Jim's Discussion Notes - Prokaryotes and the Origins of Metabolic Diversity
(Campbell, Ch.27 and Johnson/Raven, Ch.21)
1. They’re (almost) everywhere! An overview of prokaryotic life
·
Prokaryotes
were the earliest organisms on Earth and evolved alone for 1.5 billion years.
·
Today,
prokaryotes still dominate the biosphere.
·
Their
collective biomass outweighs all eukaryotes combined by at least tenfold.
·
More
prokaryotes inhabit a handful of fertile soil or the mouth or skin of a human
than the total number of people who have ever lived.
·
Prokarytes
are wherever there is life and they thrive in habitats that are too cold, too
hot, too salty, too acidic, or too alkaline for any eukaryote.
·
The
vivid reds, oranges, and yellows that paint these rocks are colonies of
prokaryotes.
·
We
hear most about the minority of prokaryote species that cause serious illness.
·
During
the 14th century, a bacterial disease known as bubonic plague spread across
Europe and killed about 25% of the human population.
·
Other
types of diseases caused by bacteria include tuberculosis, cholera, many
sexually transmissible diseases, and certain types of food poisoning.
·
However,
more bacteria are benign or beneficial.
·
Bacteria
in our intestines produce important vitamins.
·
Prokaryotes
recycle carbon and other chemical elements between organic matter and the soil
and atmosphere.
·
Prokaryotes
often live in close association among themselves and with eukaryotes in
symbiotic relationships.
·
Mitochondria
and chloroplasts evolved from prokaryotes that became residents in larger host
cells.
·
Modern
prokaryotes are diverse in structure and in metabolism.
·
About
5,000 species of prokaryotes are known, but estimates of actual prokaryotic
diversity range from about 400,000 to 4 million species.
2. Bacteria and archaea are the two main branches of prokaryote evolution
·
Molecular
evidence accumulated over the last two decades has led to the conclusion that
there are two major branches of prokaryote evolution, not a single kingdom as
in the five-kingdom system.
·
These
two branches are the bacteria and the archaea.
·
The
archaea inhabit extreme environments and differ from bacteria in many key
structural, biochemical, and physiological characteristics.
·
Current
taxonomy recognizes two prokaryotic domains:
domain Bacteria and domain Archaea.
·
A
domain is a taxonomic level above kingdom.
·
The
rationale for this decision is that bacteria and archaea diverged so early in
the history of life and are so fundamentally different.
·
At
the same time, they are both structurally organized at the prokaryotic level.
B. The Structure, Function, and Reproduction of Prokaryotes
·
Most
prokaryotes are unicellular.
·
Some
species may aggregate transiently or form true colonies, even extending to
division of labor between specialized cell types.
·
The
most common shapes among prokaryotes are spheres (cocci), rods (bacilli), and
helices.
·
Most
prokaryotes have diameters in the range of 1-5 m, compared to 10-100 m
for most eukaryotic cells.
·
However,
the largest prokaryote discovered so far has a diameter of 0.75 mm.
1. Nearly all prokaryotes have a cell wall external to the plasma membrane
·
In
nearly all prokaryotes, a cell wall maintains the shape of the cell, affords
physical protection, and prevents the cell from bursting in a hypotonic
environment.
·
Most
bacterial cell walls contain peptidoglycan,
a polymer of modified sugars cross-linked by short polypeptides.
·
The
walls of archaea lack peptidoglycan.
·
The
Gram stain is a valuable tool for
identifying specific bacteria based on differences in their cell walls.
·
Gram-positive bacteria have simpler cell
walls, with large amounts of peptidoglycans.
·
Gram-negative bacteria have more complex
cell walls and less peptidoglycan.
·
An
outer membrane on the cell wall contains lipopolysaccharides, carbohydrates
bonded to lipids.
·
Among
pathogenic bacteria, gram-negative species are generally more threatening than
gram-positive species.
·
The
lipopolysaccharides on the walls are often toxic and the outer membrane
protects the pathogens from the defenses of their hosts.
