Classification
Why do we classify or separate different organism into groups?
Aristotle suggested plant and animal Kingdoms.
- Why did this system work in 375 BC?
- Why doesn’t it work today?
Modern day taxonomy relies on molecular, structural and evolutionary characteristics.
- Examples –
Binomial Nomenclature –Each organism is assigned a two word Latin name. Genus, species
- Homo sapiens, Homo sapiens
- Bacillus anthracis, Bacillus anthracis
Classifications of Microbes
- Prokaryote
- Bacteria
- Archea
- Eukaryote
- Planta
- Animalia
- Fungi
- Protista
Kingdom Animalia
- Eukaryotic
- Multicellular
- No cell wall
- Consumer (mouth)
- Typically motile
- Examples –
Kingdom Planta
- Eukaryotic
- Typically mulitcellular, some unicellular and colonial
- Cell wall – made of cellulose
- Producer
- No movement
- Examples –
Kingdom Fungi
- Eukaryotic
- Unicellular or multicellular
- Cell walls – chitin
- Non-motile
- Consumer (no mouth), dead feeder, parasite
- Examples –
DomainProtista
- Eukaryotic
- Unicellular and colonial
- Two distinct groups
- Plant – like characteristics
- Green Algae
- Diatoms
- Euglena
- Dinoflagellates
- Brown and red algae
- Animal – like characteristics
- Ameboids
- Flagellates
- Ciliates
- Sporozoans (no movement)
Domain Bacteria
- Prokaryotic
- Cell walls, peptidoglycan
- Unicellular, some colonial
- Parasite, dead feeder
- May be motile
- Examples –
Domain Archea –
- Prokaryote
- Unicellular or colonial
- Non-motile
- No cell wall
- Specialized producer
- Examples –
How do we classify plants and animals?
How is bacterial classification different from that of plants and animals?
What characteristics do we use to classify bacteria?
- Cell wall composition
- Morphology
- Shape
- Coccus
- Bacillus
- Spiral (vibrio, spirillum)
- Arrangement of cells
- Diplo-
- Strepto-
- Staphylo-
- Differential staining
- Gram stain
- Endospore stain
- Oxygen requirements
- DNA base pair comparison = A/T vs. C/G
- Biochemical tests – what kind of media will they grow on?
Eukaryotic cell structure
- No cell walls
- Membrane bound organelles
- Mitochondria
- Nucleus
- Centriole
- Endoplasmic Reticulum
- RER
- SER
- Golgi Body
- Vacuole
- Peroxisome
- Non membrane bound organelles
- Ribosome
Prokaryotic Cell Structure
- Outside the cell wall
- Glycocalyx
- Negative staining technique
- Capsule
- Slime layer
- Flagella
- Gives motility towards food (chemotrophic), light (phototropyic)
- Monotrichous
- Lophotrichous
- Amphitrichous
- Peritrichous
- Fimbrae – provide attachment, G- bacteria
- Pili – used to share DNA segments, a form of sexual reproduction
- Cell wall – responsible for cell shape, controls osmotic movement.
- Made up of several materials, depending on species.
- Peptidoglycan typical component
- Some bacteria have lipid in their cell wall, special cell wall staining techniques
- Gram staining procedure
- Adhere to clean, dry slide.
- Air dry
- Flame, twice
- Crystal violet
- Gram’s iodine
- Alcohol
- Safranin (a counterstain)
- Gram positive cells
- Gram negative cells
- Inside the cell wall
- Plasma membrane
- Selectively permeable membrane
- Fluid mosaic model
- Hydrophobic unit
- Hydrophilic unit
- Proteins
- Glycoproteins
- Cytoplasm
- Cytosol + organelles
- DNA – one single, circular DNA
- Plasmid – small, circular DNA
- Replicates independent of DNA
- Small number of genes (<10)
- Carries information unnecessary to daily life
- Ribosome
- site of protein synthesis
- composed of rRNA + proteins
- Inclusions – reserve storage (fat, lipids, etc.)
- Endospore – in bacteria they are formed in response to environmental stress, lack of nutrients, never reproductive structures, mostly in G+
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