Taxonomy Prokaryotes Flashcards
Who invented the binomial system of taxonomy?
Carl Linnaeus in 1700s
Generic + Specific Name –> usually descriptive
Taxonomists refine classifications
Did King Philip Come Over For Good Sushi
General classification system categories
Phenetic (numerical) - overall similarity
Phylogenetic - evolutionary relationships
Why does taxonomy of plants/animals not work for microorganisms?
Because the definition is based on organisms which can interbreed but most microbes reproduce asexually
Evolutionary history of microorganisms is very incomplete and dates back 3.5 byo
Stromatolites are
Ancient vs. modern stromatolites
Microbial mats of layers of filamentous prokaryotes, sediments and ECM
Ancient stromatolites are dominated by anoxygenic bacteria whereas modern are dominated by oxygenic bacteria
Subsurface vs. surface origin hypotheses
Evolutionary development stages:
Surface: primordial soup arose membrane enclosed self replicating cell with inorganic and organic materials inside
- but conditions would have been too unstable - theory against argument
Subsurface: life originated in hydrothermal vents - stable conditions, with steady supply of energy as H2S and H2
Theoretically: building blocks –> catalytic + self-replicating RNA, protein synthesis, DNA, lipid bilayer development and horizontal gene transfer —> LUCA –> bacteria + archaea
- began as chemoautotrophs and then produced enough O2 in the atmosphere that other heterotrophs appeared in different niches
Why is it theorized early self-replicating system was RNA?
RNA can bind small molecules
RNA has catalytic activity (ribozymes)
RNA can be copied like DNA
But DNA is more stable
Michael Adanson invented
Phenetic taxonomy 200 years ago
1) All characteristics of equal importance
2) Classify based on as many features as possible
3) Organisms grouped by similarity which is calculated as a similarity or Jaccard coefficient
Doesn’t work considering how vastly different similar lineages can be in catabolic pathways
What is a Phenon?
Similarity coefficient?
Jaccard coefficient?
From Phenetic taxonomy, a group of organisms that share characteristics in common
Similarity coefficient: shared/tested characteristics
Jaccard coefficient: shared/total characteristics not shared
How mutations affect evolutionary change
Adaptive mutation improve fitness of organism and increase survival
Silent mutations may be beneficial in new niches
Deleterious mutations are usually lost
Accumulation of mutations —> speciation
Carl Woese
Comparitive rRNA sequencing
1970’s sequence small subunit rRNA in prokaryotes (16S) and eukaryotes (18S) –> established 3 domains of life and created phylogenetic taxonomy
1) Amplification of gene encoding SSU rRNA
2) Sequencing of genome of rRNA
3) Analysis of sequence in reference to other sequences
What is used today to infer phylogeny of prokaryotes and other microorganisms !
Conserved vs. variable regions in SSU rRNA
Conserved regions include DNA which remains between different organisms whereas variable regions can be the sites of accumulated differences and neutral mutations (genetic drift)
Evolutionary relationship between organisms is correlated with number of accumulated mutations
- alignment of similar sequences allows for this
More differences —> longer time since divergence
Why are eukaryotic cells chimeric?
similar lipids and energy metabolism to bacteria
transcription and translation machinery similar to archaea
phylogenetically more similar to ARCHAEA
Hypotheses for formation of eukaryotic cell
1) Eukaryotes began as lineage with nuclei and then acquired mitochondria/chloroplats
2) Eukaryotes arose from association between H2-producing bacterium symbiont (become mitochondria) and H2-consuming archaea host
- archaea host later developed nucleus to protect DNA from bacteria
Filamentous Actinobacteria
Ex. Streptomyces
hyphal growth - cytoplasm filament not separated by cross walls (coenocytic)
produce dessication resistant spores at tip of sprorophore
Predatory bacteria
Ex. Bdellovibrio
Infects other bacterial cells, acquires nutrients from host cell, does not grow on agar plates
Does not target gram positive (no periplasm)