·
Gram-negative
bacteria are commonly more resistant than gram-positive species to antibiotics
because the outer membrane impedes entry of antibiotics.
·
Many
antibiotics, including penicillins, inhibit the synthesis of cross-links in
peptidoglycans, preventing the formation of a functional wall, particularly in
gram-positive species.
·
These
drugs are a very selective treatment because they cripple many species of
bacteria without affecting humans and other eukaryotes, which do not synthesize
peptidoglycans.
·
Many
prokaryotes secrete another sticky protective layer, the capsule, outside the cell wall.
·
Capsules
adhere the cells to their substratum.
·
They
may increase resistance to host defenses.
·
They
glue together the cells of those prokaryotes that live as colonies.
·
Another
way for prokaryotes to adhere to one another or to the substratum is by surface
appendages called pili.
·
Pili
can fasten pathogenic bacteria to the mucous membranes of its host.
·
Some
pili are specialized for holding two prokaryote cells together long enough to
transfer DNA during conjugation.
2. Many prokaryotes are motile
·
About
half of all prokaryotes are capable of directional movement.
·
The
action of flagella, scattered over the entire surface or concentrated at one or
both ends, is the most common method of movement.
·
The
flagella of prokaryotes differ in structure and function from those of
eukaryotes.
·
In
a prokaryotic flagellum, chains of a globular protein are wound in a tight
spiral to form a filament, which is attached to another protein (the hook),
which is inserted into the basal apparatus.
·
Rotation
of the filament is driven by the diffusion of protons into the cell through the
basal apparatus after the protons have been actively transported by proton
pumps in the plasma membrane.
·
A
second motility mechanism is found in spirochetes, helical bacteria.
·
Two
or more helical filaments under the cell wall are attached to a basal motor
attached to the cell.
·
When
the filaments rotate, the cell moves like a corkscrew.
·
A
third mechanism occurs in cells that secrete a jet of slimy threads that
anchors the cells to the substratum.
·
The
cell glides along at the growing end of threads.
·
In
a relatively uniform environment, a flagellated cell may wander randomly.
·
In
a heterogenous environment, many prokaryotes are capable of taxis, movement toward or away from a
stimulus.
·
With
chemotaxis, binding between receptor cells on the surface and specific
substances results in movement toward the source (positive chemotaxis) or away
(negative chemotaxis).
·
Other
prokaryotes can detect the presence of light (phototaxis) or magnetic fields.
3. The cellular and genomic organization of prokaryotes is fundamentally different from that of eukaryotes
·
Prokaryotic
cells lack a nucleus enclosed by membranes.
·
The
cells of prokaryotes also lack the other internal compartments bounded by membranes
that are characteristic of eukaryotes.
·
Instead,
prokaryotes used infolded regions of the plasma membrane to perform many
metabolic functions, including cellular respiration and photosynthesis.
·
Prokaryotes
have smaller, simpler genomes than eukaryotes.
·
On
average, a prokaryote has only about one-thousandth as much DNA as a eukaryote.
·
Typically,
the DNA is concentrated as a snarl of fibers in the nucleoid region.
·
The
mass of fibers is actually the single prokaryotic chromosome, a double-stranded
DNA molecule in the form of a ring.
·
There
is very little protein associated with the DNA.
·
Prokaryotes
may also have smaller rings of DNA, plasmids,
that consist of only a few genes.
·
Prokaryotes
can survive in most environments without their plasmids because essential
functions are programmed by the chromosomes.
·
However,
plasmids provide the cell genes for resistance to antibiotics, for metabolism
of unusual nutrients, and other special contingencies.
·
Plasmids
replicate independently of the chromosome and can be transferred between
partners during conjugation.
·
Although
the general processes for DNA replication and translation of mRNA into proteins
are alike for eukaryotes and prokaryotes, some of the details differ.
·
For
example, the prokaryotic ribosomes are slightly smaller than the eukaryotic
version and differ in protein and RNA content.
