bio 127 lec 3 microbiology: prokaryotic and eucaryotic cell structures

117
Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

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Page 1: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic

Cell Structures

Morphology of Bacteria

A Size

- bacterial cells vary in size depending on the species

but most are approximately 05 to 1 um in diameter or

width

eg Staphylococci and streptococci (D=075 to 125 um)

cylindrical typhoid and dysentery bacteria (05 um to

1 um in width and 2 to 3 um in length)

B Shape

-divided on three main groups

1 Cocci ndash spherical (eg S aureus)

2 Bacilli ndash cylindrical or rod-shaped(eg B subtilis)

3 Spirilla- spirals (Treponema)

4 comma-shaped (eg Vibrio cholerae)

Usually round but they can be ovoid or flattened on 1 side

when they are adhering to another cell

have considerable differences in length and width for the

various species The ends of some are square others

rounded or tapered or pointed

helical bacteria that look like corkscrews (eg Spirochetes)

Pleomorphic- can have variety of cell shapes

eg Arthrobacter (it changes its shape as the culture

ages)

C Arrangement

Examples

a Neisseria

b Streptococcus species

which cause throat and

wound infection

c Pediococcus

d Staphylococcus

e Sarcina

Patterns of arrangement

Examples

a Corynebacterium diphtheriae

b Caulobacter

c Streptobacillus

Bacterial Cell Structure

1 Appendages ndash flagella and pili

2 Surface Layers- capsule cell wall and plasma

membranes mesosomes

3 Cytoplasm ndash nuclear material plasmids ribosomes

inclusions and chromatophores

4 Special structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 2: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Morphology of Bacteria

A Size

- bacterial cells vary in size depending on the species

but most are approximately 05 to 1 um in diameter or

width

eg Staphylococci and streptococci (D=075 to 125 um)

cylindrical typhoid and dysentery bacteria (05 um to

1 um in width and 2 to 3 um in length)

B Shape

-divided on three main groups

1 Cocci ndash spherical (eg S aureus)

2 Bacilli ndash cylindrical or rod-shaped(eg B subtilis)

3 Spirilla- spirals (Treponema)

4 comma-shaped (eg Vibrio cholerae)

Usually round but they can be ovoid or flattened on 1 side

when they are adhering to another cell

have considerable differences in length and width for the

various species The ends of some are square others

rounded or tapered or pointed

helical bacteria that look like corkscrews (eg Spirochetes)

Pleomorphic- can have variety of cell shapes

eg Arthrobacter (it changes its shape as the culture

ages)

C Arrangement

Examples

a Neisseria

b Streptococcus species

which cause throat and

wound infection

c Pediococcus

d Staphylococcus

e Sarcina

Patterns of arrangement

Examples

a Corynebacterium diphtheriae

b Caulobacter

c Streptobacillus

Bacterial Cell Structure

1 Appendages ndash flagella and pili

2 Surface Layers- capsule cell wall and plasma

membranes mesosomes

3 Cytoplasm ndash nuclear material plasmids ribosomes

inclusions and chromatophores

4 Special structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 3: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

B Shape

-divided on three main groups

1 Cocci ndash spherical (eg S aureus)

2 Bacilli ndash cylindrical or rod-shaped(eg B subtilis)

3 Spirilla- spirals (Treponema)

4 comma-shaped (eg Vibrio cholerae)

Usually round but they can be ovoid or flattened on 1 side

when they are adhering to another cell

have considerable differences in length and width for the

various species The ends of some are square others

rounded or tapered or pointed

helical bacteria that look like corkscrews (eg Spirochetes)

Pleomorphic- can have variety of cell shapes

eg Arthrobacter (it changes its shape as the culture

ages)

C Arrangement

Examples

a Neisseria

b Streptococcus species

which cause throat and

wound infection

c Pediococcus

d Staphylococcus

e Sarcina

Patterns of arrangement

Examples

a Corynebacterium diphtheriae

b Caulobacter

c Streptobacillus

Bacterial Cell Structure

1 Appendages ndash flagella and pili

2 Surface Layers- capsule cell wall and plasma

membranes mesosomes

3 Cytoplasm ndash nuclear material plasmids ribosomes

inclusions and chromatophores

4 Special structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 4: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

