BACTERIA
Bacteria: The Deinococci and
Nonproteobacteria Gram-Negatives
Chapter Overview
This chapter is devoted to nine of the more interesting and
important eubacterial groups from volumes 1 and 5 of the 2nd edition of
Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. Though the organization and
perspective of the 2nd edition is used, the description of each group in the
current edition is summarized. Where appropriate the distinguishing
characteristics, morphology, reproduction, physiology, metabolism, and ecology
of each group is included. The taxonomy of each major group is summarized and
representative species are mengetahuied.
Chapter Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1.
discuss the deeply
branching bacterial phyla Aquificae and Thermotogae
2.
discuss the deinococci,
focusing on their extraordinary resistance to desiccation and radiation
3.
compare and
contrast the phyla of photosynthetic bacteria
4.
discuss the unique
structural features of Planctomycetes
5.
discuss the unique
life style of the Chlamydiae
6.
discuss the unique
structural features and motility of the Spirochaetes
7.
discuss the
important metabolic and ecological characteristics of the Bacteroidetes
8.
discuss gliding
motility
These are the most important concepts you are learning in this chapter:
- The first edition of
Bergey’s Manual takes a largely phenetic approach to classification and
relates bacteria based on their overall similarity. The second edition
will classify bacteria according to phylogenetic relationships with
emphasis on 16S rRNA sequence comparisons.
- Some eubacterial
groups, such as those represented by the hyperthermophiles Aquifex and
Thermotoga, are deeply branching and very old; other bacterial taxa have
arisen more recently.
- Because of its
emphasis on phylogenetic relationships, the second edition of Bergey’s
Manual has substantially rearranged bacterial groups and taxonomic
categories. For example, the second edition places the gram-positive
deinococci in volume 1, which otherwise contains gram-negative bacteria.
Bacteria such as the rickettsias and chlamydiae are separated into
different sections despite their similar life-styles. The thermotogas and
many other completely new groups have been added.
- Although most of the
photosynthetic bacteria are located in volume 1 of the second edition, the
purple bacteria have been moved to the proteobacteria in volume 2. The
cyanobacteria are separated from other photosynthetic bacteria because
they resemble eucaryotic phototrophs in having photosystem II and carrying
out oxygenic photosynthesis. Their rRNA sequences also indicate that they
are different from other photosynthetic bacteria.
- Bacteria such as the
chlamydiae that are obligately intracellular parasites have relinquished
some of their metabolic independence through loss of metabolic pathways.
They use their host’s energy supply and/or cell constituents.
- Gliding motility is
widely distributed among bacteria and is very useful to organisms that
digest insoluble nutrients or move over the surfaces of moist, solid
substrata.
Study Outline
1)
Aquificae
and Thermotogae
a)
Aquificae-thought
to represent the deepest (oldest) branch of bacteria; two of its best studies
genera are Aquifex and Hydrogenobacter
i)
Hyperthermophilic
ii)
Chemolithoautotrophic-generate
energy by oxidizing electron donors such as hydrogen, thiosulfate, and sulfur
with oxygen as the electron acceptor
b)
Thermotogae-second
deepest branch of the bacteria; best studies are members of the genus
Thermotoga
i)
Hyperthermophiles
with an optimum of 80°C and a maximum of 90°C
ii)
Gram-negative
rods with an outer sheath-like envelope (like a toga) that can balloon out from
the ends of the cell
iii)
Grow
in active geothermal areas (e.g., marine hydrothermal vents and terrestrial
solfataric springs)
iv)
Chemoheterotrophs
with a functional glycolytic pathway; can grow anaerobically on carbohydrates
and protein digests
2)
Deinococcus-Thermus
a)
Consists
of three genera; genus Deinococcus is the best studied
i)
Spherical
or rod-shaped; often associated in pairs or tetrads
ii)
Aerobic,