·
These
differences are great enough that selective antibiotics, including tetracycline
and chloramphenicol, can block protein synthesis in many prokaryotes but not in
eukaryotes.
4. Populations of prokaryotes grow and adapt rapidly
·
Prokaryotes
reproduce only asexually via binary
fission, synthesizing DNA almost continuously.
·
A
single cell in favorable conditions will produce a colony of offspring.
·
While
lacking meiosis and sex as seen in eukaryotes, prokaryotes have several
mechanisms to combine genes between individuals.
·
In
transformation, a cell can absorb
and integrate fragments of DNA from their environment.
·
This
allows considerable genetic transfer between prokaryotes, even across species
lines.
·
In
conjugation, one cell directly
transfers genes to another cell.
·
In
transduction, viruses transfer genes
between prokaryotes.
·
Lacking
meiotic sex, mutation is the major source of genetic variation in prokaryotes.
·
With
generation times in minutes or hours, prokaryotic populations can adapt very
rapidly to environmental changes, as natural selection screens new mutations
and novel genomes from gene transfer.
·
The
word growth as applied to prokaryotes
refers to multiplication of cells and population increases, rather than
enlargement of individual cells.
·
Conditions
for optimal growth vary according to species.
·
Variables
include temperature, pH, salt concentrations, and nutrient sources, among
others.
·
In
the absence of limiting resources, growth of prokaryotes is effectively
geometric.
·
The
number of cells doubles each generation.
·
Typical
generation times range from 1-3 hours, but some species can double every 20
minutes in an optimal environment.
·
Prokaryotic
growth in the laboratory and in nature is usually checked at some point.
·
The
cells may exhaust some nutrient.
·
Alternatively,
the colony poisons itself with an accumulation of metabolic waste.
·
Prokaryotes
can also withstand harsh conditions.
·
Some
bacteria form resistant cells, endospores.
·
In
an endospore, a cell replicates its chromosome and surrounds one chromosome
with a durable wall.
·
While
the outer cell may disintegrate, an endospore, such as this anthrax endospore, dehydrates,
does not metabolize, and stays protected by a thick, protective wall.
·
An
endospore is resistant to all sorts of trauma.
·
Endospores
can survive lack of nutrients and water, extreme heat or cold, and most
poisons.
·
Sterilization
in an autoclave kills even endospores by heating them to 120oC.
·
Endospores
may be dormant for centuries or more.
·
When
the environment becomes more hospitable, the endospore absorbs water and
resumes growth.
·
In
most environments, prokaryotes compete with other prokaryotes (and other
microorganisms) for space and nutrients.
·
Many
microorganisms release antibiotics,
chemicals that inhibit the growth of other microorganisms (including certain
prokaryotes, protists, and fungi).
1. Prokaryotes can be grouped into four categories according to how they obtain energy and carbon
·
Nutrition
here refers to how an organism obtains energy and a carbon source from the environment
to build the organic molecules of cells.
·
Species
that use light energy are phototrophs.
·
Species
that obtain energy from chemicals in their environment are chemotrophs.
·
Organisms
that need only CO2 as a carbon source are autotrophs.
·
Organisms
that require at least one organic nutrient as a carbon source are heterotrophs.
·
These
categories of energy source and carbon source can be combined to group
prokaryotes according to four major modes of nutrition.
·
Photoautotrophs are photosynthetic organisms
that harness light energy to drive the synthesis of organic compounds from
carbon dioxide.
·
Among
the photoautotrophic prokaryotes are the cyanobacteria.
·
Among
the photosynthetic eukaryotes are plants and algae.
·
Chemoautotrophs need only CO2 as
a carbon source, but they obtain energy by oxidizing inorganic substances,
rather than light.
·
These
substances include hydrogen sulfide (H2S), ammonia (NH3),
and ferrous ions (Fe2+) among others.
·
This
nutritional mode is unique to prokaryotes.
·
Photoheterotrophs use light to generate ATP
but obtain their carbon in organic form.
