Microbes and Energy Flow Flashcards
Describe Natural Environments ‘the unseen majority’
- Most organisms cannot be or have nor been isolated in pure culture
- Identification now down using genetic ‘fingerprints’
- Currently, there are millions of unique 16S rRNA sequences (molecular barcodes) available in databases
- The majority of these gene are therefore from uncultivated bacteria
The uncultured microbial world is far greater than the cultured world
Population vs community: microbes
- Individual microbial cells of a species proliferate (increase rapidly) to form a population
- Populations interact/communicate to form communities
Define microbial ecology and microbiome
Microbial ecology: the study of the interrelationships among microorganisms and their environment
Microbiome: all microorganisms, and their genes, within a particular environment
Describe how the process of breaking bonds can have two potential goals
- Harvesting of building blocks
- Harvesting of energy
This process can run in reverse. You would then need both energy to create a bond, AND a building block to attach to that bond
Describe reduction-oxidation in bacteria (RedOx) in terms of the steps the molecules undergo
RedOx is the basis for energy transfer in cells.
- For every action (eg. oxidation) there is an equal and opposite reaction
Step 1.
- H2S is an external electron donor and undergoes oxidation to become S
- NADP+ undergoes reduction at the same time, using the donated electrons to become NADPH2
Step 2:
- NADPH2 undergoes oxidation to become NADP+ again
- CO2 undergoes reduction to produce (CH2O)n using the electrons taken from NADPH2
What are the key points of RedOx in bacteria
- Energy harvested from the environment is converted to a ‘local currency’ inside the cell
- NADH/NADPH serve as intermediates to transfer energy inside of cell
- NAD+ and NADH facilitate redox reactions without being consumed; they are recycled
- The RedOx reactions have to be equal and recycling at all times otherwise the cell will die
- A redox reaction is shuttled through NADH/NADPH
Describe the trophic nourishment groups in microbiology
FOOD
Autotrophs
- Primary producers
- Fix CO2
- Self sufficient, do not require carbon
Heterotrophs: Get carbon from organic compounds
- Decomposers
- Need fixed carbon, cannot use CO2 directly
- Dependent on primary producers
ENERGY
Phototrophs: Get their energy from light
- use solar energy
Chemotrophs: Get their energy from chemical compounds
- use chemical energy from either C compounds (organic - glucose) or non C compounds (inorganic - H2S)
Describe the findings from a microbal mat in a marsh
- Light is the common resource
- Avoid competition by tuning their antenna to different wavelengths
- Different colours in the marsh mat show the different kinda of bacteria in the marsh
What can we learn from the cable bacteria
- All organisms need to eat (gather energy)
- If life is present, energy is being harvested from something
- If one source of energy is missing, there must be another one to sustain life. Find it and the communities redox profile will match it