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00:01 Okay so here we're going to close the end of Chapter one with a

00:06 of topics um concluding what we started last at the end last time

00:12 ecology uh then about endo symbiosis and origins. So um so recall that

00:27 mentioned Winograd ski in the context of microbiology um samples from wetland environments that

00:37 discovered um these odd metabolic activities uh to this time really what was known

00:46 terms of nutritionally let's say among among is uh we called hypertrophic activity uh

00:55 of organic materials as the raw as energy and carbon source. Uh Just

01:01 we do as humans do and in process giving up C. 02 and

01:06 oxygen. So this was the metabolism was known biological metabolism. And so

01:12 he found these other unusual types uh which in experiments he saw that inorganic

01:20 like hydrogen ammonium uh were um when disappeared and converted into end products.

01:31 the thought was well what's doing Is this is this an actual biological

01:35 or visit a biotic process occurring in soil somehow. And he devised some

01:44 experiments to basically looking at soil that sterilized was non sterilized. The sterilization

01:50 course would kill any kind of living into the soil and then examine if

01:55 still had the capability of converting these materials. Uh And he discovered that

02:01 when the soil was not sterilized that occurred. So this was a clue

02:06 there was something biological that was carrying out and subsequently using what's called enrichment

02:13 Enrichment culture will talk about this In four. But enrichment culture you provide

02:19 to to um favor the growth of types over others. Okay. And

02:27 can do that by manipulating the the medium components in the in your culture

02:34 favor their growth. And in doing he is how this is how he

02:39 others discovered the with a trophic Uh He's he's completely inorganic materials source

02:46 sources. Things like um H. S. Um ammonium ion um even

03:01 and other sorts inorganic sources sources so inorganic materials being used as energy.

03:09 And so when we look at this in context with hetero tropes and autotrophs

03:15 recall that these are two most basic metabolisms. Right? So the designation

03:22 petro for autotrophs is relates to what the carbon source being used. Then

03:27 can further differentiate as we'll see as go through uh into chapter four on

03:33 and metabolism that you have to have designations photo and chemo so photo

03:40 chemo autotrophs, photo hetero tropes, hete trophies relate to than the energy

03:47 being used. Okay so um and uh this these these range of metabolisms

03:55 we see among micro so bacteria archaea can be little traffic using inorganic sources

04:05 can be uh Of course photo oughta your little troughs are basically chemo

04:10 They don't photosynthesize but they do um energy from the oxidation of inorganic materials

04:16 they fix the 02 to get their . Uh and so as we go

04:21 into metabolism uh we'll see that there this very diverse metabolic types and of

04:28 it's this metabolic diversity that allows for chemical cycling geochemical cycling by bacteria by

04:37 of of the essential form elements needed all life like nitrogen sulfur phosphorus

04:45 These are all of course critical elements make up basically. They're your your

04:51 take acids, lipids, carbohydrates, . Okay. And so organisms in

04:57 ecosystem each have specific requirements for the of these molecules that they can

05:04 And so by having lots of variety metabolisms to generate these types is very

05:10 activity to have in these ecosystems to able to provide nutrients that that that

05:17 can use. And so we kind put this in the context of,

05:21 know, the ecosystem cycle we saw mentioned before. And so you have

05:26 course every system ecosystem the foundation that your producers be it plants and terrestrial

05:35 , allergy cyanobacteria in aquatic ecosystems, the foundation. They are the most

05:40 . They take light from the convert that to chemical energy. These

05:47 the autotrophs of course uh organic materials produce then are consumed by consumers.

05:53 tropes that then break these down. . And then of course consumers and

05:57 both will die. And that material be processed by decomposes broken down by

06:04 composers. And there again you're releasing know these materials that can be used

06:09 others. You're breaking these down to building blocks that can be utilized by

06:13 too produce their own materials. Okay of course microbes are going to be

06:19 at all levels. They're gonna be are gonna be head atrocious. And

06:23 course in the among the composers as . Okay um and so this is

06:30 to illustrate again the importance of of types of metabolisms um to provide different

06:38 of nitrogen. So the nitrogen triangle have bacterial types that will be able

06:44 take nitrogen from the atmosphere and bring into the environment. So we call

06:49 fixation reactions. Okay then this ammonium that are the product of the fixation

06:57 be used by nitro fire as we them. And that's actually your little

07:03 . This trophy is B. Okay right here. They can utilize these

07:09 materials like ammonia and convert to Others can convert nitrite tonight trade.