·
This
mode is restricted to prokaryotes.
·
Chemoheterotrophs must consume organic
molecules for both energy and carbon.
·
This
nutritional mode is found widely in prokaryotes, protists, fungi, animals, and
even some parasitic plants.
·
The
majority of known prokaryotes are chemoheterotrophs.
·
These
include saprobes, decomposers that
absorb nutrients from dead organisms, and parasites,
which absorb nutrients from the body fluids of living hosts.
·
Some
of these organisms (such as Lactobacillus)
have very exacting nutritional requirements, while others (E. coli) are less specific in their requirements.
·
With
such a diversity of chemoheterotrophs, almost any organic molecule, including
petroleum, can serve as food for at least some species.
·
Those
few classes or syntheticorganic compounds that cannot be broken down by
bacteria are said to be nonbiodegradable.
·
Accessing
nitrogen, an essential component of proteins and nucleic acids, is another
facet of nutritional diversity among prokaryotes.
·
Eukaryotes
are limited in the forms of nitrogen that they can use.
·
In
contrast, diverse prokaryotes can metabolize most nitrogenous compounds.
·
Prokaryotes
are responsible for the key steps in the cycling of nitrogen through
ecosystems.
·
Some
chemoautotrophic bacteria convert ammonium (NH4+) to
nitrite (NO2-).
·
Others
“denitrify” nitrite or nitrate (NO3-) to N2,
returning N2 gas to the atmosphere.
·
A
diverse group of prokaryotes, including cyanobacteria, can use atmospheric N2
directly.
·
During
nitrogen fixation, they convert N2
to NH4+, making atmospheric nitrogen available to other
organisms for incorporation into organic molecules.
·
Nitrogen
fixing cyanobacteria are the most self-sufficient of all organisms.
·
They
require only light energy, CO2, N2, water and some
minerals to grow.
·
The
presence of oxygen has a positive impact on the growth of some prokaryotes and
a negative impact on the growth of others.
·
Obligate aerobes require O2 for
cellular respiration.
·
Facultative anerobes will use O2 if
present but can also grow by fermentation in an anaerobic environment.
·
Obligate anaerobes are poisoned by O2
and use either fermentation or anaerobic respiration.
·
In
anaerobic respiration, inorganic
molecules other than O2 accept electrons from electron transport
chains.
2.
Photosynthesis evolved early in prokaryotic life
·
Early
prokaryotes were faced with constantly changing physical and biological
environments.
·
All
of the major metabolic capabilities of prokaryotes, including photosynthesis,
probably evolved early, in the first billion years of life.
·
It
seems reasonable that the very first
prokaryotes were heterotrophs that obtained their energy and carbon molecules
from the pool of organic molecules in the “primordial soup” of early Earth.
·
Glycolysis,
which can extract energy from organic fuels to generate ATP in anaerobic environments,
was probably one of the first metabolic pathways.
·
Presumably,
heterotrophs depleted the supply of organic molecules in the environment.
·
Natural
selection would have favored any prokaryote that could harness the energy of
sunlight to drive the synthesis of ATP and generate reducing power to
synthesize organic compounds from CO2.
·
Photosynthetic
groups are scattered among diverse branches of prokaryote phylogeny.
·
While
it is possible that photosynthesis evolved several times independently, this
seems unlikely because of the complex molecular machinery required.
·
The
most reasonable or parsimonious hypothesis, is that photosynthesis evolved just
once.
·
Heterotrophic
groups represent a loss of photosynthetic ability during evolution.
·
Although
the very first organisms may have been heterotrophs from which autotrophs
evolved, the diversity of heterotrophs we observe today probably descended
secondarily from photosynthetic ancestors.
·
The
early evolution of cyanobacteria is also consistent with an early origin of
photosynthesis.
·
Cyanobacteria
are the only autotrophic prokaryotes that release O2 by splitting
water during the light reaction.
·
Geological
evidence for the accumulation of atmospheric O2 at least 2.7 billion
years ago suggests that cyanobacteria were already important by this time.