C Arrangement

Examples

a Neisseria

b Streptococcus species

which cause throat and

wound infection

c Pediococcus

d Staphylococcus

e Sarcina

Patterns of arrangement

Examples

a Corynebacterium diphtheriae

b Caulobacter

c Streptobacillus

Bacterial Cell Structure

1 Appendages ndash flagella and pili

2 Surface Layers- capsule cell wall and plasma

membranes mesosomes

3 Cytoplasm ndash nuclear material plasmids ribosomes

inclusions and chromatophores

4 Special structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 5: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Patterns of arrangement

Examples

a Corynebacterium diphtheriae

b Caulobacter

c Streptobacillus

Bacterial Cell Structure

1 Appendages ndash flagella and pili

2 Surface Layers- capsule cell wall and plasma

membranes mesosomes

3 Cytoplasm ndash nuclear material plasmids ribosomes

inclusions and chromatophores

4 Special structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 6: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Bacterial Cell Structure

1 Appendages ndash flagella and pili

2 Surface Layers- capsule cell wall and plasma

membranes mesosomes

3 Cytoplasm ndash nuclear material plasmids ribosomes

inclusions and chromatophores

4 Special structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 7: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Flagella (singular flagellum)-thin hairlike filaments extend from the cytoplasmic

membrane and through the cell wall

-propel bacteria through liquid sometimes as fast as

100 um per second (= to 3000 body lengthsmin)

-composed of three parts

1 basal body

2 a short hooklike structure

3 a long helical filament

L ring

P ring

Rod

S ring

M ring

Gram-negative

(E coli)

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 8: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-but for Gram positive bacteria like Bacillus subtilis their

flagellum lacks the L and P rings since they have no outer

membrane

the rings of the basal body through chemical reactions rotate

the flagellum (proton motive force)

-the hooks positions the filament in such a way that the helical

filaments spins evenly about its long axis instead of

rotating off center

-the filament is composed of protein molecules called flagellin

(made within the cell and then passed along the hollow core of

flagellum to be added to the distal end of the filament)

thus a flagellum grows at its tip rather than at its base

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 9: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-flagella are usually several times longer than the cell

(15 to 20 um in length but diameter is 12 to 20 nm)

-cocci have no flagella but for bacteria that do the pattern

of flagellar attachment and the number of flagella are used

to classify them into taxonomic groups

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 10: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Pseudomonas

Some pseudomonads

spirilla

Escherichia

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 11: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Periplasmic flagella-also known as axial filament

-special flagella that arise at

the cell poles and wind

around the cell body or

protoplasmic cylinder

beneath the outer mem-

brane of the cell wall

-responsible for the corkscrew-

like motility of the

spirochetes

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 12: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Chemotaxis

- the movement of bacteria in response to chemicals

in the environment

attractant ndash towards

repellant ndash away

Polar flagellated bacteria (swim in back- and- forth fashion)

-reverse their direction by reversing the direction of

flagellar rotation

Peritrichous flagellated bacteria swim in a very complicated

manner (the cell swims along a relatively straight

track called a run when the flagellar motors reverse

the bundle of flagella flies apart and the cell tumbles

wildly)

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 13: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

The following players are involved in chemotaxis MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins respond

to repellent in fully methylated state

CheW Coupling protein between MCP and CheACheA Is a sensor kinase autophosphorylates itself

and CheY apart from CheBCheY Acts as response regulator and in

phosphorylated state moves to motor of flagella and rotates it clockwise

CheB Acts as demethylase in phosphorylated form CheR Acts as methyl transferase transfers methyl

group to MCP CheZ Dephosphorylates CheY

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 14: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Fig 5 - Phosphorelay signaling The flagellar motors of E coli spin CCW by default the signaling pathway modulates the level of phospho-CheY the signal for CW rotation Reactions and components that augment CW rotation are depicted in green those that augment CCW rotation are depicted in red