mesophilic, catalase positive, and usually able to produce acid from only a few
sugars
iii)
They
stain gram-positive but have a layered cell wall and an outer membrane like
gram-negative bacteria; have L-ornithine in their peptidoglycan and lack
teichoic acid
iv)
Have
a plasma membrane with large amounts of palmitoleic acid rather than
phosphatidylglycerol phospholipids
v)
Extraordinarily
resistant to desiccation and radiation
b)
Relatively
little is know about the biology of deinococci
i)
Can
be isolated from ground meat, feces, air, fresh water, and other sources but
their natural habitat is not known
ii)
Genome
consists of two circular chromosomes, a mega plasmid, and a small plasmid
iii)
Have
an unusual ability to repair chromosomal damage (even fragmentation) and this
probably accounts for their ability to resist desiccation and radiation;
genomic analysis show they have many DNA repair genes and many repeat sequences
3)
Photosynthetic
Bacteria
a)
Three
groups: purple bacteria, green bacteria, and cyanobacteria
i)
Cyanobacteria
carry out oxygenic photosynthesis, using water as an electron source for the
generation of NADH and NADPH
ii)
Green
and purple bacteria carry out anoxygenic photosynthesis, using reduced
molecules other than water, as an electron source for the generation of NADH
and NADPH
(1)
Purple
sulfur bacteria use reduced sulfur compounds as electron sources and accumulate
sulfur granules within their cells
(2)
Green
sulfur bacteria use reduced sulfur compounds as electron sources and deposit
sulfur granules outside their cells
(3)
Purple
nonsulfur bacteria use organics molecules as their electron sourcec
b)
Type
of photosynthetic pigments and oxygen relationships correlates with ecological
distribution
i)
Purple
and green bacteria are anaerobes and use bacteriochlorophyll pigments
(1)
Grow
better in deeper, anaerobic zones of aquatic habitats
(2)
Their
bacteriochlorophylls absorb shorter wavelengths of light, which penetrate to
these deeper zones
ii)
Cyanobacteria
have chlorophyll a, which absorbs longer wavelengths of light; these bacteria
are found primarily at the surface of bodies of water
c)
The
2nd edition of Bergey’s Manual divides the photosynthetic bacteria into six
groups:
i)
Phylum Chloroflexi-green nonsulfur
bacteria
ii) Phylum
Chlorobi-green sulfur bacteria
iii) Phylum
Cyanobacteria
iv) Phylum
Proteobacteria-Purple sulfur bacteria (gammaproteobacteria) and purple
nonsulfur bacteria (alphaproteobacteria and betaproteobacteria); these
organisms are covered in chapter 22
(1) Phylum
Chloroflexi-green nonsulfur bacteria
(a)
Genus
Chloroflexus-major representative of the photosynthetic green nonsulfur
bacteria
1.
Filamentous,
gliding bacteria
2.
Thermophilic,
often isolated from neutral to alkaline hot
springs where they grow in the form of orange-reddish
mats
3.
Ultrastructure
and photosynthetic pigments are like green bacteria, but their metabolism is
similar to that of the purple nonsulfur bacteria
4.
Can
carry out anoxygenic photosynthesis with organic compounds as carbon sources or
can grow aerobically as a chemoheterotroph
(b)
Genus
Herpetosiphon-represents nonphotosynthetic members of phylum Chloroflexi;
contains gliding, rod-shaped filamentous bacteria; aerobic chemoorganotrophs
with respiratory metabolism; isolated from fresh water and soil
(2) Chlorobia-green
sulfur bacteria
(i)
Obligately
anaerobic photolithoautotrophs that use hydrogen sulfide, elemental sulfur and
hydrogen as electron sources; elemental sulfur produced by sulfide oxidation is
deposited outside the cell
(ii)
Photosynthetic
pigments are located in ellipsoidal vesicles called chlorosomes, which are
attached to the plasma membrane but not continuous with it; chlorosome membrane
is not a normal lipid bilayer; chlorosomes have accessory bacteriochlorophylls
but the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll is located in the plasma membrane
(iii)
Lack
flagella and are nonmotile; some species have gas vesicles to adjust their depth
in water for adequate light and hydrogen sulfide; species without gas vesicles
are found in sulfide-rich mud at the bottom of lakes and ponds.