07:17 so um a process on all three fixation notification notification due to the activities

07:28 various bacterial species. And of course nitrogen essential nutrients um producers themselves although

07:36 can you know fix CO. Two converts sunlight into chemical energy. They

07:42 need to have these basic elements nitrogen to support their growth and and they

07:48 heavily on bacteria making up just nitrogen to do this. Okay. Um

07:55 course the bacterial types that can also an ecosystem of nitrogen uh the petrification

08:03 . But we'll talk more about the later in the semester. But just

08:08 point out that you know that that activity microbial activity is very important for

08:13 . Okay. And so we had question at the end in the last

08:17 and so it's kind of too to this. Uh we talked about these

08:24 previously. So uh the true statement of course is uh it's not a

08:33 a coax germ theory of disease that the infectious disease uh ecologically we are

08:40 producers. We are as humans are . Archaea, aren't you carry out

08:45 pro carry outs. Um Some infectious may be caused by more than one

08:51 pneumonia is an example of that because types, viruses, fungi and protozoa

08:58 can cause pneumonia but also a single in time can be responsible in some

09:04 for causing multiple diseases, streptococcus for . Uh streptococcus priorities can cause strep

09:12 . It can cause different types of infections including um uh what's called a

09:19 eating disease. Um can cause scarlet . So there are cases where a

09:25 passenger can also cause multiple diseases. with soap and sepsis falls into that

09:33 , vaccines work by stimulating your body produce antibodies not androgen, so none

09:39 these are actually true. Okay, gee is the correct answer here.

09:45 so micro endo symbiosis. So uh was aware of symbiotic relationships uh Endo

09:55 are uh just different in terms of fact that the host and um the

10:02 are very very intimately associated with each . So you're human microbiome, you

10:09 have, the symbiont is on on body in your body. Uh plant

10:18 in those symbiosis. These are just talked about the nitrogen cycle and nitrogen

10:25 . The most common form of nitrogen occurs between bacteria that have these interactions

10:34 specific plants. It's a very specific um Their chemical attractants that bring each

10:40 of these together. And so it's very orchestrated process and specific process between

10:45 two your plants like peanut plants, plants, alfalfa, these are plants

10:53 have these relationships with bacteria and are to fix nitrogen. So the plants

10:58 have their own nitrogen acquisition system. you will uh in and having these

11:04 with bacteria, ruminants like cattle and and goats and the like uh they

11:11 these complex digestive compartments containing different types bacteria that are responsible for basically converting

11:20 grass and rain that they the animals into usable. A similar herbal nutrients

11:29 the cattle can then or whatever the is can then assimilate and grow

11:34 Okay um and so in the end symbiosis vein, this is where the

11:44 of how it's evolved uh through endo symbiosis with a with a bacterial type

11:55 capable of inspiring or photo synthesizing but giving rise to the different eukaryotic cell

12:06 . So uh this theory proposes that would've been a pre eukaryotic cell that

12:15 have engulfed let's say a bacterial type inspires um and thereby becoming the forerunner

12:24 the mitochondria. Okay. And so of course the mitochondria is you know

12:31 the powerhouses in the eukaryotic cell. enables it to break down or getting

12:38 to get energy um produce a P. S. Uh So a

12:44 then with these these mitochondria were given to the animal life of the animal

12:51 and the fungi kingdoms. Uh subsequently that same cell then engulfing a santa

13:01 type which is a photosynthetic bacterium would been a forerunner for the chloroplast.

13:08 giving rise down of course to plant . Okay and so again all these

13:14 to indo symbiosis with a specific bacterial type. Okay. Um man there's

13:22 strong evidence for this. So if look here at the the evidence that

13:29 each of these organelles the chloroplast and mitochondria do contain D. N.

13:34 . Um And the that DNA does genes that code for some of the

13:41 of those processes in those organelles. for all the processes some are still

13:47 the larger chromosomes for that. But uh uh some of the genes in

13:53 D. N. A. Transcribed and translated within those organelles because

13:57 do contain ribosomes and T. RNA do produce the proteins needed for the

14:04 of for the synthesis or black calls cell respiration that occurs in mitochondria.

14:12 Further the the organelles can also of during the eukaryotic cell undergoes mitosis or

14:20 . Those organelles do duplicate themselves prior cell division. So um so all

14:26 this is evidence that that these at time or once cells independent of the

14:32 cell. Um and histology of the . N. A. In those

14:37 to bacteria is known. And there um our bacterial types that relate directly

14:44 the D. N. A. are in those organelles. So all

14:47 is very strong compelling evidence that this is likely how this happened eukaryotic cells

14:53 about um two billion years ago. and so this is just this is

15:00 something you need to memorize but I want to put it in here for

15:03 uh timeline of life. So you the origin of earth is quite long

15:10 over four billion years ago. Humans in in with respect to this are

15:16 of course a very tiny very tiny of this scale. We've been around

15:22 six million years. We involved from the most recent ancestor. But of

15:29 the point here is precarious have been the longest. Okay evolved first.