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 15: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Quiz

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 16: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

httpwwwrowlandorglabsbacteriamoviesrsphe_f_swim_1mov

Movfluorescent ie of motile Rhodobacterspheroides with labelled-flagella

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 17: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Fimbriae and Pili

- found in gram-negative bacteria

-shorter straighter and more numerous than

flagella

-not for motility

-are hollow like flagella but nonhelical

-thinner (3 to 10 nm in diam)

Fimbria

- belong to a class of proteins called lectins

which recognize and bind to specific sugar resi-

dues in cell surface polysaccharides)

-frequently called adhesins (bacteria

possessing fimbriae have a tendency to adhere

to each other as well as to animal cells)

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 18: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

N gonorrhoeae and enterotoxigenic Ecoli

-ability of certain organisms to cause

disease is associated with the possession

of fimbriae (loss of fimbriae is accompanied

by a loss of virulence)

Pilus or Pili

-morphologically and chemically similar to

fimbriae

-involved in sexual reproduction of bacteria

(F pilus)

those with F pilus are donor cells and

those without it are recipient cells

(genetic materials are transferred during

bacterial conjugation)

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 19: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Glycocalyx

- a layer of viscous material that surrounds

some bacterial cells

- special stains are used to show this layer

such as India ink (appears halo under a light

microscope)

-composed of polymers

a Capsule ndash if the glycocalyx is organized

into a defined structure and is attached

firmly to the cell wall

b Slime layer- if the glycocalyx is disorganized

and without any definite shape

-attached loosely to the wall

-tends to be soluble in water

-medium becomes highly viscous

-produce stringiness in milk

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 20: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Capsules maybe

1 Homopolysaccharide

-single kind of sugar

-synthesis of glucan from sucrose by

Streptococcus mutans

-to adhere firmly to smooth tooth

surfaces and cause dental caries or

cavities (without the sticky glucan the

microorganisms might be swept away

by flowing saliva)

2 Heteropolysaccharide

-more than one kind of sugar

-capsule of S pneumoniae type VI

consists of galactose glucose amp

rhamnose

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 21: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

few capsules are made of polypeptides

(eg Capsule of Bacillus anthracis made

entirely of a polymer of the amino acid glutamic

acid more of the rare D optical isomer rather

than L isomer usually found in nature)

Glycocalyx

-serve a number of functions (depending on

the bacterial species)

1 adherence to various surfaces (major role)

such as rocks in fast-moving water

plant roots and human teeth

2 capsules protect from temporary drying by

binding water molecules

3 serve as a reservoir of stored food

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 22: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

4 Capsules may prevent attachment and

lysis of cells by bacteriophages(viruses

that attack bacteria)

5 Capsules protect pathogenic from being

engulfed by the white blood cells that

defend the mammalian body

6 Nuisance to industry (responsible for

accumulation of slime in manufacturing

equipment that can clog filters and coat

pipes affecting the quality of the final

product)

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 23: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

The Cell Wall of Prokaryotes Peptidoglycan and Related

Molecules

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 24: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

peptidoglycan

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Outer membrane

peptidoglycan

Gram + Gram -

Cytoplasmic

membrane

Cell wallCell wall

15-80 nm

7-8 nm

7-8 nm

2-3 nm

Schematic cross sections of bacterial cell wall

Typical lipid-protein bilayer

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 25: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Bacterial cell wall

- fundamental differences in ultrastructure of

the cell wall are responsible for the reaction

(+ or -) of bacteria towards the Gram stain

- In both types of cell the cytoplasmic

membrane is surrounded and supported by

a cell wall which provides strength rigidity

and shape (prevents cell from expanding

and eventually bursting bec of water

uptake)

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 26: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-Usually essential for cells to grow and divide

(cells whose walls have been removed in the

laboratory are incapable of normal growth and

division)