·
Fossils
from stromatolites that look like modern cyanobacteria are as old as 3.5
billion years.
·
Oxygenic
photosynthesis is especially complex because it requires two cooperative
photosystems.
·
Some
modern groups of prokaryotes use a single photosystem to extract electrons from
compounds such as H2S instead of splitting water.
·
A
logical inference is that cyanobacteria which split water and released O2
evolved from ancestors with simpler, nonoxygenic photosystems.
·
The
evolution of cyanobacteria changed the Earth in a radical way, transforming the
atmosphere from a reducing one to an oxidizing one.
·
Some
organisms took advantage of this change through the evolution of cellular
respiration which used the oxidizing power of O2 to increase the
efficiency of fuel consumption.
·
In
fact, photosynthesis and cellular respiration are closely related, both using
electron transport chains to generate proton gradients that power ATP synthase.
·
It
is likely that cellular respiration evolved by modification of the
photosynthetic equipment for a new function.
1. Molecular systematics is leading to a phylogenetic classification of prokaryotes
·
The
limited fossil record and structural simplicity of prokaryotes created great
difficulties in developing a classification of prokaryotes.
·
A
breakthrough came when Carl Woese and his colleagues began to cluster
prokarotes into taxonomic groups based on comparisons of nucleic acid
sequences.
·
Especially
useful was the small-subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU-rRNA) because all organisms
have ribosomes.
·
Woese
used signature sequences, regions of SSU-rRNA that are unique, to establish a
phylogeny of prokarotes.
·
Before
molecular phylogeny, phenotypic characters, such as nutritional mode and gram
staining behavior, were used to establish prokaryotic phylogeny.
·
While
these characters are still useful in the identification of pathogenic bacteria
in a clinical laboratory, they are poor guides to phylogeny.
·
For
example, nutritional modes are scattered through the phylogeny, as are
gram-negative bacteria.
·
Some
traditional phenotype-based groups do persist in phylogenetic classification,
such as the cyanobacteria and spirochetes.
·
More
recently, researchers have sequenced the complete genomes of several
prokaryotes.
·
Phylogenies
based on this enormous database have supported most of the taxonomic
conclusions based on SSU-rRNA comparisons, but it has also produced some
surprises.
·
Among
the surprises is rampant gene-swapping within early communities of prokaryotes
and the first eukaryotes.
2. Researchers are identifying a great diversity of archaea in extreme environments and in the oceans
·
Early
on prokaryotes diverged into two lineages, the domains Archaea and Bacteria.
·
A
comparison of the three domains—Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya—demonstrates
that Archaea have at least as much in common with eukaryotes as with bacteria.
·
The
archaea also have many unique characteristics.
·
Most
species of archaea have been sorted into the kingdom Euryarchaeota or the
kingdom Crenarchaeota.
·
However,
much of the research on archaea has focused not on phylogeny, but on their
ecology - their ability to live where no other life can.
·
Archaea
are extremophiles, “lovers” of
extreme environments.
·
Based
on environmental criteria, archaea can be classified into methanogens, extreme
halophiles, and extreme thermophilies.
·
Methanogens obtain energy by using CO2
to oxidize H2 replacing methane as a waste.
·
Methanogens
are among the strictest anaerobes.
·
They
live in swamps and marshes where other microbes have consumed all the oxygen.
·
Methanogens
are important decomposers in sewage treatment.
·
Other
methanogens live in the anaerobic guts of herbivorous animals, playing an
important role in their nutrition.
·
They
may contribute to the greenhouse effect, through the production of methane.
·
Extreme halophiles live in such saline places
as the Great Salt Lake and the Dead Sea.
·
Some
species merely tolerate elevated salinity; others require an extremely salty
environment to grow.
·
Colonies
of halophiles form a purple-red scum from bacteriorhodopsin,
a photosynthetic pigment very similar to the visual pigment in the human
retina.
·
Extreme thermophiles thrive in hot environments.
