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Life • Individual survival • Reproduction

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Page 1: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Life

• Individual survival

• Reproduction

Page 2: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Bacteria

Archaea

Protozoa

Algae

Plants

FungiAnimals

InvertebratesVertebrates

US

UCA

Prokaryotes

Euk

aryo

tes

Sin

gle-

celle

d

Page 3: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Cell Functions• Maintenance

– Recovery of energy from nutrients– Storage of energy– Synthesis of correct proteins and other cell

components

• Perpetuation of self– DNA replication– Cell division

• Specialized functions– e.g. muscle, blood, nerve cells

Page 4: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

The molecules of life

• Nucleic acids (DNA, RNA)

• Proteins

• Carbohydrates

• Lipids

• Lipoproteins, glycoproteins, vitamins….

Page 5: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

• DNA, the blueprint for the cell– Four bases, A,C,G,T– The order of the bases dictates amino acid sequence in proteins -

“codes for synthesis of proteins”

• Double strand, coiled in Double Helix– Arranged in chromosomes– About 1 yard total in each human cell

• Inside nucleus• RNA takes instructions from nucleus to endo-plasmic

reticulum where proteins are made

Page 6: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

DNA RNA Protein

DNA + DNA

Translation protein synthesis

DNA ReplicationCell division

The ProteomeThe ProteomeProteomicsProteomics

GenomicsGenomicsThe GenomeThe Genome

Transcription

Page 7: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

PROTEINS

• Chains of amino acids

• Structural elements - cell walls, membranes

• Catalysts - enzymes

• Communication devices - within cells, between cells• Cytokines• Signal transduction factors• Receptors

–Vital in regulation of cell growth, replication

Page 8: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Schematic metabolic cycleCellular components

Nucleic acids, Carbohydrates, Protein,

Fat

Metabolic intermediates

NADPHNADP+

Work

TransportAssemblyMovementHeat

ATP

ADP + Pi

Food

Carbohydrates, Fats, Glucose,

Proteins

Wastes

CO2, H2O, lactic acid

ATP

ADP + Pi

NAD+

NAD+

NADH

NADH

Page 9: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Viruses

• 0.02-0.3 micrometers diameter• Genetic material: ss or ds DNA, RNA • Protein coat• Some enzymes• Lipid envelope – enveloped/non enveloped

viruses• Nomenclature semi-systematic

– Hepatitis A Virus, HAV

• Need host cell for replication

Page 10: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

The Flu Virion

Page 11: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

• Envelope: lipid bilayer membrane + glycoproteins, typically acquired from host cell membranes

• Capsid (protein coat): multiple copies of 1 or more proteins in an array

Page 12: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Life-cycle of virus

• Particle, virion

• Infects host cell

• Genetic material uses host’s replication apparatus to produce new viral components (capsid, core proteins, genetic material)

• Components assemble into viral particles, exit host cell, sometimes lysing host cell

Page 13: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

• Each type of virus has its own specific host

• Viruses that colonize bacteria are bacteriophage viruses (bacteriophages).

Page 14: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Viruses in the Environmment• Must be able to survive outside host cell• Non-enveloped viruses are more persistent than

enveloped viruses– lipid envelope more easily damages, protein

coat confers stability • Enteric viruses are almost all non-enveloped

– Hepatitis A, poliovirus, noroviruses, rotaviruses – transmitted by direct and indirect contact, fecally

contaminated water, food, fomites and air. • Respiratory viruses: adenoviruses, coronaviruses

– transmitted by direct and indirect contact, air and fomites (some also by water and food).

Page 15: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Unicellular organisms

• Bacteria - procaryotes

• Protozoa

• Algae - eucaryotes

• Fungi

Page 16: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Procaryotic Cell (left) and Eucaryotic Cell (right)

Page 17: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Procaryotes: Bacteria and Others

Unicellular organisms

Simple internal organization

Multiply by binary fission

Diameter ~0.5-1.0 micrometer

Envelope: cytoplasmic membrane, cell wall & capsule (polysaccharide)

Some have appendages:

flagella: for locomotion

pili: attachment to other cells for genetic transfer; virus receptor site

Standard Linnean nomenclature: Genus species

Page 18: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Bacterial types

• Gram positive• Gram negative• Aerobes• Anaerobes• Facultative aerobes• Rods (bacilli)• Spherical (cocci)• Comma-shaped (vibrios)• Spiral (spirochetes)