-Account for as much as 10 to 40 of the dry

weight of the cell depending on the species

and the cultural conditions

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 27: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

bull This material consists of strands of alternating repeats of N-acetylglucosamineand N-acetylmuramic acid with the latter cross-linked between strands by short peptides Many sheets of peptidoglycan can be present depending on the organism

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 28: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Each peptidoglycan repeating subunit is composed of four amino acids (L-alanine D-alanine D-glutamic acid and either lysine or diaminopimelic acid) and two N-acetyl-glucose-like sugars

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 29: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

bull Archaea lack peptidoglycan but contain walls made of other polysaccharides or protein The enzyme lysozyme destroys peptidoglycan leading to cell lysis

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 30: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Peptidoglycans

bull Alias murein or mucopeptide

bull Present in almost all bacteria (exceptions wall-

less mycoplasmas archaebacteria)

bull Unique to bacteria

bull Essential function

(physical support of the

cytoplasmic membrane)

bull Common architecture

but variations in

structural detail

bull Ideal target for

selective toxicity

bull contains 3 kinds of

building blocks

1 2

3(tetrapeptide)

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 31: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Gram-positive

bull Relatively thick and featureless (electron

microscope)

bull Major component (~50) is peptidoglycan

bull No lipid and often no protein

bull Accessory polymers (teichoic acid andor

teichuronic acid) covalently linked to

Peptidoglycan or to cell membrane

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 32: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

2 major forms of teichoic acid

1 polymers of ribitol phosphates

2 polymers of glycerol

-aid in the transport of positive ions in

and out of cell

-aid in the storage of phosphorus

-highly antigenic(ie They will induce a

host to make specific antibodies) provide the

antigenic determinants used in the serological

identification of many groups and species of

gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 33: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Gram-negative

bull The cell envelope consists of a pair of membranes

(cytoplasmic and outer) with a thin intermediate

layer of peptidoglycan

bull the outer membrane not the peptidoglycan that

distinguishes the Gram- bacteria

bull The outer membrane contains lipopolysaccharide

(LPS) as well as lipids and proteins (lipoprotein) LPS

is located exclusively in the outer leaflet lipid

embedded in the membrane polysaccharide

protruding

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 34: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)

-characteristic of gram negative bacteria

(gram+ bacteria cell wall has no LPS)

-composed of 3 covalently linked

segments

1 Lipid A - firmly embedded in the

membrane

- extremely important bec of its

toxicity to animals (also)

known as an endotoxin and can

act as a poison-causing fever

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 35: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

diarrhea destruction of red blood cells and potentially

fatal shock

- Unlike lipids in CM lipid A is not composed of

phospholipids but of saturated fatty acids

2 Core polysaccharide

- located at the membrane surface

3 O antigens

- polysaccharides that extend like whiskers from

the membrane surface to the surrounding medium

-consists of repeating carbohydrate units

arranged in a variety of combinations

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 36: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-carbohydrates include common hexoses(glugal

mannose and rhamnose) and some unique sugars

(abequose)

-responsible for many of serological properties of LPS-

containing bacteria

-they also serve as sites for bacteriophage attachment

to bacterial cells

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 37: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

the outer membrane is selectively permeable to

molecules on the basis of their electric charge

and molecular size

Porins ndashdiffusion channels formed by special proteins

where molecules pass

bullThe general designation for outer ndashmembrane

proteins including porins and receptors is

Omp

Removal of peptidoglycan layer in the presence of 10-20 sucrose the cell

with CM is

called spheroplast - Gram-negative bacteria

protoplast ndash Gram-positive bacteria

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 38: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Cell Wall

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 39: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Cytoplasmic Membrane Structure

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 40: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Cytoplasmic Membranes

-immediately beneath the cell wall

- in aerobic organisms it transports electrons and

protons released during oxidation of bacterial

ldquofoodstuffsrdquo to oxygen (to form water) amp it converts

the energy liberated by such oxidations into

chemical E that can

be used by the cell

-it contains some of the enzymes necessary for

the synthesis and transport of peptidoglycan

teichoic acids and outer membrane compts

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 41: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-it secretes extracellular hydrolytic

enzymes

- it ensures the segregation of nuclear matl

(DNA) to daughter cells during division

- it controls the transport of most compounds entering and leaving the cell

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 42: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Unlike Bacteria and Eukarya in which ester linkages bond fatty acids to glycerol Archaea contain ether-linked lipids

