Three Domains – Archaea, Bacteria, Eukarya
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Transcript Three Domains – Archaea, Bacteria, Eukarya
The Origin and Evolution of Microbial Life:
Prokaryotes and Protists
PROKARYOTES
16.7 Prokaryotes have inhabited Earth for billions of
years
Prokaryotes are the oldest life-forms
And remain the most numerous and widespread organisms
Figure 16.7
Colorized SEM 650
Three Domains – Archaea,
Bacteria, Eukarya
16.8 Bacteria and archaea are the two main branches of
prokaryotic evolution
Domains Bacteria and Archaea
Are distinguished on the basis of nucleotide sequences and
other molecular and cellular features
Differences between Bacteria and Archaea
Table 16.8
16.9 Prokaryotes come in a variety of shapes
Prokaryotes may be shaped as
Colorized SEM 12,000
Figure 16.9A–C
Colorized SEM 3,000
Spheres (cocci)
Rods (bacilli)
Curves or spirals (vibrio or spirochaete)
Colorized SEM 9,000
16.10 Various features contribute to the
success of prokaryotes
I.
External Structures
i. Cell wall
ii. Pili
iii. Flagella
II. Reproduction and adaptation
III. Specialized internal structures
IV. Form colonies
V. Varied methods of obtaining food
External Structures
The cell wall
Is one of the most important features of
nearly all prokaryotes
Is covered by a sticky capsule
Capsule
Figure 16.10A
Colorized TEM 70,000
Some prokaryotes
Stick to their substrate with pili
Colorized TEM 16,000
Pili
Figure 16.10B
Flagellum
Colorized TEM 14,000
Motility
Many bacteria and archaea
Are equipped with flagella, which enable them to
move
Plasma
membrane
Cell wall
Figure 16.10C
Rotary movement of
each flagellum
Reproduction and Adaptation
Prokaryotes
Have the potential to reproduce
quickly in favorable environments
Some prokaryotes can withstand harsh
conditions
By forming endospores
TEM 34,000
Endospore
Figure 16.10D
Internal Organization
Some prokaryotic cells
Have specialized membranes that perform
metabolic functions
Figure 16.10E
Thylakoid
membrane
TEM 6,000
TEM 45,000
Respiratory
membrane
16.11 Prokaryotes obtain nourishment in a
variety of ways
As a group
Prokaryotes exhibit much more
nutritional diversity than eukaryotes
Types of Nutrition
Autotrophs make their own organic
compounds from inorganic sources
Photoautotrophs harness sunlight for
energy and use CO2 for carbon
Chemoautotrophs obtain energy from
inorganic chemicals instead of sunlight
Heterotrophs obtain their carbon atoms
from organic compounds
Photoheterotrophs can obtain energy
from sunlight
Chemoheterotrophs are so diverse that
almost any organic molecule can serve as
food for some species
Figure 16.11A
Nutritional classification of organisms
Table 16.11
Metabolic Cooperation
In some prokaryotes
Metabolic cooperation occurs in surfacecoating colonies called biofilms
Figure 16.11B
Colorized SEM 13,000
16.12 Archaea thrive in extreme environments
(extremophiles) — and in other habitats
Archaea are common in
Salt lakes, acidic hot springs, deep-sea
hydrothermal vents
Figure 16.12A, B
Archaea are also a major life-form in the ocean
Plankton dispersal
Phytoplankton
16.13 Bacteria include a diverse assemblage of prokaryotes
Bacteria are currently organized into several subgroups,
LM 13,000
Figure 16.13A, B
Colorized TEM 5,000
including
Proteobacteria
Chlamydias
Spirochetes
Figure 16.13C, D
Nitrogen-fixing
cells
Photosynthetic
cells
LM 650
Colorized SEM 2,8000
Gram-positive bacteria
Cyanobacteria, which photosynthesize in
a plantlike way
Colorized SEM 2,800
CONNECTION
16.14 Some bacteria cause disease
Pathogenic bacteria cause disease by producing
Exotoxins or endotoxins
SEM 12,000
Spirochete
that causes
Lyme disease
Figure 16.14A, B
“Bull’s-eye”rash
SEM 2,800
Tick that
carries
the Lyme
disease
bacterium
CONNECTION
16.15 Bacteria can be used as biological weapons
Bacteria, such as the species that causes anthrax
Can be used as biological weapons
Figure 16.15
CONNECTION
16.16 Prokaryotes help recycle chemicals and clean
up the environment
