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19.2A: Bacteria

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    Bacteria are microscopic organisms whose single cells have neither a membrane-enclosed nucleus nor other membrane-enclosed organelles like mitochondria and chloroplasts. Another group of microbes, the archaea, meet these criteria but are so different from the bacteria in other ways that they must have had a long, independent evolutionary history since close to the dawn of life. In fact, there is considerable evidence that you are more closely related to the archaea than they are to the bacteria!

    Properties of Bacteria

    • prokaryotic (no membrane-enclosed nucleus)
    • no mitochondria or chloroplasts
    • a single chromosome
      • a closed circle of double-stranded DNA
      • with no associated histones
    • If flagella are present, they are made of a single filament of the protein flagellin; there are none of the "9+2" tubulin-containing microtubules of the eukaryotes.
    • Ribosomes differ in their structure from those of eukaryotes
    • Have a rigid cell wall made of peptidoglycan.
    • The plasma membrane (in Gram-positive bacteria) and both membranes in Gram-negative bacteria are phospholipid bilayers but contain no cholesterol or other steroids.
    • No mitosis
    • Mostly asexual reproduction
    • Any sexual reproduction very different from that of eukaryotes; no meiosis
    • Many bacteria form a single spore when their food supply runs low. Most of the water is removed from the spore and metabolism ceases. Spores are so resistant to adverse conditions of dryness and temperature that they may remain viable even after 50 years of dormancy.

    Classification of Bacteria

    Until recently classification has done on the basis of such traits as:

    • shape
      • bacilli: rod-shaped
      • cocci: spherical
      • spirilla: curved walls
    • ability to form spores
    • method of energy production (glycolysis for anaerobes, cellular respiration for aerobes)
    • nutritional requirements
    • reaction to the Gram stain

    Figure 19.2.1.1 Gram positive and negative bacteria

    Gram-positive bacteria are encased in a plasma membrane covered with a thick wall of peptidoglycan. Gram-negative bacteria are encased in a triple-layer. The outermost layer contains lipopolysaccharide (LPS).

    • The bacterial cells are first stained with a purple dye called crystal violet.
    • Then the preparation is treated with alcohol or acetone.
    • This washes the stain out of Gram-negative cells.
    • To see them now requires the use of a counterstain of a different color (e.g., the pink of safranin).
    • Bacteria that are not decolorized by the alcohol/acetone wash are Gram-positive.

    Although the Gram stain might seem an arbitrary criterion to use in bacterial taxonomy, it does, in fact, distinguish between two fundamentally different kinds of bacterial cell walls and reflects a natural division among the bacteria. More recently, genome sequencing, especially of their 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA), has provided additional insights into the evolutionary relationships among the bacteria.

    Gram-positive Bacteria

    Firmicutes

    Comparison of their sequenced genomes reveals that all the Gram-positive rods and cocci as well as the mycoplasmas belong to a single clade that has been named the Firmicutes.

    Gram-Positive Rods

    Aerobic Gram-Positive Rods

    • Bacillus anthracis/cereus/thuringiensis. These organisms differ mainly in the plasmids they contain.
    • B. anthracis causes anthrax. Currently the biological agent favored by terrorists. Its 2 plasmids contain the genes needed to synthesize
      • a capsule which (like those of pneumococci) makes it resistant to phagocytosis
      • the three components of the toxin that causes the disease symptoms
    • B. thuringiensis — the organism, its toxin, and even the gene (also plasmid-encoded) for the toxin are used as biocontrol agents against a variety of insect pests.
    • Bacillus subtilis. A common soil bacterium. Its chromosome contains 4,214,814 bp of DNA encoding 4,100 genes.
    • Lactobacillus. Several species are used to convert milk into cheese, butter, and yogurt.

    Anaerobic Gram-Positive Rods

    • Clostridium tetani. Clostridia are spore-forming obligate anaerobes. The spores of C. tetani are widespread in the soil and often get into the body through wounds. Puncture wounds (e.g., by splinters or nails) are particularly dangerous because they provide the anaerobic conditions needed for germination of the spores and growth of the bacteria.

      C. tetani liberates a toxin that blocks transmitter release (by destroying the SNAREs needed) at inhibitory synapses in the spinal cord and brain. This interferes with the reciprocal inhibition of antagonistic pairs of skeletal muscles so the victim suffers violent muscle spasms. Fortunately, the disease - called tetanus - is now rare in developed countries, thanks to almost universal immunization against the toxin. Chemical alteration of the toxin produces a toxoid that still retains the epitopes of the toxin. Incorporated in a vaccine, the toxoid provides a relatively long-lasting (~10 years) immunity against tetanus.

    alt
    Figure 19.2.1.2 Strep

    The bacteria in this group grow in characteristic colonies.