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 43: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Structure and Chemical Composition of CM

-approx 75 nm thick

-composed of phospholipid (20-30) and

proteins (50-70)

-fluid-mosaic model

-semipermeable

-contains specific proteins called permeases

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 44: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-most prokaryotic CM do not contain sterols such as

cholesterol (less rigid than those of eucaryotes)

-an exception is the mycoplasmas (wout cell walls)

Thus the cytoplasmic membrane is the outermost

structure of a mycoplasma cell and the sterols in mem-

brane help the cell to maintain its integrity

-since do not have membrane-bounded organelles the

CM of many bacteria extend into the cytoplasm to form

tubules known as Mesosomes

-prominent in gram-positive bacteria

-consists of 2 types

1 central ndashfd deeper seem to be attached to cellrsquos nuclear

material (thought to be involved in DNA replication

and cell division)

2 peripheral- barely penetrate the CM not restricted to

central locationnot associated w nuclear material

- appear to be involved in the secretion of certain

enzymes such as penicillinases that destroy penicillin

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 45: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-diffusion and osmosis occurs across the cytoplasmic

membrane

Internal Cell Structures

-material contained wiithin the cytoplasmic membrane

may be divided into

1 the cytoplasmic area ndash the fluid portion contg dissol-

ved substances and particles such as ribosomes

2 nuclear material or nucleoid ndashrich in the genetic

material DNA

Cytoplasmic area

-consists of of about 80 water

-aside from water NA proteins CHO lipids inorganic

ions many low-mol weight cpds and particles w

various functions

- no evidence that it has cytoskeleton unlike in

eukaryotes

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 46: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Ribosomes

-densely packed in the cytoplasm

-site of protein synthesis

-consist of two subunits

a 50S subunit

b 30S subunit 70S ribosome

-targets of many antibiotics that inhibit protein

synthesis such as strptomycin neomycin tetracyclins

Inclusions

-chemical substances that accumulate and form

insoluble deposits in the cytoplasm

-these may be granules of various kinds

a Glycogen-look like dark granules

b Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB)droplets ndashacts a

reserve carbon and energy source (clear round

areas)

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 47: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Cytoplasmic inclusions Where found Composition Function

glycogenmany bacteria eg E coli

polyglucosereserve carbon and energy source

polybetahydroxyutyric acid (PHB)

many bacteria eg Pseudomonas

polymerized hydroxy butyrate

reserve carbon and energy source

polyphosphate (volutin granules)

many bacteria eg Corynebacterium

linear or cyclical polymers of PO4

reserve phosphate possibly a reserve of high energy phosphate

sulfur globules

phototrophic purple and green sulfur bacteria and lithotrophic colorless sulfur bacteria

elemental sulfur

reserve of electrons (reducing source) in phototrophs reserve energy source in lithotrophs

gas vesiclesaquatic bacteria especially cyanobacteria

protein hulls or shells inflated with gases

buoyancy (floatation) in the vertical water column

parasporal crystalsendospore-forming bacilli (genus Bacillus)

proteinunknown but toxic to certain insects

magnetosomes certain aquatic bacteriamagnetite (iron oxide) Fe3O4

orienting and migrating along geo-magnetic field lines

carboxysomesmany autotrophic bacteria

enzymes for autotrophic CO2 fixation

site of CO2 fixation

phycobilisomes cyanobacteria phycobiliproteinslight-harvesting pigments

chlorosomes Green bacterialipid and protein and bacteriochlorophyll

light-harvesting pigments and antennae

Table 8 Some inclusions in bacterial cells

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 48: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

c Sulfur globules ndash found in H2S-oxidizing bacteria

d Volutin granules (metachromatic granules)-made of

polyphosphates

-reddish color when stained with methylene

blue

-appear round

Chromatophores

-special membrane system found in certain

photosyhnthetic bacteria and cyanobacteria

-lacks chloroplasts

Nuclear area

-lacks nucleus

-nuclear matl in a bacterial cell occupies a position

near the center of the cell

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 49: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Sulfur globule