(iv)
Morphologically
diverse (rods, cocci, or vibrios; grow singly, in chains, or in clusters);
grass green or chocolate-brown in color
(3) Phylum
Cyanobacteria
(a)
Largest
and most diverse group of photosynthetic bacteria (56 genera are described in
the 2nd edition of Bergey’s Manual)
(b)
Photosynthetic
system resembles that of eucaryotes, having chlorophyll a and photosystem II;
carry out oxygenic photosynthesis
(c)
Photosynthetic
pigments are in thylakoid membranes lined with particles called phycobilisomes
(contain phycobilin pigments), which transfer energy to photosystem II; some
species are red-brown and contain the pigment phycoerythrin
(d)
Fix
carbon dioxide by the Calvin cycle
(e)
Do
not have functional TCA cycle; pentose phosphate pathway plays a central role
in their metabolism
(f)
Although
they are oxygenic photolithoautotrophs, some can grow slowly in the dark as
chemoheterotrophs, and some species can carry out anoxygenic photosynthesis if
in an anaerobic environment
(g)
Vary
greatly in shape and appearance
(h)
May
be unicellular, exist as colonies of many shapes, or form filaments called
trichomes (rows of bacterial cells that are in close contact with one another
over a large area)
(i)
Have
typical procaryotic structures with a gram-negative cell wall
(j)
Often
use gas vesicles to move vertically in the water; many filamentous
cyanobacteria have a gliding motility; although cyanobacteria lack flagella,
some marine species are able to move by an unknown mechanism
(k)
Reproduce
by binary fission, budding, fragmentation, and multiple fission
(i)
Fragmentation
generates small motile filaments called hormogonia
(ii)
Some
species develop akinetes, which are thick-walled resting cells that are
resistant to desiccation; these often germinate to form new filaments
(l)
Many
filamentous cyanobacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen in special cells
(heterocysts), which protect the oxygen-sensitive nitrogenase; other cyanobacteria
that lack heterocysts can also fix nitrogen
(m)
Taxonomy
of cyanobacteria is unsettled; the 2nd edition of Bergey’s Manual divides them
into five subsections
(i)
The
prochlorophytes, which used to be categorized separately from other
cyanobacteria, are now dispersed into subsections I and III
(ii)
Prochlorophytes
differ from other cyanobacteria by having chlorophyll b as well as chlorophyll
a and by lacking phycobilisomes
(iii)
The
three recognized prochlorophyte genera are quite different from one another
(iv)
Prochloron-extracellular
symbiont on the surface or within the cloacal cavity of marine colonial ascidan
invertebrates
(v)
Prochlorothrix-free
living
(vi)
Prochlorococcus-has
a modified chlorophyll a and a-carotene rather than b-carotene
(vii)
The
five subsections differ markedly in terms of morphology and reproduction
1.
Subsection
I-unicellular rods or cocci; most are nonmotile; reproduce by binary fission or
budding
2.
Subsection
II-unicellular, though some may be held together in an aggregate by an outer
wall; reproduce by multiple fission to form baeocytes
3.
Subsections
III, IV, and V-filamentous cyanobacteria
(viii)Tolerant of environmental extremes;
thermophilic species can grow at temperatures up to 75°C
(ix)
Successful
at establishing symbiotic relationships (e.g., in lichens; symbionts with
protozoa, fungi and plants)
(4) Phylum
Planctomycetes
(a)
Contains
one class, one order, and four genera
(b)
Spherical
or oval, budding bacteria with distinctive crateriform structures (pits) in
their walls
(c)
In
two genera, Gemmata and Pirullela, the nuclear body is membrane bounded,
something that is not seen in other procaryotes
(d)
The
genus Planctomyces attaches to surfaces through a stalk and holdfast; other
genera lack stalks
(e)
Most
have life cycles in which sessile cells bud to produce motile swarmer cells
(5) Phylum
Chlamydiae
(a)
This
phylum has only 5 genera; Chlamydia is the most important and best-studied
genus
(i)
Nonmotile,
coccoid, gram-negative bacteria
(ii)
Reproduce
within cytoplasmic vesicles of host cells by a unique developmental cycle
involving elementary bodies (EBs) and reticulate bodies (RBs)
(iii)
Gram-negative-like
wall but lacks muramic acid and peptidoglycan; EBs use cross-linking of outer
membrane proteins, and possibly, periplasmic proteins to achieve osmotic
stability
(iv)
Obligately
intracellular parasites; found mostly in mammals and birds but have been
recently isolated from spiders, clams, and freshwater invertebrates
(v)
Have
one of the smallest procaryotic genomes
(b)
Chlamydial
reproduction
(i)
Begins
with attachment of an EB to host cell
(ii)
Host
cell phagocytizes the EB, but fusion of lysosome with the phagosome is
prevented by the EB
(iii)
EB
reorganizes itself into a reticulate body (RB), which is specialized for
reproduction
(iv)
RB
reproduces repeatedly, giving rise to many RBs, all within a vacuole
(v)
RBs
change back into EBs, and these are released when the host lyses
(c)
Chlamydial
metabolism
(i)
Usually
thought of as being completely dependent on host for ATP; however, recent
genomic analysis indicates that some genes for ATP synthesis are present in the
genome
(ii)
RBs
have a number of biosynthetic capabilities (e.g., DNA, RNA, glycogen, lipid,
protein, some amino acids and coenzymes)
(iii)
EBs
have very little metabolic activity; seem to be dormant forms concerned
exclusively with transmission and infection
(d)
Three
recognized human pathogens
(i)
C.
