BACTERIA

[pl. of bacterium], microscopic unicellular prokaryotic organisms characterized by the lack of a membrane-bound nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Once considered a part of the plant kingdom, bacteria were eventually placed in a separate kingdom, Monera. Bacteria fall into one of two groups, Archaebacteria (ancient forms thought to have evolved separately from other bacteria) and Eubacteria. A recently proposed system classifies the Archaebacteria, or archaea, and the Eubacteria as major groupings (sometimes called domains) above the kingdom level.

Bacteria were the only form of life on earth for 2 billion years. They were first observed by Antony van Leeuwenhoek in the 17th cent.; bacteriology as an applied science began to develop in the late 19th cent. as a result of research in medicine and in fermentation processes, especially by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch.

Bacteria are remarkably adaptable to diverse environmental conditions: they are found in the bodies of all living organisms and on all parts of the earth—in land terrains and ocean depths, in arctic ice and glaciers, in hot springs, and even in the stratosphere. Our understanding of bacteria and their metabolic processes has been expanded by the discovery of species that can live only deep below the earth's surface and by species that thrive without sunlight in the high temperature and pressure near hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor. There are more bacteria, as separate individuals, than any other type of organism; there can be as many as 2.5 billion bacteria in one gram of fertile soil.

Characteristics

Bacteria are grouped in a number of different ways. Most bacteria are of one of three typical shapes—rod-shaped (bacillus), round (coccus, e.g., streptococcus), and spiral (spirillum). An additional group, vibrios, appear as incomplete spirals. The cytoplasm and plasma membrane of most bacterial cells are surrounded by a cell wall; further classification of bacteria is based on cell wall characteristics (see Gram's stain). They can also be characterized by their patterns of growth, such as the chains formed by streptococci. Many bacteria, chiefly the bacillus and spirillum forms, are motile, swimming about by whiplike movements of flagella; other bacteria have rigid rodlike protuberances called pili that serve as tethers.

Some bacteria (those known as aerobic forms) can function metabolically only in the presence of free or atmospheric oxygen; others (anaerobic bacteria) cannot grow in the presence of free oxygen but obtain oxygen from compounds. Facultative anaerobes can grow with or without free oxygen; obligate anaerobes are poisoned by oxygen.

Reproduction

In bacteria the genetic material is organized in a continuous strand of DNA. This circle of DNA is localized in an area called the nucleoid, but there is no membrane surrounding a defined nucleus as there is in the eukaryotic cells of protists, fungi, plants, and animals (see eukaryote). In addition to the nucleoid, the bacterial cell may include one or more plasmids, separate circular strands of DNA that can replicate independently, and that are not responsible for the reproduction of the organism. Drug resistance is often conveyed via plasmid genes.

Reproduction is chiefly by binary fission, cell division yielding identical daughter cells. Some bacteria reproduce by budding or fragmentation. Despite the fact that these processes should produce identical generations, the rapid rate of mutation possible in bacteria makes them very adaptable. Some bacteria are capable of specialized types of genetic recombination, which involves the transfer of nucleic acid by individual contact (conjugation), by exposure to nucleic acid remnants of dead bacteria (transformation), by exchange of plasmid genes, or by a viral agent, the bacteriophage (transduction). Under unfavorable conditions some bacteria form highly resistant spores with thickened coverings, within which the living material remains dormant in altered form until conditions improve. Others, such as the radioactivity-resistant Deinococcus radiodurans, can withstand serious damage by repairing their own DNA.

Nutrition

Most bacteria are heterotrophic, living off other organisms. Most of these are saprobes, bacteria that live off dead organic matter. The bacteria that cause disease are heterotrophic parasites. There are also many non-disease-causing bacterial parasites, many of which are helpful to their hosts. These include the "normal flora" of the human body.

Autotrophic bacteria manufacture their own food by the processes of photosynthesis and chemosynthesis (see autotroph). The photosynthetic bacteria include the green and purple bacteria and the cyanobacteria. Many of the thermophilic archaebacteria are chemosynthetic autotrophs.

Beneficial Bacteria

Harmless and beneficial bacteria far outnumber harmful varieties. Because they are capable of producing so many enzymes necessary for the building up and breaking down of organic compounds, bacteria are employed extensively by humans—for soil enrichment with leguminous crops (see nitrogen cycle), for preservation by pickling, for fermentation (as in the manufacture of alcoholic beverages, vinegar, and certain cheeses), for decomposition of organic wastes (in septic tanks, in some sewage disposal plants, and in agriculture for soil enrichment) and toxic wastes, and for curing tobacco, retting flax, and many other specialized processes. Bacteria frequently make good objects for genetic study: large populations grown in a short period of time facilitate detection of mutations, or rare variations.

Pathogenic Bacteria

Bacterial parasites that cause disease are called pathogens. Among bacterial plant diseases are leaf spot, fire blight, and wilts; animal diseases caused by bacteria include tuberculosis, cholera, syphilis, typhoid fever, and tetanus. Some bacteria attack the tissues directly; others produce poisonous substances called toxins. Natural defense against harmful bacteria is provided by antibodies (see immunity). Certain bacterial diseases, e.g., tetanus, can be prevented by injection of antitoxin or of serum containing antibodies against specific bacterial antigens; immunity to some can be induced by vaccination; and certain specific bacterial parasites are killed by antibiotics.