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 50: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Figure 3 A variety of bacterial inclusions a PHB granules b a parasporal BT crystal in the sporangium of Bacillus thuringiensis c carboxysomes in Anabaena viriabilis showing their polyhedral shape d sulfurglobules in the cytoplasm of Beggiatoa

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 51: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-seems to be attached to the mesosome-cytoplasmic

membrane system

-total nuclear material called the nucleoid consists of a

single circular chromosome

Plasmids

-relatively small circular pieces of double-stranded

DNA which exist separately from the bacterial

chromosome

- capable of autonomous replication and encode

for many auxiliary functions (antibiotic resistance) not

necessary for bacterial growth

-can be transferred from 1 bacterium to another thru

conjugation or thru lab manipulation (recombinant

DNA technology)

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 52: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Dormant Forms of Prokaryotic Microorganisms

-some species of bacteria produce dormant forms

called spores and cysts

-can survive unfavorable conditions such as drying

or heat

-resting forms (metabolically inactive) but in favora-

ble conditions they can germinate and become

metabolically active vegetative cells (grow and

multiply)

Spores

-only two genera of medical importance Bacillus and

Clostridium have the ability to developed specialized struc-

tures called endospore

-form within the cell

-thick-walled highly refractile and highly resistant to

environmental changes

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 53: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-when endospores are freed from the mother cell or

sporangium they can survive extreme heat drying

and exposure to toxic chemicals such as disinfectants

eg C botulinum ndashcause of food poisoning (botulism)

can resist boiling for several hours

Vegetative cells-killed at 70C but most endospores wstand

80C for at least 10 min

-endospores contain large amts of dipicolinic acid (DPA)

-a unique compound not found in vegetative cells that

may play a role in heat resistance

-5-10 dry weight of spore and occurs in combn w

Ca

Conidium

-another type of spore produced by Actinomycetes

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 54: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-not much more heat-resistant than vegetative cell tho

resistant to drying

-produce many of these conidia at the tip of a filament

-for reproduction not for protection

Cyst

-like endospores they are dormant

-thick-walled forms that resist drying

-develop frm vegetative cell

-structure and composition different from

endospres and do not have high heat of resistance

eg Cyst produced by Azotobacter

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 55: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Endospore Formation

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 56: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Gross Morphological Characteristics of

Eukaryotic Microorganisms

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 57: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Morphology of Fungi-yeasts and molds

- differ in their morphology

Yeast

-single yeast cells are generally larger than most

bacteria (size 1-5 um in width and 5-30 um or

more in length)

-commonly oval but some are elongated or

spherical

-each species has a characteristic shape

-variation in size and shape of individual cells

-lack flagella and other means of locomotion

-on agar medium form smooth glistening colonies

that resemble those of bacteria

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 58: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Molds

-multicellular organisms that look like filaments under low

magnification

-with high magnification they look like tiny jungles

-the body (thallus)

-consists of the mycelium (mycelia) and dormant

spores

-each mycelium is a mass of filaments called hyphae

Hypha

-about 5-10 um in width and is formed by joining to-

gether of many cells

-rigid walls of hyphae are made of chitins celluloses

and glucans

-maybe classified as

1 coenocytic ndashdo not have septa(crosswalls bet the

cells that make up a long filament)

-contains many nuclei

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 59: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

2 septate ndash have septa that divide the filaments intodistinct cells containing nuclei

there is a pore in each septum that allows cytoplasm and

nuclei to migrate between cells

bullA hypha grows by elongation at its tip and each fragment

that contains nuclei is capable of growing into a new

organism

-some hyphae are embedded in solid media such as

bread or soil to give the thallus support and nourishment

(rhizoids-specialized hyphae since they are rootlike)