Bioremediation
Is the use of organisms to clean up pollution
Prokaryotes are decomposers in
Sewage treatment and can clean up oil
spills and toxic mine wastes
Rotating
spray arm
Rock bed
coated with
aerobic
bacteria
and fungi
Liquid wastes
Figure 16.16A, B
Outflow
PROTISTS
16.17 The eukaryotic cell probably originated
as a community of prokaryotes
Eukaryotic cells
Evolved from prokaryotic cells more than
2 billion years ago
The nucleus and endomembrane system
Probably evolved from infoldings of the
plasma membrane
Mitochondria and chloroplasts
Probably evolved from aerobic and
photosynthetic endosymbionts,
respectively
Endosymbiotic Theory
Cytoplasm
Plasma
membrane
Ancestral prokaryote
A model of the origin of eukaryotes
Endoplasmic
Nuclear
reticulum
Nucleus envelope
Membrane infolding
Aerobic heterotrophic
prokaryote
Cell with nucleus and
endomembrane system
Some
cells
Ancestral host cell
Photosynthetic
prokaryote
Endosymbiosis
Mitochondrion Chloroplast
Mitochondrion
Figure 16.17
Photosynthetic
eukaryotic cell
16.18 Protists are an extremely diverse
Figure 16.18
LM 275
assortment of eukaryotes
Protists
Are mostly unicellular eukaryotes
Molecular systematics
Is exploring eukaryotic phylogeny
Alveolates
Stramenopila
Figure 16.19
Ancestral eukaryote
Green algae
Red algae
Animals
Choanoflagellates
Fungi
Plants
Closest algal relatives of plants
Amoebozoa
Cellular slime molds
Plasmodial slime molds
Amoebas
Brown algae
Diatoms
Water molds
Ciliates
Apicomplexans
Dinoflagellates
Euglenozoans
Diplomonads
How are Protists classified?
16.19 A tentative phylogeny of eukaryotes includes multiple
clades of protists
The taxonomy of protists
Is a work in progress
16.20 Diplomonads and euglenozoans include some
flagellated parasites
The parasitic Giardia
Is a diplomonad with highly reduced
mitochondria
Figure 16.20A
Colorized SEM 4,000
Euglenozoans
Figure 16.20B, C
Colorized SEM 1,300
Include trypanosomes and Euglena
Colorized SEM 1,300
16.21 Alveolates have sacs beneath the plasma
SEM 2,300
membrane and include dinoflagellates,
apicomplexans, and ciliates
Dinoflagellates
Are unicellular algae
Figure 16.21A
Apicomplexans are parasites
Such as Plasmodium, which causes malaria
Apex
Figure 16.21B
Red blood cell
TEM 26,000
Cilliates
Use cilia to move and feed
Cilia
LM 60
Macronucleus
Figure 16.21C
16.22 Stramenopiles are named for their
“hairy” flagella and include the water molds,
diatoms, and brown algae
This clade includes
Fungus-like water molds
Figure 16.22A
Photosynthetic, unicellular diatoms
Figure 16.22B
LM 400
Brown algae, large complex seaweeds
Figure 16.22C
16.23 Amoebozoans have pseudopodia and include
amoebas and slime molds
Amoebas
Figure 16.23A
Move and feed by means of pseudopodia
LM 185
A plasmodial slime mold is a multinucleate plasmodium
That forms reproductive structures under adverse conditions
Figure 16.23B
Cellular slime molds
Have unicellular and multicellular stages
45
Figure 16.23C
Reproductive
structure
15
Amoeboid cells
LM 1,000
Slug-like aggregate
16.24 Red algae and green algae are the closest relatives
of land plants
Red algae
Contribute to coral reefs
Figure 16.24A
Green algae
May be unicellular, colonial, or multicellular
Chlamydomonas
LM 80
LM 1,200
Volvox colonies
Figure 16.24B
The life cycles of many algae
Involve the alternation of haploid gametophyte and
diploid sporophyte generations
Mitosis
Male
gametophyte
Spores
Gametes
Mitosis
Meiosis
Female
gametophyte
Fusion of
gametes
Sporophyte
Zygote
Mitosis
Figure 16.24C
Key
Haploid (n)
Diploid (2n)
16.25 Multicellularity evolved several times in eukaryotes
Multicellularity evolved in several different lineages
Probably by specialization of the cells of colonial
protists
Gamete
2
1
Unicellular protist
Figure 16.25
Colony
Locomotor
cells
3
Foodsynthesizing
cells
Early multicellular organism
with specialized, interdependent cells
Somatic
cells
Later organism that
produces gametes
Multicellular life arose over a billion years ago