·
The
optimum temperatures for most thermophiles are 60oC-80oC.
·
Sulfolobus oxidizes sulfur in hot
sulfur springs in Yellowstone National Park.
·
Another
sulfur-metabolizing thermophile lives at 105oC water near deep-sea
hydrothermal vents.
·
If
the earliest prokaryotes evolved in extremely hot environments like deep-sea
vents, then it would be more accurate to consider most life as “cold-adapted”
rather than viewing thermophilic archaea as “extreme”.
·
Recently,
scientists have discovered an abundance of marine archaea among other life
forms in more moderate habitats.
·
All
the methanogens and halophiles fit into Euryarchaeota.
·
Most
thermophilic species belong to the Crenarchaeota.
·
Each
of these taxa also includes some of the newly discovered marine archaea.
3. Most
known prokarotes are bacteria
·
The
name bacteria was once synonymous
with “prokaryotes,” but it now applies to just one of the two distinct
prokaryotic domains.
·
However,
most known prokaryotes are bacteria.
·
Every
nutritional and metabolic mode is represented among the thousands of species of
bacteria.
· The major bacterial taxa are now accorded kingdom status by most prokaryotic systematists.
1. Prokaryotes are indispensable links in the recycling of chemical elements in ecosystems
·
Ongoing
life depends on the recycling of chemical elements between the biological and
chemical components of ecosystems.
·
If
it were not for decomposers,
especially prokaryotes, carbon, nitrogen, and other elements essential for life
would become locked in the organic molecules of corpses and waste products.
·
Prokaryotes
also mediate the return of elements from the nonliving components of the
environment to the pool of organic compounds.
·
Prokaryotes
have many unique metabolic capabilities.
·
They
are the only organisms able to metabolize inorganic molecules containing
elements such as iron, sulfur, nitrogen, and hydrogen.
·
Cyanobacteria
not only synthesize food and restore oxygen to the atmosphere, but they also
fix nitrogen.
·
This
stocks the soil and water with nitrogenous compounds that other organisms can
use to make proteins.
·
When
plants and animals die, other prokaryotes return the nitrogen to the
atmosphere.
2. Many
prokaryotes are symbiotic
·
Prokaryotes
often interact with other species of prokaryotes or eukaryotes with
complementary metabolisms.
·
Organisms
involved in an ecological relationship with direct contact (symbiosis) are known as symbionts.
·
If
one symbiont is larger than the other, it is also termed the host.
·
In
commensalism, one symbiont receives
benefits while the other is not harmed or helped by the relationship.
·
In
parasitism, one symbiont, the parasite, benefits at the expense of
the host.
·
In
mutualism, both symbionts benefit.
·
For
example, while the fish provides bioluminescent bacteria under its eye with
organic materials, the fish uses its living flashlight to lure prey and to
signal potential mates.
·
Prokaryotes
are involved in all three categories of symbiosis with eukaryotes.
·
Legumes
(peas, beans, alfalfa, and others) have lumps in their roots which are the
homes of mutualistic prokaryotes (Rhizobium)
that fix nitrogen that is used by the host.
·
The
plant provides sugars and other organic nutrients to the prokaryote.
·
Fermenting
bacteria in the human vagina produce acids that maintain a pH between 4.0 and
4.5, suppressing the growth of yeast and other potentially harmful
microorganisms.
·
Other
bacteria are pathogens.
3. Pathogenic prokaryotes cause many human diseases
·
Exposure
to pathogenic prokaryotes is a certainty.
·
Most
of the time our defenses check the growth of these pathogens.
·
Occasionally,
the parasite invades the host, resists internal defenses long enough to begin
growing, and then harms the host.
·
Pathogenic
prokaryotes cause about half of all human disease, including pneumonia caused
by Haemophilus influenzae bacteria.
·
Some
pathogens are opportunistic.
·
These
are normal residents of the host, but only cause illness when the host’s
defenses are weakened.
·
Louis
Pasteur, Joseph Lister, and other scientists began linking disease to
pathogenic microbes in the late 1800s.