Reproductive hyphae may grow upward into the air to disse-

minate the spores they produce

Vegetative hyphae- hyphae with no specialized division of

labor may simply grow along the surface of the substrate

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 60: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Germ tube

-a short hyphalike

extension that soon

Grows into a thallus

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 61: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-other hyphae can become organized into large structures

to form the so called fleshy fungi such as mushrooms

puffballs and bracket fungi

bullMany fungi exhibit dimorphism (existing either in a unice-

llular yeastlike form or in a filamentous form)

Present when the

organism is parasiteWhen the organism is a

saprophyte in its natural

habitat (such as soil) or on

lab media incubated at rm T

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 62: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Morphology of Algae

- are of many sizes and shapes

-species range from single microscopic cells to orgs

hundreds of feet long

-Single ndashcelled species may be

1 spherical

2 rod-shaped

3 club-shaped

4 spindle-shaped

-some maybe motile

-Multicellular

-some organized as filaments of cells attached end to end

-in some species these filaments intertwine into microscopic

plantlike bodies

-occur in colonies some of which are simple aggregations of

single cells while others contain different cell types with

special functions

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 63: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Morphology of Protozoa

-some are oval or spherical others are elongated

-others are polymorphic w morphologically different

forms at diff stages of life cycle

-cells can be as small as 1 um in diameter and as large

as 2000 um or 2 mm)

-like animals protozoa lack cell walls

-able to move at some stage of their life cycle

-ingest particles of food

-each individual cell is a complete organism

many protozooan cells are more complex than other

types of cells

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 64: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Protist Cell

arrangement

Mode of

nutrition

Motility Miscellaneo

us

Fungi unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

nonmotile Sexual and

asexual spores

Algae Unicellular or

multicellular

Photoautotrop

hic by

absorption of

soluble

nutrients

Mostly

nonmotile

Photosynthetic

pigments

Protozoa unicellular Chemoheterotr

ophic by

absorption or

ingestion of

particles of

food

Mostly motile Some form

cyst

Major Distinguishing Characteristics of the Eucaryotic Protists

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 65: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Ultrastructure of Eucaryotic microorganisms

Flagella and Cilia

-thin structures for locomotion

-originate from a basal body lying beneath a mem-

brane that encloses the cell

-many single-celled protozoa and algae possess

flagella(beat with a whiplike motion and propel the

cell through fluid environments

in some cases only the presence of chlorophyll

distinguishes a motile alga from a protozoan

-both cilia and flagella are identical in structure but

cilia are usually shorter and numerous (arranged in

groups or rows on the cell surface)

-cilia beat in a coordinated rhythmic motion

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 66: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-structurally and functionally more complex

than procaryotic flagella and cilia

-composed of thin hairlike

microtubules ldquo9 + 2rdquo arrangement (9 pairs

of these tubules encircle a central pair )

-shaft formed by the microtubules

Is wrapped in a membrane

Differences bet eucaryotic and procaryo

-tic flagella

1 movement is powered by the

hydrolysis of the chemical cpd

ATP for the eucaryotes while for

procaryotic flagella the energy to

move it comes from the proton

motive force(the movement of

hydrogen ions across the CM)

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 67: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

2 Differ also in the way they move the cell

eucaryotic flagellum-propels the cell by acting

like a whip bending and twisting against the

liquid environment

procaryotic flagellum-moves the cell by rotating

like a corkscrew Pseudopodia

-specialized structures as mode of locomotion by

some protozoans

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 68: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Amoeba in motion - YouTube

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 69: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

-a pseudopodium is a temporary projection of part of

the cytoplasm and cytoplasmic membrane which is caused

by cytoplasmic streaming

-characteristics of amoebas

-maybe used to capture food particles

Cell Walls

-plants algae and fungi have cell walls

-maintains the shape of cells and prevents them from

bursting through osmotic pressure

-cell walls of plants algae and fungi differ from one

another and from bacterial cell walls in chemical

composition and physical structure

-protozoa lack cell wall but some are surrounded by

a layer of shell-like matl (may fit tightly or form a

loose chamber in which the organism moves)

scales or spines may be present

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 70: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Organism Chem composition

