Functional Diversity of Microorganisms: Powerpoint Presentations
Functional Diversity of Microorganisms: Powerpoint Presentations
Presentations
CHAPTER 15
Functional
Diversity of
Microorganisms
• Ecology of cyanobacteria
• important for productivity of oceans
• Synechococcus and Prochlorococcus are most abundant
ocean phototrophs, contributing 80 percent of marine
photosynthesis and 35 percent of all Earth’s photosynthesis.
• Cyanobacterial nitrogen fixation is dominant input of new
nitrogen in oceans.
• Widely distributed in terrestrial and freshwater
environments
• more tolerant of extremes than eukaryotic algae (e.g., hot
springs, saline lakes, desert soils)
• can be phototrophic component of lichens (symbiosis
between phototroph and fungus)
• important metabolic products (e.g., potent neurotoxins
and toxic blooms, geosmin in water)
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15.4 Purple Sulfur Bacteria
• Other Chloroflexi
• Heliothrix and Roseiflexus
• filamentous and thermophilic but lack chlorosomes
• Other Chloroflexi
• Thermomicrobium
• chemotrophic genus of Chloroflexi
• Phototrophic Acidobacteria
• Chloracidobacterium thermophilum (Figure 14.21)
• found in thermal springs of Yellowstone National Park
• thermophilic oxygen-tolerant anoxygenic phototroph
• similar to green sulfur bacteria, producing chlorosomes and
using FeS-type photosystem
• can grow aerobically
• photoheterotroph that uses short-chain fatty acids as
carbon sources
• not autotrophic
• Symbiotic diazotrophs
• several relationships with plants, animals, and fungi
• need source of carbon and energy and regulation of
oxygen concentrations
• microbial symbiont provides fixed nitrogen
• symbiosis between rhizobia and leguminous plants
• Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, Actinobacteria
• other symbioses
• shipworms and Teridinibacter
• termite guts and Treponema
• fungi, algae, and plants with Cyanobacteria
• Free-living diazotrophs
• need to protect nitrogenase
• obligate anaerobes in marine and freshwater sediments
and microbial mats
• Some fix N2 only when oxygen absent or low
concentration.
• example: facultative aerobes only when anaerobic
(Klebsiella)
• example: microaerophiles (typically less than two percent
oxygen)
• some aerobes
• Cyanobacteria and chemoorganotrophic bacteria
• Azotobacter produce extensive capsules or slime layers to
help protect nitrogenase. (Figure 15.31)
• believed to protect nitrogenase from O2
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.31
15.12 Diversity of Nitrogen-Fixers
• Physiology
• typically very versatile at anaerobic respiration
• possess outer membrane cytochromes that facilitate
electron transfer with insoluble minerals
• Most species use iron oxide or manganese oxides as
electron acceptors.
• Various species use nitrate, fumarate, oxidized inorganic
sulfur, cobalt, chromium, uranium, tellurium, selenium,
arsenic, humic compounds.
• mostly obligate anaerobes; some facultative aerobes
• Electron donors are organic compounds (e.g., fatty acids,
alcohols, sugars, some aromatic compounds) or H2 (not
autotrophically).
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
15.14 Dissimilative Iron-Reducers
• Physiology
• Geobacter, Desulfuromonas, Desulfuromusa all oxidize
acetate and other small organics to CO2.
• specialize in anaerobic respiration
• Geobacter produce pili containing cytochromes that
facilitate electron transfer to surface of iron oxide minerals.
• Pelobacter are primarily fermentative.
• Pelobacter carbinolicus only uses lactate as electron donor
and ferric iron or S0 as electron acceptor.
• unable to oxidize substrates completely to CO2
• Physiology
• Shewanella, Ferrimonas, Aeromonas are facultative
aerobes.
• Shewanella use a variety of electron donors and acceptors
but cannot completely oxidize carbon substrates to CO2
and cannot oxidize acetate for anaerobic respiration.
