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  AP BIOLOGY:
Chapter Thirty Outline

INTRODUCTION

                Simplest Organisms Are Bacteria

                Viruses Are Not Living Organisms
                        Are fragments of a genome
                        Cannot grow or replicate on their own
                        Replicate only utilizing host cell`s machinery
                        Important due to disease producing potential

THE VIRUSES

                Viruses Are Unique Entities
                        Are strands of nucleic acid encased in protein coats
                        Cannot grow or replicate on their own, use machinery of host cell to reproduce
                        Possess only one form of nucleic acid, either DNA or RNA
                        True organisms contain both DNA and RNA
                        Could never have existed independently as preexisting organisms

                The Discovery of Viruses
                        Earliest observations near end of nineteenth century
                                Concluded infectious agents of some diseases were not bacteria
                                Included tobacco mosaic and hoof-and-mouth disease
                                Infectious agents were not filtered out with fine porcelain filters
                        Purification on tobacco mosaic virus by Stanley in 1933
                                Purified virus formed crystals  fig 30.1
                                Considered agent chemical matter rather than living organism
                        Structure of a basic virus      fig 30.2
                                Protein coat in combination with a nucleic acid
                                Rod about 300 nanometers long
                                Tobacco mosaic virus specifically contained RNA
                                        Plant viruses have similar composition
                                        Most other viruses contain DNA
                                Nearly all viruses form a protein sheath or capsid around nucleic acid core
                                Many viruses form an envelope around capsid, rich in protein, lipid, glycoprotein
                        Simple structure of viruses enhance study of genetics and molecular biology
                        Viruses may be future means by which genetic traits are carried from one organism to another to treat human genetic diseases

                The Nature of Viruses
                        Usually produce no disease or outward sign of presence
                                Viruses are often highly host-specific, reproduce only within a certain host
                                An organism may have more than one kind of virus
                                May be many more viruses than there are kinds of organisms
                        Mode of action
                                Transmit nucleic acid component from one host cell to another
                                Nucleic acid takes over host cell and produces more viruses
                                        Virulent viruses cause host cell to lyse and release new virus particles
                                        Temperate viruses become established in genome of host cell
                        Viruses possess limited nucleotide sequences
                                Ones associated with enzymes needed to replicate viral parts
                                Make possible invasion of new cells
                        Existence of prions demonstrated and under great study
                                Infectious proteins not associated with nucleic acids
                                Implicated as infectious agents in Alzheimer's disease
                        Control of viruses
                                Difficult as they completely integrate into host`s metabolism
                                Immunization most effective control
                                Antibiotics are useless because they act on features of living organisms
                                Viruses being used as control agents for some kinds of bacteria

                The Structure of Viruses        fig 30.3
                        Size
                                Smallest = 17 nanometers in diameter
                                Largest = 1000 nanometers in greatest dimension
                                Few barely visible at light microscope level
                                Most are visible only through electron microscopy
                        Variable in appearance  fig 30.2
                                Simplest is single molecule of nucleic acid surrounded by capsid
                                More complex are many molecules surrounded by many different proteins   fig 30.4
                                Two different shapes identified
                                        Helical have rod-like appearance
                                        Isometric have spherical appearance
                                                Form icosahedron structural pattern     fig 30.3
                                                Efficient symmetrical arrangement

                Bacteriophages          fig 30.5
                        Infect bacteria, structurally and functionally diverse
                                Double-stranded DNA viruses important in molecular biology
                                Among most complex viruses
                        T3 and T7 varieties are icosahedral with short tails
                        Structure of T-even (T2, T4, T6) varieties
                                Icosahedral head 
                                Capsid composed of three primary proteins
                                Long tail
                                Connecting neck with collar, long whiskers and complex base plate
                        Progression of infection by T4 bacteriophage
                                One of tail fibers contacts bacterial cell wall lipoproteins
                                Other tail fibers set phage perpendicular to bacterial surface
                                Base plate contacts cell surface
                                Tail contracts, tail tube pierces bacterial cell wall
                                Contents of head (DNA) injected into host cell cytoplasm        fig 30.6
                        T -series bacteriophages are all virulent
                        Lambda phage of Escherichia coli is a temperate phage
                                Much known about its structure
                                Complete sequence of bases identified, 23 proteins identified

