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Microbial Diversity Scott Clingenpeel

Microbial Diversity

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Microbial Diversity. Scott Clingenpeel. Complete Genomes. 2671 Prokaryotic genomes in GenBank 114 Eukaryotic genomes 9 Plants 52 Animals. Do we really need more microbial genomes?. Microbial Diversity. Less than 0.1% of known microbes have been grown in the lab - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Microbial Diversity

Microbial Diversity

Scott Clingenpeel

Page 2: Microbial Diversity

Complete Genomes

• 2671 Prokaryotic genomes in GenBank

• 114 Eukaryotic genomes– 9 Plants– 52 Animals

Do we really need more microbial genomes?

Page 3: Microbial Diversity

Microbial Diversity• Less than 0.1% of known microbes have been

grown in the lab

• The uncultured microbes were completely unknown until the relatively recent development of DNA techniques

• The vast majority of microbes known today don’t have a formal species name

Page 4: Microbial Diversity

What is a Microbial Species?

Page 5: Microbial Diversity

Cell Morphology

Image from Wikimedia Commons

Page 6: Microbial Diversity

Cell Morphology

Images from Wikimedia CommonsEscherichia coliBacteroides fragilis

Clostridium sp.

Page 7: Microbial Diversity

Colony Morphology

Image from Wikimedia Commons

Page 8: Microbial Diversity

Colony Morphology

NOAA Office of Exploration & Research

Brian Traw, U. Pittsburgh

Wikimedia Commons

Page 9: Microbial Diversity

Biochemistry

Images from ASM MicrobeLibrary

Page 10: Microbial Diversity
Page 11: Microbial Diversity

DNA (Finally!)

• Need a gene present in all life• Need a gene that is the right size• Need a gene with slow and fast evolving parts

• The gene that was chosen as just right is the 16S/18S ribosomal RNA gene

• Arbitrary cutoff of 97% identity was decided to be the definition of a microbial species

Page 12: Microbial Diversity

TaxonomyGroup Humans DogsDomain Eukarya EukaryaKingdom Animalia AnimaliaPhylum Chordata ChordataClass Mammalia MammaliaOrder Primates CarnivoraFamily HominidaeCanidaeGenus Homo CanisSpecies sapiens lupus

Page 13: Microbial Diversity

Tree of Life

Bacteria Archaea Eukarya

Modified from: Madigan et al., Brock Biology of Microorganisms 12th ed.

Thaumarchaeota Nanoarchaeota

Korarchaeota

Crenarchaeota

Euryarchaeota

Page 14: Microbial Diversity

Extremes of Life

• Temperature range: -18°C – 121°C (0°F – 250°F)– Eukaryotes: 0°C – 60°C (32°F - 140°F)

• pH: 0 – 13

• Salinity: 5M NaCl = 10x sea water = 30% salt

• Radiation: 3000x the dose that kills humans

pH Scale

Page 15: Microbial Diversity

Microbial PhysiologiesOxygen + Food → Carbon Dioxide + Water

Molecules that can be used in place of Oxygen

NitrateNitrite

Nitric OxideNitrous Oxide

Sulfate (sulfuric acid)Carbon Dioxide

ChlorineIron

ManganeseSeleniumArsenic

Molecules that can be used as Food

Hydrogen gasHydrogen Sulfide

SulfurAmmonia

NitriteCarbon Monoxide

PhosphiteIron

Page 16: Microbial Diversity

Microbial Physiologies

• At least 10,000,000 organic molecules are made by living things

• These are grouped into ~100 classes of molecules

• Only about half of these have a known microbial pathway for making them or for breaking them down

Page 17: Microbial Diversity

• 80% of current genomes come from only three bacterial kingdoms

• ~30 bacterial kingdoms have no sequenced genomes

• The number of genes shared between two species in different kingdoms are <5%

• Only two genes are shared in all sequenced prokaryotic genomes

Do We Really Need More Microbial Genomes?