·
Robert
Koch was the first to connect certain diseases to specific bacteria.
·
He
identified the bacteria responsible for anthrax and the bacteria that cause tuberculosis.
·
Koch’s
methods established four criteria, Koch’s
postulates, that still guide medical microbiology.
·
1)
The researcher must find the same pathogen in each diseased individual
investigated,
·
2)
Isolate the pathogen from the diseased subject and grow the microbe in pure
culture,
·
3)
Induce the disease in experimental animals by transferring the pathogen from
culture, and
·
4)
Isolate the same pathogen from experimental animals after the disease develops.
·
These
postulates work for most pathogens, but exceptions do occur.
·
Some
pathogens produce symptoms of disease by invading the tissues of the host.
·
The
actinomycete that causes tuberculosis is an example of this source of symptoms.
·
More
commonly, pathogens cause illness by producing poisons, called exotoxins and
endotoxins.
·
Exotoxins are proteins secreted by
prokaryotes.
·
Exotoxins
can produce disease symptoms even if the prokaryote is not present.
·
Clostridium botulinum, which grows anaerobically
in improperly canned foods, produces an exotoxin that causes botulism.
·
An
exotoxin produced by Vibrio cholerae
causes cholera, a serious disease characterized by severe diarrhea.
·
Even
strains of E. coli can be a source of
exotoxins, causing traveler’s diarrhea.
·
Endotoxins are components of the outer
membranes of some gram-negative bacteria.
·
The
endotoxin-producing bacteria in the genus Salmonella
are not normally present in healthy animals.
·
Salmonella typhi causes typhoid fever.
·
Other
Salmonella species, including some
that are common in poultry, cause food poisoning.
·
Since
the discovery that “germs” cause disease, improved sanitation and improved
treatments have reduced mortality and extended life expectancy in developed
countries.
·
More
than half of our antibiotics (such as streptomycin and tetracycline) come from
the soil bacteria Streptomyces.
·
The
decline (but not removal) of bacteria as threats to health may be due more to
public-health policies and education than to “wonder-drugs.”
·
For
example, Lyme disease, caused by a spirochete spread by ticks that live on
deer, field mice, and occasionally humans, can be cured if antibiotics are
administered within a month after exposure.
·
If
untreated, Lyme disease causes arthritis, heart disease, and nervous disorders.
·
The
best defense is avoiding tick bites and seeking treatment if bitten and a
characteristic rash develops.
·
Today,
the rapid evolution of antibiotic-resistant strains of pathogenic bacteria is a
serious health threat aggravated by imprudent and excessive antibiotic use.
·
Although
declared illegal by the United Nations, the selective culturing and stockpiling
of deadly bacterial disease agents for use as biological weapons remains a
threat to world peace.
4. Humans use prokaryotes in research and technology
·
Humans
have learned to exploit the diverse metabolic capabilities of prokaryotes for
scientific research and for practical purposes.
·
Much
of what we know about metabolism and molecular biology has been learned using
prokaryotes, especially E. coli, as
simple model systems.
·
Increasingly,
prokaryotes are used to solve environmental problems.
·
The
application of organisms to remove pollutants from air, water, and soil is bioremediation.
·
The
most familiar example is the use of prokaryote decomposers to treat human
sewage.
·
Anaerobic
bacteria decompose the organic matter into sludge (solid matter in sewage),
while aerobic microbes do the same to liquid wastes.
·
Soil
bacteria, called pseudomonads, have been developed to decompose petroleum
products at the site of oil spills or to decompose pesticides.
·
Humans
also use bacteria as metabolic “factories” for commercial products.
·
The
chemical industry produces acetone, butanol, and other products from bacteria.
·
The
pharmaceutical industry cultures bacteria to produce vitamins and antibiotics.
·
The
food industry uses bacteria to convert milk to yogurt and various kinds of
cheese.
· The development of DNA technology has allowed genetic engineers to modify prokaryotes to achieve specific research and commercial outcomes.