    • Many cases of "food poisoning" are caused by staphylococci.
    • Most Streptococci grow in chains. The electron micrograph (courtesy of the Naval Dental Research Institute, Great Lakes, IL) shows Streptococcus mutans, a common inhabitant of the mouth.

      Streptococci cause

      • "strep throat"
      • impetigo
      • middle ear infections
      • scarlet fever (a result of a toxin produced by the organism)
      • rheumatic fever
      • a rare form of toxic shock syndrome
    • Pneumococci. The cells of these streptococci grow in pairs. Streptococcus pneumoniae causes bacterial pneumonia. This was once a major killer — especially of the aged and infirm — but today there is an effective vaccine and any infections that do occur usually respond quickly to antibiotics.

    Mycoplasmas

    Mycoplasmas have the distinction of being the smallest living organisms. They are so small (0.1 µm) that they can be seen only under the electron microscope. Mycoplasmas are obligate parasites; that is, they can live only within the cells of other organisms. They are probably the descendants of Gram-positive bacteria who have lost their peptidoglycan wall as well as much of their genome — now depending on the gene products of their host.

    The DNA sequences of the complete genomes of seven mycoplasmas have been determined, including

    • Mycoplasma genitalium has 580,073 base pairs of DNA encoding 525 genes (485 for proteins; the rest for RNAs).
    • Mycoplasma urealyticum has 751,719 base pairs of DNA encoding 651 genes (613 for proteins; 39 for RNAs).
    • Mycoplasma pneumoniae has 816,394 base pairs of DNA encoding 679 genes.

    How many genes does it take to make an organism?

    The scientists at The Institute for Genomic Research (now known as the J. Craig Venter Institute - JCVI) who determined the Mycoplasma genitalium sequence followed this work by systematically destroying its genes (by mutating them with insertions) to see which ones are essential to life and which are dispensable. Of the 485 protein-encoding genes, they have concluded that only 381 of them are essential to life.

    Workers at the JCVI have also succeeded in synthesizing the complete genome of one species of mycoplasma, inserted this into a second species, which converted the second species into the first.

    Actinobacteria

    Most of these Gram-positive organisms grow as thin filaments - like a mold - rather than as single cells. In fact, they were long thought to be fungi and were called actinomycetes. But fungi are eukaryotes and the actinobacteria are not.

    Actinobacteria dominate the microbial life in soil where they play a major role in the decay of dead organic matter. Many of them have turned out to be the source of valuable antibiotics, including streptomycin, erythromycin, and the tetracyclines.

    Mycobacteria and Corynebacteria

    These Gram-positive organisms are closely related to the actinobacteria and often classified with them. They include three important human pathogens:

    • Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the agent of tuberculosis (TB). TB is estimated to have killed 2 million people in 2007. Under ideal conditions, a single bacterium can cause infection. AIDS patients are especially at risk.

      Its genome contains 4,411,532 bp of DNA encoding some 3,959 genes.

    • Mycobacterium leprae causes leprosy. Its genome contains 3,268,203 bp of DNA encoding only 1,604 genes.

      Although a close relative of M. tuberculosis (they share 1,439 genes), much of its DNA encodes pseudogenes, genes that no longer make a functional product. M. leprae is an obligate intracellular parasite; it has never been cultured in vitro. This is probably because it has abandoned many of the genes needed for an independent existence choosing instead to depend on the genes of its host cell.

    • Corynebacterium diphtheriae causes diphtheria. As in tetanus, it isn't the growth of the organism (in the throat) that is dangerous but the toxin it liberates. The toxin is the product of a latent bacteriophage in the bacterium. It catalyzes the inactivation of a factor necessary for amino acids to be added to the polypeptide chain being synthesized on the ribosome. Sensibly enough, the toxin has no such effect on the translation machinery of bacteria (or of chloroplasts and mitochondria).

      Treatment of the toxin with formaldehyde converts it into a harmless toxoid. Immunization with this toxoid — usually incorporated along with tetanus toxoid and pertussis antigens in a "triple vaccine" (DTP) - protects against the disease.

    Gram-negative Bacteria

    The Proteobacteria

    This large group of bacteria form a clade sharing related rRNA sequences. They are all Gram-negative but come in every shape (rods, cocci, spirilla). They are further subdivided into 5 clades: alpha-, beta-, gamma-, delta-, and epsilon proteobacteria.

    Alpha (α) Proteobacteria.