Page 19: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Bacteria in the Environment

Some bacteria form spores:

– highly resistant to physical and chemical agents and

– very persistent in the environment

Page 20: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Pathogenic Bacteria

Pathogenic bacteria possess structures or chemical constituents that contribute to virulence properties – Outer cell membrane of Gram

negative bacteria: endotoxin (fever producer)

– Exotoxins– Pili: for attachment to cells and

tissues– Invasins: to invade cells

Page 21: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Unicellular Eucaryotes:

• More complex internal organization:

– organelles: discrete nucleus, mitochondria

• Wide range of sizes: 2 micrometers and larger

Page 22: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Protozoa• Unicellular; non-photosynthetic; flexible cell membrane;

no cell wall; some are parasites, have complex life-cycles • Wide range of sizes and shapes; 2 micrometers to 2 mm• Disease-causing:

– Amoebae: Entamoeba histolytica– Flagellates: Giardia lamblia– Ciliates: Balantidum coli– Sporozoans: Plasmodium vivax– Coccidians: Cryptosporidium parvum– Microsporidia – Cyclosopora cayetanensis

Page 23: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled
Page 24: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts: ~5 m diameter

Acid fast stain of fecal preparation

Wet mount by differential interference contrast microscopy

Page 25: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Giardia lamblia cyst: ~10 x 8 micrometers

Page 26: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

More Protozoans: Fungi

Fungi (yeasts and molds):•non-photosynthetic• immotile; •rigid cell wall

Molds:•grow as branched, interlacing chains or filaments (hyphae) called mycelia

•Yeasts:• do not form mycelia •grow as single cells that bud •sexual reproduction possible

Mitospores (conidia) of Penicillium, one of the asexual Ascomycota

Yeasts

Page 27: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Algae

• Photosynthetic• Rigid cell wall • Simple plants, protists,

protozoa, plancton, derived from cyanobacteria ?

• Wide range of sizes and shapes – 2 micrometers and larger

• Some algae are harmful– Algal booms

• Toxins– Anabaena, anatoxins

Nostoc

Page 28: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Helminths (Worms)

• Multicellular animals• Some are human and/or animal

parasites • Eggs pass via human and animal

excreta to water, food, soil.• Several major groups:

– Roundworms, Nematodes eg. Ascaris, Trichinella spiralis, hookworms

– Flatworms Platyhelminthes: Cestodes (tapeworms): pork, beef tapeworms, and Trematodes (flukes) eg Schistosomes

– Annelids (leeches)

Necator (hookworm)

eggs

adult

Page 29: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

• Eggs hatch in soil• Infective stage: larvae• Penetrate skin, migrate to

blood, lungs, trachea • or are ingested• Adults mature in intestine• Attach to intestinal walls

– anemia– Necator americanus ,

Ancylostoma duodenale (hookworm)

Page 30: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Trematodes

• Schistosomes (blood flukes)

• Liver fluke

Page 31: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Cestodes

• Head (scolex) attaches to tissue– beef tapeworm,

Taenia saginata– pork tapeworm (T.

solium)

• Grows in intestine

http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_tapeworm.html

Page 32: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Multicellular organisms

• Plants

• Animals– Invertebrates– Vertebrates

Page 33: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled
Page 34: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

The plasma membraneLipid bilayer

Polar

Non-polar

(Lipid)

Protein

Av. Width

7.5 nm

(75 Å)

Sugar

GlycolipidGlycoprotein

Page 35: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

The cell cycle

GG11

SS

GG22

MMGG00

AA

Mitosis (Cell division)

Page 36: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Different cell types

• Connective tissue, fibroblasts• Endothelial cells, lining of blood

vessels• Epithelial cells, “outside” of several

tissues• Hepatocytes, liver cells• Some cell populations are continually

being renewed (turnover), others are “permanent”

Page 37: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Rat fibroblasts

Page 38: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Cell renewal• Renewal by

duplication - proliferation– eg endothelial

cells– pancreas– hepatocytes ?

• Renewal by differentiation of stem cells– eg skin, intestinal

wall, blood cells

Page 39: Life Individual survival Reproduction. Bacteria Archaea Protozoa Algae Plants Fungi Animals Invertebrates Vertebrates US UCA Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Single-celled

Cell reproduction, cell development

“Generic” Specialized

Stem cells Differentiated cells

Pluripotent stem cells Different types of

differentiated cells

Totipotent (embryonic) stem cells Organs, organisms ?