Morphology and structure Flashcards
Revision of the 3 Domains of Life Revision of the taxonomic ranks in the Bacteria and Archaea. Revision of key difference between the 3 Domains. General cell properties found in all Bacteria and Archaea. General cell properties found in more specific groups. (specifically things like cell walls [part of which is revision], intracellular granules etc).
When were eukarya “born”?
When there was the endosymbiotic engulfment of Rickettsiaceae to form mitochondria
What led to the lineage of the Rhodophyta?
Endosymbiotic engulfment of a red
member of the “Cyanobacteria” to
form rhodoplasts, leading to the lineage
of the Rhodophyta.
What led to the lineages of the Viridiplantae?
Endosymbiotic engulfment of a green member of the “Cyanobacteria” to form chloroplasts, leading to the
lineages of the Viridiplantae (including Streptophyta, Chlorophyta, Bryophyta etc)
Why are phylum names used sometimes in the literature?
They are nickname
We don’t use the rank of kingdom. Show order of other ranks.
Domain > Phylum > Class > Order > Family > Genus > Species [ > Subspecies]
How are bacteria and bacteria studied>
Individual isolates of a species are strains and each one has a strain code e.g. Escherichia coli K12 MG1655.
All Bacteria and Archaea are studied by isolating from the environment and maintaining a population in the laboratory. Our only ecological methods are molecular ecology.
How are the species defined?
Species are defined currently based only on whole-genome studies (sequence comparison, start-codon frequencies, amino acid frequencies in core genes, G+C fraction etc) alongside analysis of single genes (16S rRNA gene and ribosomal protein genes (53 from rpl, rps, rpm operons)) plus physiological characteristics, fatty
acid use, polar lipid use, quinone use etc. N.B. nomenclatural Code for the Bacteria and Archaea is much stricter than those for Zoology and Botany-Phycology-Mycology! We have registered names which the other Codes do not provide for all names of new taxa must be either ;
1) validly published: published in Int. J. Syst. Evol.
Microbiol.
OR
2) effectively published in any other journal and then sent to Editor-in-Chief of Int. J. Syst.Evol. Microbiol. to be listed on a Validation List –
if this is not done, the name has no standing and can only be
used in quotation marks.
Cell structure – general features of all Bacteria and Archaea that they have in common
- cell membrane(s) (bacteria= lipid bilayer, some archaea have double-headed lipid monolayer)
- cell walls in many cases but not all, and very variable. A glycocalyx [pl. glycocalyces] may be present instead as well, either as a well-formed capsule (“wearing a jumper”) or irregular slime (“in a blanket”)
layer. [Gr. masc. n. κᾰ́λῠξ (kálux), coating on a seed; L. masc. n. calyx] (it is like a sugar coating) - cytoplasm – we often call this cytosol, it’s interchangeable.
- If they have two membranes (e.g. the Gram-stain-negative Bacteria), they will have a periplasm too, in the periplasmic space between the two membranes.
- respiratory chain is always on inner membrane (IF they respire at all – not all do)
and Δp (proton-motive force) builds in periplasm (if present) or in membrane invaginations if not).
Note many respiratory Bacteria use ΔNa+ (sodium-motive
force) instead! (mostly gut or marine organisms) - ribosomes, which vary by Domain of Life [S = Svedberg, a rate of sedimentation in a centrifuge]. Both the Bacteria and Archaea have 70S ribosomes with about ribosomal proteins. Each has a 50S subunit (23S and 5S rRNA plus ribosomal
proteins) and a 30S subunit (16S rRNA plus ribosomal proteins). Ribosomal proteins c. 50 in the Bacteria, c. 60 in the Archaea. - circular genome. Sometimes other replicons too.
Describe more structures they could have (outside)
describe what the names are for the amount of flagella
- pili (pl. pili, sing. pilus) – either used in replicon transfer (‘sex pili’) or in gliding motility (Type IV pili), particularly in Myxococcus spp. [L. masc. n. pilus, a hair]
- fimbriae (pl. fimbriae, sing. fimbria) - used for sticking to surfaces and to other cells. [fringe]
- flagella- fuelled by Δp directly, to provide movement.
Required for rapid tactic responses. Many organisms without flagella (atrichous cells) are still motile by gliding or magnetotaxis and so on. Cells can have a flagella at one
end (monotrichous) or many at one end (lophotrichous). A single one at each end is referred to as amphitrichous and cells with flagella all over are peritrichous.
