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Microbiology

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MICROBIOLOGY 130

SURVEY OF MICROORGANISMS
(Read chapter 10 Tortora et. al., 7th ed. especially look at pages 276-285)

5 KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM:


o Procaryotes or monera
o Protista
o Fungi
o Plantae
o Animalia
3 DOMAIN CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM
o Archaea
o Eubacteria
o Eucaryotes

Naming and Classifying Bacteria


Genus - a group of closely related species
Species - a population of cells with very similar characteristics. Members of a
species are practically indistinguishable from each other - but there are often some
minor differences.
Strain - a population of cells derived from a single cell.
Sometimes bacterial names change frequently as new data comes to
light. For instance in the last decade:

Pseudomonas solanacearum --> Burkholdaria


solanacearum --> Ralstonia solanacearum
How do we classify bacteria into genera and species?
o Shape and stain characteristics (Gram Stain and Acid Fast Stain)

o Biochemistry -- which nutrients does the organism use for energy and carbon?
What kinds of waste products does the organism make?
o Genetic characteristics -- G+C ratio, sequence of chromosome and or plasmids,
sequence of specific genes (16s ribosome sequence)

PRACTICAL OVERVIEW OF DIFFERENT TYPES OF ORGANISMS:


1. Prion -- infectious protein
2. Virus
o Genetic particle
o It has the information to reproduce - but only
when inside cells
o No machinery of life
o One nucleic acid only - either RNA or DNA
o Protein coat - capsid, capsomeres
o May have envelope - a lipid bilayer membrane
3. Bacteria
o Procaryotic
o Single-celled organisms -- under proper
conditions these cells can reproduce freely
o Has both DNA and RNA in several different
organizations (chromosome, plasmid, ribosomes,
etc.).

o Cytoplasm is not highly organized


o Cytoplasmic membrane
o Cell wall
o Locomotion based on flagella or axial filaments
4. Single Cell Eucaryotes
o Protozoa, Algae, Simple Fungi (Yeast)
o These are eucaryotes
o Single celled organisms - can reproduce freely
under suitable conditions
o Contain both DNA and RNA - in several
organizations. Much of it in the nucleus
o Cytoplasm - highly organized with many
organelles and a cytoskeleton. (mitochondria,
chloroplasts, various vacuoles, endoplasmic
reticulum, golgi bodies, basal bodies, centrioles.)
o Locomotion based on flagella (cilia) and
contraction (actin).
5. Multicellular Eucaryotes
o Higher Fungi, Plants, Animals
o Basic organization of each cell is like it is in the
single-cell eucaryotes.
o Individual cells are not normally free living. They
live in a "community" -- the body or soma of the
organism.
o These organisms start off as a single cell.

o The cell and its progeny undergo repeated rounds

off division resulting in a mass of cells. At certain


times different groups of cells differentiate into
cells with specialized function. Differentiation is
the process by which certain cells in a
multicellular organism acquire a special function
and organize into unique tissues. In vertebrate
animals, early in the life of the organism there are
many cells which can individually differentiate
into a complete organism. Such cells are called
stem cells.

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PROCARYOTES AND


EUCARYOTES (also see chart on pg. 99 of Tortora et. al. 7th ed.)
Procaryotes - eubacteria and
archaeobacteria

Eucaryotes - all other cells

Genetic info is free in cytoplasm Genetic info is enclosed in a


membrane (nucleus). DNA is
associated with proteins called
histones.
Cell wall is usually present and Cell wall is not found in animal
it is chemically complex. In
cells. In plants it is composed of
eubacteria it contains
cellulose. In fungi it is
peptidoglycan (and teichoic acid composed of chitin. These are
in gram positive bacteria).
polymers of glucose.
No large internal organelles. But Many internal organelles within
may find smaller inclusions and a highly organized cytoplasm.
bubbles.
Ribosomes are small - 70s

Ribosomes are large - 80s; in the

mitochondria and chloroplasts


the mitochondria are small - 70s.
Locomotion with flagella made Locomotion with flagella and
with flagellin; also axial
cilia composed of microtubules
filaments
(tubulin and dynein); also
contractile motion based on
actin and myosin.