                Viral Replication
                        Occurs only when they enter host cells and use host's cellular machinery
                                Carry genes that are translated into proteins by host cell
                                Leads to production of more viruses
                                Viruses contain only DNA or RNA, no ribosomes or other enzymes for protein synthesis or energy production
                        Analogous to operation of a computer via a specific set of instructions
                                Introduction of a new program will cause all operations to cease
                                Computer will spend time making new copies of that introduced program
                                Introduced program is not a computer, but merely a set of instructions

                Viruses and Disease     tbl 30.1
                        Smallpox, chickenpox, measles, German measles, viral encephalitis, mononucleosis,
                        mumps, shingles, influenza, colds, infectious hepatitis, yellow fever,  fig 30.7
                        polio, rabies, AIDS
                        Implicated in some cancers, leukemias, autoimmune diseases like multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes
                        Variolation practiced in  China thousands of years ago
                                Exposure to skin scabs of people who had survived smallpox
                                Resulted in protection against contracting disease
                        Observation and treatment by Edward Jenner
                                Milkmaids exposed to milder cowpox rarely developed smallpox
                                Deliberately vaccinated patients with cowpox viruses
                                Smallpox was not contracted; treatment considered successful
                                Lacked knowledge of antibodies and viruses 
                        Marberg virus cause some of most lethal diseases known to man   fig 30.8
                                Include Ebola virus with lethality of over 90%
                                Outbreak in 1995 threatened to spread worldwide

                A Viral Case Study: HIV
                        AIDS first reported in U.S. in 1982
                                Infectious agent:  human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
                                Closely related to African green monkey virus
                        Etiology of the disease
                                Affected individuals have no resistance to infection
                                Rarely survive more than a few years, die of otherwise nonlethal diseases
                                Transfer of body fluids poses most significant threat
                                Incidence growing rapidly
                                Clinical symptoms do not develop until after long period of latency
                        How HIV compromises the immune system
                                Normally a series of cells patrols bloodstream for invaders
                                These cells are destroyed in AIDS patients, most specifically T4 cells
                        The HIV infection cycle fig 30.9
                                Attachment
                                        HIV infects only T4 cells       fig 30.10
                                        Infects T4 cell by recognizing glycoprotein surface marker
                                        HIV glycoprotein precisely fits CD4 protein on T4 surface
                                        Cells lacking CD4 cannot be infected
                                Entry
                                        Penetrates cell membrane, enters cell via endocytosis
                                        Protein coat shed 
                                Replication
                                        Single strand RNA with reverse transcriptase enzyme inside cell
                                        Viral RNA made into double-stranded DNA via reverse transcriptase
                                        Double-stranded DNA inserts itself into chromosomes of T4 cell
                                        Infected cell can remain latent or become active
                                                Latent cell:  incorporates viral DNA into cell genome
                                                Active cell:  virus directs production of copies of its genome
                                                        Cell dies and lyses
                                                        New viruses released to infect other T4 cells
                                                Latent cell can become active at later time
                                                Trigger to activate unknown, but associated with infections
                                                Latent cell activated by external stimuli
                                                        Ultraviolet radiation
                                                        Chemicals and carcinogens
                                Other kinds of viruses
                                                Retroviruses (HIV) contain both RNA and reverse transcriptase
                                                Other viruses (cold virus) contain RNA but not reverse transcriptase
                                                Work without enzyme by using host's ribosomes and using RNA like mRNA
                                                Other viruses contain DNA:  herpesviruses (cold sores and genital herpes), papillomaviruses (warts)

                Viruses:  Particles of Genomes
                        Origin as fragments of bacterial and eukaryotic genomes explains diversity
                        New forms of viruses are evolving continuously

THE BACTERIA

                Bacteria Are a Unique Group of Living Organisms
                        Represent the oldest form of life       fig 4.11
                        Only representatives of the prokaryotes 
                        Used to be classified as the only member of the kingdom Monera
                        Present classification identifies two kingdoms of bacteria
                                Archaebacteria
                                Eubacteria

                Bacteria Are an Extremely Diverse Group of Organisms    fig 30.11
                        Few major structural differences
                        Species differentiation based on metabolic processes
                                Characterized by growth on certain defined media
                                Activities altered by growth conditions and chemicals

                Role of Bacteria
                        Responsible for creating properties of atmosphere and soils
                        Are autotrophic, photosynthetic and chemosynthetic, contribute to world carbon balance
                        Are heterotrophic and break down organic compounds
                        Only a few genera of bacteria are capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen
                        Involved in industrial processes and chemical syntheses
                                Produce acetic acid, vinegar, amino acids, enzymes
                                Production of various milk products, bread and ethanol
                                Antibiotics derived from bacterial sources
                        Genetic engineering applications