trachomatis-trachoma, nongonococcal urethritis, and other diseases in humans
and mice
(ii)
C.
psittaci-causes psittacosis in humans and infects many other mammals as well;
invades the respiratory and genital tracts, the placenta, developing fetuses,
the eye, and synovial fluid of the joints
(iii)
C.
pneumoniae-a causative agent of human pneumonia and possibly atherosclerosis
and heart disease
(6) Phylum
Spirochaetes
(a)
Gram-negative,
chemoheterotrophic, flexibly helical bacteria that exhibit a creeping (crawling)
motility due to a structure called an axial filament
(b)
The
axial filament (a complex of periplasmic flagella) lies in a flexible outer
sheath (outer membrane) outside the protoplasmic cylinder, which houses the
nucleoid and cytoplasm; function of the sheath is essential (spirochetes will
die if it is removed) but unknown
(c)
Flagellar
rotation is responsible for motility by an unknown mechanism, presumably by
rotating the outer sheath or flexing the cell for a crawling motion.
(d)
Can
be anaerobic, facultatively anaerobic, or aerobic and can use a diverse array
of organic molecules as carbon and energy sources
(e)
Ecologically
diverse
(i)
Spirochaeta-free-living
and often found in anaerobic, sulfide-rich aquatic environments
(ii)
Leptospira-aerobic
water and moist soils
(iii)
Many,
including Criptispira and Treponema form symbiotic associations with other
organisms
(iv)
Some
members of Treponema, Borrelia, and Leptospira cause disease (e.g., T. pallidum
is the causative agent of syphilis, and B. burgdorferi is the causative agent
of Lyme disease)
(7) Phylum
Bacteroidetes
(a)
Consists
of 50 genera divided into 3 classes (Bacteroides, Flavobacteria, and
Shpingobacteria)
(b)
Class
Bacteroides
(i)
Obligate
anaerobes, nonsporing, chemoheterotrophic, fermentative, rods
(ii)
Found
in oral cavity and intestinal tract of humans and other animals and the rumen
of ruminants where they often benefit the host by degrading cellulose, pectins,
and other complex carbohydrates, thereby providing extra nutrition for the host
(iii)
Some
species can be associated with disease
(c)
Class
Sphingobacteria
(i)
Often
have sphinolipids in their cell walls
(ii)
Contains
several genera including Flexibacter, Cytophaga and Sporocytophaga; differ in
morphology, life cycle and physiology
1.
Cytophaga-slender
rods with pointed ends
2.
Sporocytophaga-similar
to Cytophaga but form spherical resting cells called microcysts
3.
Flexibacter-form
long threads; unlike the other two genera, they are unable to degrade complex
carbohydrates
(iii)
Physiology
(as seen in the genera Cytophaga and Sporocytophaga)
1.
Aerobes
that actively degrade complex carbohydrates (e.g., cellulose, chitin, keratin)
2.
Play
a major role in the mineralization of organic matter and can damage exposed
wooden structures
3.
Contribute
significantly to wastewater treatment
(iv)
Most
cytophagas are free-living, but some pathogenic species are known (e.g., C.
columnaris causes disease in freshwater and marine fish)
(v)
Are
nonmotile when in suspension, but exhibit gliding motility when in contact with
a surface; leaves a slime trail;
(vi)
Gliding
motility has advantages
1.
Enables
them to find and digest insoluble material encountered as they move
2.
Allows
motility in drier habitats
3.
Enables
them to position themselves for optimal environmental conditions
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