A Brief Survey of Microorganisms


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A review of vocabulary found in Chapter 3 of
"Fundamentals of Microbiology", 6th ed. by
I.E. Alcamo (Jones and Bartlett).

Animalia

Kingdom of multicellular eukaryotes with


ingestive nutrition

archaebacteria

a group of bacteria thought to be ancient in


origin, live in extreme conditions

bacterium

prokaryote

Bergey's Manual

definitive listing of all known bacteria

binomial system

classification scheme using two names to


describe organisms

cellulose

polysaccharide in cell wall of plants

cell wall

fibrous accessory covering outside plasma


membrane

centriole

organelle that anchors eukaryotic flagella and


cilia

chitin

polysaccharide in cell wall of fungi

chlamydia

small intracellular bacterial cause of


pneumonia or STD

chloroplast

photosynthetic organ of eukaryotes

chromosomes

tightly coiled complexes of DNA and proteins

cilia

eukaryotic organelle for movement, present in


thousands

class

nomenclature level between phylum and order

cyanobacteria

photosynthetic bacterium, uses true


chlorophyll

cytoskeleton

fibers in cytoplasm of eukaryotes that shape


and move cell

diatom

unicellular algae with glasslike shells

dinoflagellate

unicellular algae that move with use of two


flagella

division

equivalent to phylum for bacteria, algae,


plants, protists

DNA

heritable material

endoplasmic reticulum

maze-like organelle used for protein synthesis


and lipid metabolism

eukaryotic

cells having nuclei and internal membranous


organelles

family

taxonomic level between order and genus

flagella

long, hair-like organelles that generate


movement by rotation or whipping motions

fluid mosaic model

says cell membranes are phospholipid bilayers


with inserted proteins

Fungi

Kingdom also known as Mycetae

fungus

multicellular eukaryote with chitin in cell wall

genus

first part of name in binomial nomenclature


system

Golgi apparatus

flat stacks of membranes involved in protein


modification and routing

index of refraction

ability of a substance to bend light passing


through it

kingdom

level of classification between empire and


phylum/division

lysosome

eukaryotic organelle for intracellular digestion

nomenclature

system of naming things

membrane

limiting boundary composed primarily of


phospholipids

micrometer

unit of measure equal to a millionth of a meter

mitochondrion

dual membraned eukaryotic organelle that


makes ATP

mold

fuzzy form of fungus whose cells grow in


filaments

Monera

Kingdom name for bacteria

mycoplasma

eubacteria that lack cell walls

nanometer

unit of measure equal to a billionth of a meter

numerical aperture

a measure of the size of the cone of light that


enters the objective lens

order

level of classification between class and


family

organelle

membrane-enclosed compartment in
eukaryotic cells

peptidoglycan

complex of amino acids and sugars - major


component of eubacterial cell wall

phylum

level of classification between kingdom and

class
Plantae

kingdom of multicellular, photosynthetic


eukaryotes

plasma membrane

outer limiting membrane of cell

plastid

membranous storage vesicle in plants

prion

infectious particles composed entirely of


protein

prokaryotic

cells lacking nuclei and membranous


organelles

protist

unicellular eukaryote

Protocista

alternative name for Kingdom Protista

protozoa

unicellular eukaryotes with ingestive nutrition

resolution

ability to distinguish two points as separate

ribosome

protein + RNA complex that makes proteins

rickettsia

small bacteria that invade host cells transmitted to humans by arthropods

RNA

single stranded nucleic acid used to code for


proteins

species

most basic level of rank in a classification


system

taxon

level of classification

taxonomy

study of classification of organisms

virus

infectious particle composed of nucleic acid


surrounded by protein coat

working distance

amount of room between specimen and


objective lens

yeast

unicellular fungi that reproduce by budding

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