Plant Rigid mainly polysaccharides

(cellulose and pectin)

Filamentous fungi Chitin and cellulose

Unicellular yeast Polysaccharide mannan (polymer of

the monosaccharide mannose)

algae Varying amounts of cellulose other

polysaccharides and calcium

carbonate

Table 4 Differences in the cell wall compositions of eucaryotes

-the walls of diatoms (algae)

impregnated with silica making them thick amp rigid

surfaces often delicately sculptured with intricate

designs characterictic of the species

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 71: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Cytoplasmic membrane

-eucaryotes CM have sterols while that of

procaryotes generally does not

Cellular Organelles

-inside the the CM is the protoplasm

Protoplasm is divided into

a Karyoplasm- the material inside the nuclear

membrane

b Cytoplasm- the material between the nuclear

membrane and CM

-where organelles are found

-has cytoskeleton (network of microtubules

and proteins)

provides shape and support

serves as framework along which

organelles move thru the cytoplasm

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 72: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Nucleus

- many protozoan have multiple nuclei thruout the

greater part of their life cyle

- in ciliated microorganisms there are two nuclei

1 macronucleus- large nucleus

- controls metabolic activities growth and

regeneration

2 micronucleus- small nucleus

- controls reproductive activities

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 73: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Chloroplast

- algae have another energy-generating cytoplasmic

organelle

-site of photosynthetic reactions(light is used to con-

vert energy for the cell)

-a cucumber-shaped body (2 to 3 um wide 5 to 10 um

long) surrounded by a double membrane

Stroma- the interior

- where DNA(circular like procaryotic DNA)

codes for proteins on the chloroplast

ribosomes and for the enzymes needed

to use carbon dioxide from the air

Thylakoids- stacks of disk-shaped or ribbonlike sacs

which contain the chlorophyll and caro-

tenoid pigments that function in photo-

synthesis

Grana- each stalk is called granum

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 74: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Dormant Forms of Eucaryotic Microorganisms

-some microorganisms can produced dormant forms

called spores and cyts that can withstand unfavorable

conditions

-both fungi and protozoa use such resting structures

for protection and reproduction

-algae also form spores but their main function is for

reproduction Algae do not form cyts

Spores

-fungi produce both sexual and asexual spores

A Sexual spores

-produced as a result of the fusion of two

specialized reproductive cells called gametes

into one fertilized cell

-produced less frequently and in smaller numbers

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 75: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

B Asexual spores

-does not involve the fusion of gametes

-each thallus can produce hundreds of thousands of

asexual spores produced by aerial hyphae

-purpose is to dessiminate the species and are

specially structured for dispersion from the mother

thallus

spores of aquatic fungi-may be motile in water

spores of soil fungi-may have thick coats to

withstand drying or may be light enough

to travel on air currents

-usually white when 1st produced but they turn a cha-

racteristic color with age

-eg Penicillium notatum-colonies blue-green

Aspergillus niger- black

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 76: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

Cysts

-resting forms produce by many protozoa

- 2 possible forms of protozoan cyts

a Protective cyst

b Reproductive cyst

Trophozoites

-the vegetative forms of protozoa

-synthesize protective cysts that are resistant to drying

lack of food lack of oxygen or acidity in the hostrsquos

stomach (when conditions once again become favora-

rable cysts form trophozoites that feed and grow

Reproductive cyst- not induced by adverse environmental

conditions

-often thin-walled and lack the resistance of protective

cysts

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 77: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

parasitic species of protozoa often move from host to

host as cysts(mode of transmission)

-form in the intestinal tract and are excreted in

feces which contaminate water and food ingested

by next host

CYST is the only way to survive outside the host

eg Giardia lamblia -causative agent of diarrhea

and abdominal cramps in humans

-transmitted to humans by cysts

in water supplies contaminated with feces

THANK YOU for listening

Page 78: Bio 127 lec 3 Microbiology: Prokaryotic and Eucaryotic Cell Structures

THANK YOU for listening