• Ecology
• common in anoxic freshwater and marine sediments
• also common in shallow aquifers and deep subsurface
• several thermophilic and hyperthermophilic iron-reducing
species (e.g., Thermus, Thermotoga) in hot springs and
other geothermally heated systems
• Aerobic methanotrophs
• key genera: Methylomonas, Methylosinus
• use methane as an electron donor and typically also
carbon source (Table 15.1)
• mostly Proteobacteria
• Type I assimilate one-carbon compounds via ribulose
monophosphate cycle and are Gammaproteobacteria.
• Type II assimilate one-carbon compounds via serine
pathway and are Alphaproteobacteria.
• most specialized for aerobic growth on methane; some
can grown on methanol
• typically obligate methylotrophs
• Methylacidiphilum uses Calvin cycle.
• Physiology
• Methane monooxygenase catalyzes incorporation of an oxygen
atom from O2 into CH4 to form methanol
• located in extensive internal membrane systems
• In type I methanotrophs, membranes arranged as bundles of disc-
shaped vesicles throughout cell. (Figure 15.37b)
• Type II have paired membranes running along cell periphery.
• Verrucomicrobial methanotrophs have membrane vesicles.
• Methylotrophs unable to use CH4, lack membrane arrays.
• Methanotrophs possess large amounts of sterols (rigid planar
molecules found in eukaryotes but not most bacteria).
• Sterols may be essential for membrane system.
• also found in mycoplasmas (bacteria that lack cell walls)
• Methylotrophs contain various carotenoids and cytochromes,
making them pink.
• Bdellovibrio
• small, highly motile, curved
• after attachment, penetrates cell wall and replicates in
periplasm
• forms a spherical bdelloplast
• two stages of penetration (Figures 15.39 and 15.40)
• attacks gram-negatives, not gram-positives
• obligate aerobes that oxidize amino acids and acetate
• assimilates nucleotides, fatty acids, peptides, even some
proteins without hydrolysis
• Predation is not obligatory.
• widespread in aquatic habitats, soils, sewage
• forms plaques like bacterial viruses
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.39
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.40
15.17 Microbial Predators
• Myxobacteria
• most complex behavior among known bacteria
• can often be seen with hand lens on decaying wood or plant material
• Myxobacteria
• life cycle (Figure 15.42)
• Vegetative cells are simple nonflagellated gram-negative
rods (Figure 15.43) that glide and obtain nutrients by
lysing other bacteria.
• Vegetative cells excrete slime trails. (Figure 15.44)
• form a swarm that self-organizes, allowing them to
behave as a single coordinated entity in response to
environment
• when nutrients exhausted, vegetative cells aggregate in
mounds/heaps (Figure 15.45) likely mediated by
chemotaxis or quorum-sensing
• differentiate into fruiting bodies (Figure 15.46) containing
myxospores (specialized resistant cells)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.42
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.43
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.44
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.45
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.46
15.18 Microbial Bioluminescence
• 15.19 Spirochetes
• Leptothrix
• can precipitate iron oxides on sheaths from oxidation of
metals (Figure 15.58)
• Sphaerotilus
• a chain of rod-shaped gram-negative cells in a sheath
(Figure 15.59a)
• Motile swarmer cells are liberated, migrate, attach to a
surface, and start new filaments.
• nutritionally versatile; use simple organics for carbon and
energy
• obligate aerobes
• cause “sewage fungus,” a filamentous slime found on
rocks in streams receiving sewage pollution
• in activated sludge, responsible for “bulking” that
suspends sludge instead of settling
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.59
15.22 Magnetic Microbes
• Key genera: Magnetospirillum
• magnetotaxis: directed movement in a magnetic field
• magnetosomes consist of chains of magnetic particles made
of Fe3O4 (aerobic) or Fe3S4 (anaerobic).
• Localized within cell membrane invaginations
• align north-south
• may maintain organisms in zones of low O2
• microaerophilic or anaerobic
• found near oxic-anoxic interface in sediments or stratified lakes
• members of Alphaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria,
Deltaproteobacteria, and Nitrospira
• Best characterized is Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum
(Figure 15.60), a chemoorganotrophic microaerophile that can
grow anaerobically.
• Desulfovibrio magneticus is a sulfate-reducing obligate
anaerobe.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 15.60