PROKARYOTES VERSUS EUKARYOTES

                Structural Differences
                        Multicellularity:  bacteria are fundamentally single-celled     fig 30.11e, 12
                                May adhere within matrix, some form filaments
                                Few integrated activities between cells
                                Primitive colonial forms include gliding bacteria       fig 30.11d
                        Cell size:  extremely small individual cell size
                        Chromosomes:  non-membrane bound DNA is circular and lacks proteins 
                        Cell division and genetic recombination
                                Simple division via binary fission
                                True sexual reproduction absent, genetic recombination irregular
                        Internal compartmentalization:  Lack membrane-bound organelles
                                Enzymes are bound to cell membrane
                                Only organelles present are ribosomes
                        Flagella: possess simple flagella       fig 30.1a,c,13
                                Composed of single flagellin fiber
                                Lack 9 + 2 structure of eukaryotic flagella and cilia   fig 5.26
                                Flagellar motion resembles spinning propeller, not whip-like motion
Metabolic Diversity:  
                        Eukaryotes exhibit only one form of photosynthesis
                        Bacteria exhibit several patterns of photosynthesis, aerobic and anaerobic
                        Bacteria undergo chemosynthesis and fix atmospheric nitrogen

BACTERIAL STRUCTURE

                Cell Wall Structure
                        Polysaccharide network with polypeptide crosslinks      fig 30.14
                        Classed as gram-positive or gram-negative
                                Gram-positive composed of polysaccharide network
                                Gram-negative have additional lipopolysaccharide chains
                                Gram-negative are less susceptible to antibiotics
                        May be surrounded by gelatinous capsule

                General Morphology
                        Cell shape
                                Rod-shaped:  bacilli
                                Spherical:  cocci
                                Spirally coiled:  spirilla
                        Some form stalked structures that give rise to spores   fig 30.11d
                        After division individual cells may adhere forming chains
                        Cyanobacteria regularly form large filamentous masses   fig 30.12
                                Connected by outer walls or gelatinous sheaths
                                May exhibit coordinated gliding or rotational movements
                        Rigid, helical flagella composed of flagellin protein   fig 5.8
                        Hairlike pili function in attachment and identification fig 30.13
                        Thick-walled endospores fig 30.15
                                Resistant to desiccation
                                Resistant to heat, killed only by extremely high temperatures

BACTERIAL VARIATION

                Mutation
                        One in 200 bacteria will have mutant characteristics    fig 30.16
                        Many mutants result from great number of individual cells
                        Rapid multiplication in short time period
                                Increase number with favorable mutations
                                Rapidly changes characteristics of a population
                        Plays important role in genetic diversity
                        Example:  development of antibiotic resistance

                Genetic Recombination
                        Transfer of genes via viruses, plasmids, other DNA fragments
                        Examples
                                Rapid transfer of antibiotic resistant plasmids
                                Transfer of pathogenic characteristics among enteric bacteria
                        Rapid generation time is an alternative evolutionary strategy

BACTERIA AS PLANT PATHOGENS

                Cause Costly Plant Diseases
                        Symptoms are generally spots on stems, leaves or fruit
                        Include blights, soft rots and wilts
                        Most pathogens are rod-shaped pseudomonads      fig 30.11a

                Example:  Citrus Canker
                        Caused by pseudomonad Xanthomonas campestris
                        Introduced from abroad, causes serious economical damage in Florida

BACTERIA AS HUMAN PATHOGENS

                Cause Many Human Diseases       tbl 30.1
                        Examples:  cholera, leprosy, tetanus, bacterial pneumonia, whooping cough, diphtheria
                        Generally related to one of several genera
                                Streptococcus:  pneumonia, scarlet and rheumatic fevers         fig 30.1b
                                Staphylococcus:  cause widespread infections
                        Many bacterial diseases spread through food or water
                        Insect vectors spread diseases like typhus
                        Humans can contract disease from drinking cow milk, causes brucellosis in animals

                Tuberculosis
                        One-third of all people worldwide infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis
                        Eight million new cases each year, three million deaths
                        Leading cause of death from a single infectious agent
                        Eradication programs dismantled in U.S. in 1980's
                                Experiencing a dramatic resurgence of the disease
                                Complicated by social factors, declining public health infrastructure
                                Associated with prevalence of HIV
                        Multidrug resistant strains of TB are developing