    Some examples:

    • Rickettsias. These bacteria are too small to be clearly seen under the light microscope. Almost all are obligate intracellular parasites. This means that they can only grow and reproduce while within the living cells of their host - certain arthropods (ticks, mites, lice, fleas) and mammals.
      • Rickettsia prowazekii causes typhus fever when it is transmitted to humans by lice.
      • Rocky Mountain spotted fever is a rickettsial disease transmitted by ticks.
      The mitochondria of eukaryotes probably evolved from endosymbiotic bacteria. Because of the similarities of their genomes, rickettsias may be the closest relatives to the ancestors of mitochondria.
    • Rhizobia. These bacteria live in a mutualistic relationship with the roots of legumes where they are able to "fix" nitrogen (N2) in the air into compounds that can be used by living things.
    • Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum
    • Agrobacterium tumefaciens

    Beta (β) Proteobacteria

    • Sulfur bacteria.

      Certain colorless bacteria share the ability of chlorophyll-containing organisms to manufacture carbohydrates from inorganic raw materials, but they do not use light energy for this. These so-called chemoautotrophic bacteria secure the necessary energy by oxidizing some reduced substance present in their environment. The free energy released by the oxidation is harnessed to the manufacture of food.

      For example, some chemoautotrophic sulfur bacteria oxidize H2S in their surroundings (e.g., the water of sulfur springs) to produce energy:

      2H2S + O2 → 2S + 2H2O; ΔG = -100 kcal

      They then use this energy to reduce carbon dioxide to carbohydrate (like the photosynthetic purple sulfur bacteria)

    2H2S + CO2 → (CH2O) + H2O + 2S

    • This chemoautotroph oxidizes NH3 (produced from proteins by decay bacteria) to nitrites (NO2). This provides the energy to drive their anabolic reactions. The nitrites are then converted (by other nitrifying bacteria) into nitrates (NO3), which supply the nitrogen needs of plants.
    • Three important human pathogens among the β-proteobacteria.
      • Neisseria meningitidis.

        Causes meningococcal meningitis, an extremely serious infection of the meninges that occasionally occurs in very young children and in military camps. There is a vaccine that is effective against several strains but unfortunately not the most dangerous one.

      • Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Causes gonorrhea, one of the most common sexually-transmitted diseases (STDs): over 300,000 cases were reported in the U.S. in 2009. In males, the bacterium invades the urethra causing a discharge of pus and often establishes itself in the prostate gland and epididymis. In females, it spreads from the vagina to the cervix and fallopian tubes. If the infection is untreated (penicillin is usually effective although strains resistant to it are now being encountered), the resulting damage to the fallopian tubes may obstruct the passage of eggs and thus cause sterility.
      • Bordetella pertussis; the cause of "whooping cough".

    Gamma (γ) Proteobacteria

    The largest and most diverse subgroup of the proteobacteria.

    Some examples

    • Escherichia coli. The most thoroughly-studied of all creatures (possibly excepting ourselves). Its entire genome has been determined down to the last nucleotide: 4,639,221 base pairs of DNA encoding 4,377 genes. Lives in the human colon, usually harmlessly. However, water or undercooked food contaminated with the O157:H7 strain has caused severe - occasionally fatal - infections.
    • Salmonella enterica. Two major human pathogens:
      • Salmonella enterica var Typhi. Causes typhoid fever, a serious systemic infection occurring only in humans. This microbe is also known as Salmonella typhi.
      • Salmonella enterica var Typhimurium. Confined to the intestine, it is a frequent cause of human gastrointestinal upsets but is also found in many other animals (that are often the source of the human infection). Also known as Salmonella typhimurium.
    • Vibrio cholerae. Causes cholera, one of the most devastating of the intestinal diseases. The bacteria liberate a toxin that causes massive diarrhea (10–15 liters per day) and loss of salts. Unless the water and salts are replaced quickly, the victim may die (of shock) in a few hours. Like other intestinal diseases, cholera is contracted by ingestion of food or, more often, water that is contaminated with the bacteria.
    • Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A common inhabitant of soil and water, it can cause serious illness in humans with
      • defective immune systems
      • serious burns
      • cystic fibrosis
      Frequently encountered in hospitals and resistant to most antibiotics and disinfectants.
    • Yersinia pestis. This bacillus causes bubonic plague. It is usually transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected flea. As it spreads into the lymph nodes, it causes them to become greatly swollen, hence the name "bubonic" (bubo — swelling of a lymph node) plague. Once in the lungs, however, the bacteria can spread through the air causing the rapidly lethal (2–3 days) "pneumonic" plague. Untreated, ~30% of the cases of bubonic plague are fatal, and the figure for the pneumonic form reaches 100%. The recurrent epidemics of the "black death" in Europe from 1347–1351, which killed off at least 30% of the population, was caused by this organism. DNA sequencing of samples retrieved from the bodies of plague victims of that era confirm this diagnosis. Although no major epidemics have occurred in this century, the threat is not entirely over. Yersinia pestis still flourishes in some rodent populations in the western U. S. and causes a dozen or so cases of human plague - primarily among small game hunters -each year.
    • Francisella tularensis causes tularemia. This is primarily a disease of small mammals, but about 100 people become infected each year in the United States. Most cases occur in south-central states (KS, MO, OK, AR). However, the import of infected rabbits by game clubs has introduced the disease to Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts. In the summer of 2000, 15 people became ill (one died) on the island. All seem to have acquired their infection as they used lawn mowers and brush cutters that presumably stirred up the organism from the carcasses of infected animals.
    • Haemophilus influenzae was once thought to cause influenza. It does not, but it can cause bacterial meningitis and middle ear infections in children and pneumonia in adults — especially those whose resistance is lowered by other diseases (e.g., AIDS). There is now an effective vaccine against the most dangerous strains. The complete genome of Haemophilus influenzae is known: 1,830,138 bp of DNA encoding 1,743 genes.
    • Purple Sulfur Bacteria Like green plants, these bacteria are photosynthetic, using the energy of sunlight to reduce carbon dioxide to carbohydrate. Unlike plants, however, they do not use water as a source of electrons.
    alt
    Figure 19.2.1.3 Chromatium

