Acellular: viruses, viroids, prions
Cellular: bacteria, archaea, fungi, algae, protozoa
Cellular organisms contain the molecular machinery needed to replicate themselves.
Acellular agents must use another cell’s machinery to replicate.
Viroid: Small RNA that replicates; no protein coat
Virus: DNA or RNA inside a protein shell
Prion: Misfolded protein that causes other proteins to misfold
All are infectious but not cells.
All cells have:
DNA
Cytoplasm
Ribosomes
A membrane
They also perform metabolism, growth, and evolution.
Prokaryotes: No nucleus, no organelles, dna in nucleoid, ex. bac, archaea
Eukaryotes: nucleus, organelles, dna in nucleus, ex. fungi, protozoa, algae
Cocci (spheres)
Rods
Spirilla
Spirochetes
Filamentous
Stalked / budding
Unicellular: one cell does all life functions
Multicellular: cells depend on other cells
Life began when self-replicating RNA molecules were enclosed inside liposomes, forming the first primitive cells.
The Last Universal Common Ancestor — the first true cell from which all life evolved.
It was bacteria-like.
A common ancestor of archaea and eukaryotes that existed before they split.We know it existed because archaea and eukarya have very similar ribosomes, transcription, and metabolism.
Mitochondria and chloroplasts used to be free-living bacteria that were engulfed and became symbiotic inside eukaryotic cells.
Evidence:
They have their own DNA
They have bacterial-like ribosomes
They replicate independently
Many diseases are caused by specific microorganisms, not “bad air.”
Developed by Pasteur.
Spontaneous generation — life does not arise from non-living matter.
This led to pasteurization (heating to kill microbes).
They prove that a specific microbe causes a specific disease (causation, not correlation).
They fail when:
Organisms can’t be cultured (viruses)
Asymptomatic carriers exist
Immune status varies
Host specificity exists
They use DNA/RNA sequences to link microbes to disease:
Present when disease is present
Gone when disease resolves
Correlates with severity
DNA sequence of 16S ribosomal RNA because it is:
Stable
Inherited
Present in all cells
The root of the tree — the first ancestor from which all lineages diverged.
Cyanobacteria, because both are Gram-positive-related lineages, not proteobacteria.
Firmicutes--> Gram +, endospores(clostridia and bacilli)
Actinomycetota--> Gram +, decomposers (streptomycetes and mycobacteria)
Bacteroidetes --> Gram -, gut bacteria, major vertebrate colnizer, modulate host immjune responses (bacteroides)
Prteobacteria--> Gram -, many pathogens, very diverse (escherichia and yersinia)
Resolution is limited to 0.2 µm by wavelength of light.
Viruses (~0.1 µm) cannot be seen clearly.
Electron microscopes
(Shorter wavelength → higher resolution)
It shows cell wall structure:
Gram+ = thick peptidoglycan → purple
Gram– = thin wall → pink
Their thin cell walls let the crystal-violet-iodine complex leak out, unlike Gram-positive cells.
Allows viewing living cells, showing internal structures and motility.
Molecules that emit light after absorbing energy, such as DNA stained with DAPI.
A laser focuses on one plane at a time, producing sharper 3D images.
Electrons can’t penetrate thick samples, so thin sections are required to see inside cells.
Endosymbiotic theory — mitochondria and chloroplasts were once free-living bacteria that were engulfed and became symbionts.
Small spherical lipid vesicles that likely enclosed RNA and were precursors to the first cells.
An organelle in eukaryotes that modifies, sorts, and packages proteins after translation (not found in prokaryotes).
A small circular RNA that is infectious and has no protein coat.
An organism without a membrane-bound nucleus (Bacteria + Archaea).
Single-celled organisms that look like bacteria but are genetically closer to eukaryotes.
Fungi
Free-living or parasitic eukaryotic microbes that feed on organic matter.
Bacillus (rod-shaped)
Metabolism that builds large molecules from small ones (e.g., making proteins).
A structure made of protein + rRNA that performs protein synthesis.
A spherical bacterial cell shape.
Gene transfer between organisms, not parent → offspring (e.g., plasmids).
The region of a prokaryotic cell that contains the chromosome.
Change in heritable traits of populations across generations.
A spiral-shaped bacterium. A thin cell wall extension that helps bacteria attach to surfaces.
Catalytic RNA — RNA that acts like an enzyme.
yeasts and molds and mushrooms, incredibly diverse
photosynthetic aquatic organisms
free living or parasitic eukaryotic microorganisms that feed on organic matter
similar in size and shape to bacteria, transcription/translation/metabolism more like eukaryotes
the original prokaryote, most have peptidoglycan cell wall and nucleoid
there are examples of unicellularity and multicellularity in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. some species can even display both uni and multicellularity depending on nutrient availability
1. self replicating RNAs+ liposomes= prehistoric cells
2. these develop into DNA containing bacteria
3. Archeoeukarya arise
4. some develop endosymbitic relationship with mitochondria which leads to separation of archaea and eukarya
the flask that is gently tipped so the the microbe laden dust mixes with sterile liquid
1. the suspected pathogen must be present in all cases of the disease and absent from healthy animals
2. the suspected pathogen must be grown in pure culture
3. cells from a pure culture of the suspected pathogen must cause disease in a healthy animal
4. the suspected pathogen must be reisolated and shown to be the same as the original
Life, domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species
robert hooke
antoni van leeuwenhoek
ability to distinguish adjacent objects and distinct and separate
affected by the wavelength light. longer wavelength= lower resolution.
ability to see an object as distinct from its surroundings
brightfield
phase contrast
differential interference contrast
fluorescence/ confocal
scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy
1. can be hard to see
2. move in and out of fields of view with fluid dynamics
3. not a lot of useful information
1. heat fixed smear is penetrated with crystal violet for 1 min (turn cells purple)
2. iodine added for 1 min, causes crystal formation (still purple)~ need to be added for good amount of time
3. decolorize with alc for 20 sec, crystal solubilize and move out but in gram + thick peptidoglycan keeps them in. so only purple washes away in gram -. if left for too long, crystals can dissolve too much and get out of either.
4. safranin used as counterstain to dye everything, gram + still stays purple but gram - is now pink. if you leave for too long gram + can look pink
bright field: sample contrast comes from attenuation of light in the sample
phase contrast: sample contrast comes from the interference of different path lengths of light through the sample
certain molecules can absorb photons, this causes electrons to excite and move into higher energy state, when the electrons relax they emit a photon. this photon is called fluorescence
uses electrons instead of light
shorter wavelength than photons
larger than photons
shorter wavelength than photons --> higher resolution ( 1000x greater than light microscopes)
larger than photons--> cannot penetrate "larger" objects. proteins = good, cells= bad. to be able to see inside the cell you have to cut the cell.
cellular organisms contain the molcule machinery necessary for their own replication
the difference between archaea and eukarya
germ theory of disease
mold observed
bacteria observed
spontaneous generation disproved
growth of bac on solid media
koch postulates
community sampling of rRNA
first genome seq
kochs modified postulates
they demonstrated that particular microorganisms cause particular diseases
organisms like pseudomonas aeruginosa only cause disease in immunocompromised patients
fluorescent confocal microscope
scanning electron microscope.