New strains of more virulent bacterial pathogens, many of them resistant to antibiotics, have emerged in recent years. Many believe this to be due to the overuse of antibiotics, both in prescriptions for minor, self-limiting ailments and as growth enhancers in livestock; such overuse increases the likelihood of bacterial mutations. For example, a variant of the normally harmless Escherichia coli has caused serious illness and death in victims of food poisoning. See also drug resistance.

Bibliography

See P. Singleton, Introduction to Bacteria (1992); W. Biddle, A Field Guide to Germs (1995).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Bacteria are helpful in the wider world as well...food chain, for one thing. There are bacteria that are essential in breaking down dead...Scientists have recently discovered that bacteria play a role in species differentiation...
...there are no descriptions of protozoa or bacteria in any of these publications -- so far...Hooke discovered the Protozoa or the Bacteria: but a half-hearted claim has recently...caught a glimpse of infusoria and possibly bacteria, for he assures us that all decomposing...
...organisms of decay. These autotrophic bacteria are very probably also of great importance...The latter, the red and green sulphur bacteria, possess pigments which, like chlorophyll...into organic matter. The chemosynthetic bacteria are extensively discussed by Waksman...
...atom. Microzymas are constantly developing into bacteria. In fact, bacteria are an evolutionary form of microzymas--actually...organism dies. So-called virulent or pathogenic bacteria are generated by decaying matter, their function...
...once have been tree-hving bacteria! I orga n isms that became...arose and developed. 1 A bacterium of E. coli (circular cell...are viruses that infect only bacteria, some being specific to a...machinery, they commandeer the bacterium to ensure self replication...
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The Spread of Antibiotic-resistant Bacteria through Medical Tourism and Transmission...281 III. Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria...and Examples of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria...
...of Bacteria Most of the bacteria identified in this lab were Pseudomonads, bacteria common to many plants...plant diseases caused by bacteria or fungi (Table 3...color gram-negative bacterium lacking flagella was consistently...
Coliform Bacteria and Nitrate Contamination of Wells in...soil for a sufficient period of time, bacteria and viruses are likely to be removed...Iowa tested positive for total coliform bacteria, and nitrate contamination was more...
The Recovery of Bacteria from the Handpiece of a High School...These studies generally show that bacteria from a human subject who has used a...studies also find that the cultured bacteria were generally nonpathogenic and harmless...
...to the number of bacteria the given food type...sub r^. Each bacterium with a functional...food, while those bacteria that did not have...at which a given bacterium can divide r^sub...necessary for a bacterium to divide has a...genome length. Bacteria that posses only...
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...from one type of bacterium to another. Penicillin...example, kills bacteria by binding irreversibly...from one kind of bacterium to another, across...boundaries. Almost all bacteria carry plasmids...compete with soil bacteria. Most likely...evolved in a soil bacterium, and it and its...
...that specifically hijack bacteria cells. Like tiny syringes...modified genetic load into other bacteria. This way, bacteriophages...taking up DNA from one bacterium and dumping it into another. Bacteria also can make contact by...
...previously unknown bacterium that has turned...studies magnetotactic bacteria, so named because...that magnetotactic bacteria use to make greigite...as-yet unnamed bacterium. Simmons and her...the "barbell" bacterium because of its shape...magnetotactic bacteria will swim toward...
...insinuates itself into, a larger bacteria, it resists the host defenses...frequently identified form of the bacterium isolated from patients with...serogroups and subtypes of the bacterium are frequently isolated from...Health Risks and Legionella Bacteria Legionella is rather unusual...
...simplest and the most numerous. Bacteria were here 3.5 billion years...though there are 2.5 billion bacteria in one gram of soil, you may never see a single bacterium in your entire life. If you lined 10,000 bacteria up, side by side, they...
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...Bifidobacterium infantis These bacteria can withstand the acid...much of the probiotic bacteria swallowed. A drink needs...contain at least a billion bacteria to be effective. However...one of the recommended bacterium, there is little difference...
...your toilet bowl, spreading bacteria when you touch these surfaces...ideal breeding ground for bacteria. In these conditions one bacterium can multiply to more than...kitchens hold large numbers of bacteria includinge.coli and salmonella...
...resistance genes from one bacterium to another. When...kills the sensitive bacteria, but any resistant...rapidly because bacteria multiply quickly. Overnight, one bacterium can multiply to...The resistant bacteria then spread through...
With Bacteria, Theres Good News and Bad News. Byline...Oaks wanted to know: How many pieces of bacteria are on Earth? If you have a question...more information To learn more about bacteria, the Grayslake Public Library suggests...
...your toilet bowl, spreading bacteria when you touch these surfaces...ideal breeding ground for bacteria. In these conditions one bacterium can multiply to more than...kitchens hold large numbers of bacteria including E.coli and salmonella...
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BACTERIA pl. of bacterium, microscopic unicellular prokaryotic organisms...Once considered a part of the plant kingdom, bacteria were eventually placed in a separate kingdom, Monera . Bacteria fall into one of two groups, Archaebacteria...
NITRIFYING BACTERIA see nitrogen cycle . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
DENITRIFYING BACTERIA see nitrogen cycle . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
NITROGEN-FIXING BACTERIA see nitrogen cycle . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...e.g., infectious bacteria, would be harmless...destroyed staphylococcus bacteria in culture, and in...demonstrated that a soil bacterium was capable of decomposing...of the pneumococcus bacterium, without which the...toxic to a wide range of bacteria. Tyrothricin, a mixture...
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