    In the process, they produce elemental sulfur (often - as seen in this photomicrograph of Chromatium - stored as granules within the cell). [Image from H. G. Schlegel and N. Pfennig, Arch. Microbiol. 38[1], 1961.]

    Photosynthetic bacteria contain special types of chlorophylls (called bacteriochlorophylls) incorporated into membranes. With this machinery, they can run photosystem I but not photosystem II (which explains their inability to use water as a source of electrons). Most photosynthetic bacteria are obligate anaerobes; they cannot tolerate free oxygen. Thus they are restricted to such habitats as the surface of sediments at the bottom of shallow ponds and estuaries. Here they must make do with whatever radiant energy gets through the green algae and aquatic plants growing above them. However, the absorption spectrum of their bacteriochlorophylls lies mostly in the infrared region of the spectrum so they can trap energy missed by the green plants above them.

    Delta (δ) Proteobacteria

    This group contains the myxobacteria. They are found in vast numbers in soil and are major players in the decay of organic matter.

    Epsilon (ε) Proteobacteria

    Two members of this small group that are human pathogens:

    • Helicobacter pylori, the main cause of stomach ulcers
    • Campylobacter jejuni; the bacterium most frequently implicated in gastrointestinal upsets.

    Bacteroidetes

    alt
    Figure 19.2.1.4 Spirochete

    Two notorious examples:

    • Treponema pallidum (right), the cause of syphilis, one of the most dangerous of the sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). (Image courtesy of Harry E. Morton.)
    • Borrelia burgdorferi is transmitted to humans through the bite of a deer tick causing Lyme disease (over 30,000 cases — the largest number up to then — were reported in the U.S. in 2009).

    Both these organisms have had their complete genomes sequenced.

    Chlamydiae

    Chlamydiae are also obligate intracellular parasites (they cannot make their own ATP).

    • Its genome contains 1,042,519 bp of DNA encoding 894 genes. In 2008, over 1.2 million cases were reported in the U. S., and this is probably only half of the true total. The infection is usually spread by sexual intercourse making it the most common sexually-transmitted disease (STD). It is easily cured if diagnosed, but many infections remain untreated and, in females, are a major cause of pelvic inflammatory disease. This causes scarring of the uterus and fallopian tubes and often results in infertility.

      Mothers can pass the infection on to their newborn babies causing serious eye disease and pneumonia. To avoid this, pregnant women are usually tested for chlamydia and treated with antibiotics if they are infected.

    • Chlamydia psittaci usually infects birds, but can infect their human contacts causing psittacosis (a.k.a. ornithosis).

    Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae)

    alt
    Figure 19.2.1.5 Oscillatoria

    Unlike other photosynthetic bacteria, cyanobacteria

    • use chlorophyll a (as do plants)
    • use water as the source of electrons to reduce CO2 to carbohydrate (because they have photosystem II as well as photosystem I).

    CO2 + 2H2O → (CH2O) + H2O + O2

    It is estimated that cyanobacteria are responsible for ~ 25% of the photosynthesis occurring on our planet.

    The micrograph is of Oscillatoria, a filamentous cyanobacterium (magnified about 800 times). Each disk in the chains is one cell.

    Cyanobacteria also contain two antenna pigments:

    • blue phycocyanin (making them "blue-green")
    • red phycoerythrin (The Red Sea gets its name from the periodic blooms of red-colored cyanobacteria.)

    These two pigments also occur in red algae. Their chloroplasts (in fact probably all chloroplasts) evolved from an endosymbiotic cyanobacterium.


    This page titled 19.2A: Bacteria is shared under a CC BY 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by John W. Kimball via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.

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