                Dental Caries
                        Causes tooth decay and cavities
                        Dental plaque composed of bacteria and polysaccharide matrix
                        Involves many species of bacteria
                        High sugar diets harmful
                                Bacteria convert sugars to lactic acid
                                Acid destroys hard tissue of tooth
                        Control via fluoride by retarding loss of calcium

                Sexually Transmitted Diseases
                        STDs caused by bacteria and viruses
                                Viral STDs have no cure
                                Bacterial STDs frequently mutate to drug-resistant strains
                        Gonorrhea
                                Most prevalent communicable disease, cause by Neisseria gonorrhoeae bacterium
                                Transmitted during sexual activities through transfer of body fluids
                                Can spread to eyes (conjunctivitis) and internal organs, cause arthritic meningitis
                                Symptoms in women and men  are generally mild and go unnoticed
                                Treatment via combination of antibiotics
                        Syphilis
                                Less common as a result of blood-screening procedures and antibiotic treatment
                                Caused by spirochaete bacterium, Treponema palladum
                                Transmitted during intercourse, direct contact with sore or from mother to fetus
                                Disease progresses in four distinct stages
                                        Primary stage characterized by chancre sore, highly infectious stage
                                        Secondary stage distinguished by body rash
                                        Third stage shows no symptoms, may last years
                                        Fourth stage is heart disease, mental deficiency, nerve damage, loss of motor functions, blindness
                                Treated via antibiotics
                        Genital herpes
                                Caused by two types of closely related viruses
                                        Herpes simplex Type 1 causes cold sores and fever blisters
                                        Herpes simplex type 2 causes genital lesions of genital herpes
                                Transmitted through sexual contact when open sores are evident
                                Herpes virus in body travels along nerve endings to base of spine
                                        May remain dormant with no symptoms
                                        May become active and produce painful symptoms
                                        Initial outbreak produces measle-like lesions, flu-like symptoms
                                        May become dormant, outbreaks reappear with stress or exposure to sun
                                Antiviral drugs can lessen severity of outbreaks, not a cure
                                Transmission possible during outbreaks
                        Chlamydia
                                "Silent STD" caused by Chlamydia trachomatis bacterium
                                        Has both bacterial and viral characteristics
                                        Susceptible to antibiotics like bacterium
                                        Depends on host cell to replicate, like virus
                                Transmitted via sexual intercourse
                                Women usually do not experience symptoms until infection is established
                                        Can cause pelvic inflammatory disease
                                        Can lead to sterility, increase risk of acquiring HIV
                                Symptoms in men include watery discharge, burning or itching
                                Tests exist to identify bacteria in discharge
                                Treatment via antibiotics mostly tetracycline, penicillin not effective
                        Genital warts
                                Caused by human papillomavirus (HPV)
                                Transmission through contact with infected person       fig 30.17
                                More than 30 strains, three known to cause cervical cancer
                                Warts appear in genital region three weeks to three months after exposure
                                Treatment through various agents to remove warts

                Archaebacteria and Eubacteria
                        Archaebacteria are distinctly different from all other bacteria
                                Base sequences of rRNA virtually identical in all members
                                Differ from sequences in other bacteria and eukaryotes
                                Cell walls lack muramic acid
                                Have distinctive membranes, unusual cell walls, unique metabolic cofactors
                                Capable of living in anaerobic atmosphere rich in CO2 and H2
                                Include oldest life forms, ancestral to Eubacteria and eukaryotes
                                        Independent evolution of each group
                                        Some have ribosomes similar to eukaryotes
                                        Others have smaller ribosomes like Eubacteria
                        Include methanogens that produce methane gas
                                Produce marsh gas, natural gas and reduce elemental sulfur
                                Produce own anaerobic environment, cannot function in presence of oxygen
                        Include other bacteria able to survive in inhospitable environments
                                Thermoacidophiles
                                        Hot springs, deep sea thermal vents
                                        Use hydrogen sulfide as energy source
                                Halophiles
                                        Salt-loving bacteria
                                        Use salt to generate ATP

SIMPLE BUT VERSATILE ORGANISMS

                Simple Organisms with Diverse Metabolisms

                First Life on Earth and Only Life for Two Billion Years



 

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