[L. neut. n. flagellum, a whip, a lash, a scourge] - holdfasts – sticky regions for adhering to surfaces e.g. in Hyphomicrobium spp.
Name things SOME Bacteria and Archaea have too on the
INSIDE
- Membrane-bound nuclei/other regions – unique to the
phylum “Planktomycetia”. Highly specialist cell compartments used to protect DNA from metabolic
intermediates. - proteinaceous cell compartments – examples include
carboxysomes and enterosomes that maintain low-pH regions for diol metabolism.
How can anammoxosome grow in phylum Planctomycetota
autotrophically on ammonia as their electron donor and nitrite as their electron acceptor – ‘anammox’ Bacteria
Name other things inside
- storage granules – these are usually in the cytoplasm but sometimes in the periplasmic space (sulfur granules only).
- insecticide crystals – e.g. δ-endotoxin in Bacillus thuringiensis – stains with any protein stain like Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 (AB83) and looks like a cartoon diamond!
- storage states/forms – like endospores, exospores, cysts etc.
- internal membranes – common in methanotrophs (L09) and some autotrophs (L06
Name different types of storage crystals
- sulfur granules produced only by some chemolithoautotrophs when a lot of sulfide/thiosulfate around –this allows them to turn the sulfur into an insoluble form (mainly S8 rings and amorphous long chains) that
other organisms can’t get at and that they can then use themselves later on. - polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) granules – main types are poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (β-PHB) and poly-γhydroxybutyrate (γ-PHB) but longer ones also found. Long-term carbon storage – kind of like triglycerides in adipose tissue in Homo sapiens L. Bioplastics – commercially very popular at present.
Older names “lipid bodies” and “sudanophilic granules” often used still. - glycogen granules produced in heterotrophic Bacteria are not like glycogen from the Animalia as they don’t have the same glycogenin glucosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.186) enzyme at the core but they are the same kind of D-(+)-glucose polymer. They are a form of carbon storage but they only last a few minutes so do not allow long-term survival during starvation. Stain with periodic* acid-Schiff stain
- polyphosphate granules (polymer of phosphate groups) which we normally call volutin granules or metachromatic granules – these are really a means to storing up inorganic phosphate as an insoluble polymer when there is not much ADP needing to be phosphorylated into ATP. That means that later on, if inorganic phosphate is less abundant,
they have a store.
Subcellular granules
Name and describe stains used
Corynebacterium sp. from the class Actinobacteria, stained to show volutin granules (polyphosphate granules)
which are red-black against green cytoplasm.
Stain is Albert’s stain which uses toluidine blue (stains volutin granules) and malachite green.
Escherichia coli from the class Gammaproteobacteria, stained to show polyhydroxyalkanoate granules using
Sudan black III (oil soluble dye). Safranin O has been used as the counterstain to show the cytoplasm (pinkish). Some people use Nile blue instead of Sudan black III.
Bacillus thuringiensis from the class Bacilli, by phase-contrast microscopy to show endospores (E) and insecticide
crystals (C) made of δ-endotoxin. Below shows some purified crystals by scanning electron microscopy.
Cell walls and membranes
What do we consider a true capsule and what do we call it?
what negative staining inks are mainly used and what do they show?
What other staining inks are used for slime layer.
What is the slime layer referred to as?
Glycocalyx:
The glycocalyx is a layer of carbohydrates that surrounds the exterior of some bacterial cells.
If the glycocalyx is present and has a jelly-like consistency, it is considered a true capsule.
Capsules may contain polymers of amino acids and polysaccharides, and the term used for the substance is capsular polymeric substance (CPS).
you can’t stain a capsule, the carbon bits in india ink just can’t get through so it doesn’t stain and becomes a halo
Staining Techniques:
Negative staining is mentioned as a method to observe capsules. India ink and Nigrosin WS are specified as staining agents.
India ink, which contains lamp black particles in gum arabic and water, is excluded by the capsule, creating a halo around the cells.
Nigrosin WS, a water-soluble violet-black dye, is excluded by hydrophilic/water-rich slime layers.
Slime Layer:
Some bacteria have a looser slime layer or a thin layer of polysaccharide instead of a distinct capsule.
Alcian blue 8G staining is suggested to observe this type of glycocalyx, as it specifically picks up polysaccharides.
The substance that makes up the slime layer is referred to as extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) or extracellular polysaccharide.