15:34 Then that group of cyanobacteria are photosynthetic that evolved later. But they're the

15:40 that put oxygen into earth atmosphere Then you can have the evolution of

15:46 oxygen using metabolism. Okay. Giving of course the eukaryotes, microbes and

15:53 multi stereotypes. So of course, to the the prior to the formation

16:02 oxygen. And of course it took time for the option to accumulate.

16:06 still talking about an anaerobic world. . For a long time. So

16:13 course from anaerobic means no oxygen. life evolving an anaerobic environment. An

16:20 that's quite quite hostile with. Um a volcanic activity and the like.

16:28 so the question is that what kind life would evolve? And so of

16:35 it was would have been precarious. is micro fossil evidence that shows of

16:40 secular life uh existing three plus three billion years ago. Um Also evidence

16:49 evidence in the form of hope, , annoyed or molecules analogous to cholesterol

16:55 in our membranes. And so bacteria these in their membranes and similar but

17:00 similar function. And so that too evidence. You can see uh micro

17:06 evidence and how those morphology is look similar to what you see in modern

17:11 types. Okay. Um and so terms of metabolism and uh how would

17:19 produced energy to survive. Uh Well would have been they would have had

17:24 rely on of course the the materials to them to grow on. So

17:30 this very hostile environment billions of years would have been of course um a

17:40 anaerobic environment. It would have had volcanic eruptions spewing forth things like hydrogen

17:46 . 02 ammonia iron. Um So kind of reduced compounds in the early

17:52 earth environment would be the substrates uh be used for energy. And of

17:59 there's presidents for this year's. We're of little trolls right with bacteria.

18:03 just talked about can use these inorganic . So um something that we'll talk

18:09 in the next unit of course is and how energy sources are used.

18:14 so recall, you know, the transport chain, right? You've gone

18:20 um a mitochondrial work and the process black causes and cell respiration. Several

18:26 electron transport chain to which um a a source molecule is oxidized to provide

18:34 defeated. Okay. And a terminal er that will receive those electrons and

18:41 reduced in the process. Right? these reduced compounds in this kind of

18:49 be the electron source. And so could use things an anaerobic environment that

18:55 have been occurring in early earth could things like nitrate. Um so

19:06 So the kind of molecules you you see in this early environment and this

19:11 be used to re spire with. remember that we use oxygen as our

19:17 sector. But those that are anaerobic use molecules other than oxygen. So

19:21 can be a completely anaerobic environment and an organic Energy sources. But of

19:29 you have to be fixing c. . 2. Okay. To provide

19:35 carbon. Always remember, life on planet is carbon based. So you

19:40 to have a source for that. this would have been C. 02

19:43 these kinds of chemo autotrophs. so you know, it's the kind

19:48 metabolism that you know if if there life on mars there's likely some kind

19:53 metabolism we'd be looking for and why we will be looking for precarious on

19:58 planet. Um So but you to historically there's there's duplications of early

20:05 environment have shown uh that biological compounds be produced. So things like you

20:13 , acids and nucleotides can be formed these in experiments involving these, duplicating

20:20 earth environments. So um so compelling . Um and of course having talked

20:28 spontaneous generation, we are talking here life coming forth from, you

20:33 the chemical constituents available at the And so instead of using the word

20:39 generation, scientists have coined the term oasis as a term to describe this

20:51 of these, a biological chemical chemicals together to to produce life. So

20:59 any case the origins of life obviously with the precarious and then evolved from

21:05 . So uh so then that closes chapter one and so at the beginning

21:10 of chapter three, chapter three of we're looking at pro cario so the

21:17 and function. So we're gonna focus the the inner workings of the pro

21:25 sell uh textbook kind of takes the of let's start with kind of what's

21:31 the outside then go inwards. And we really begin the journey here with

21:39 I refer to as a cell Right? So obviously a cell any

21:45 , we're gonna have a number of constituents, things like ribosomes, proteins

21:50 with D. N. A. or in the primaries. So these

21:54 certainly common uh constituents of many cells I want to focus first on the

22:00 . Okay so the envelope because bacteria archaea can vary with what's beyond the

22:10 membrane. We refer to it as envelope. Okay so there can be

22:15 different types of chemical structures that can a cell wall. There there may

22:18 additional membrane may be present. So just depends on the bacterial or keel

22:24 , what's there. So we refer that collectively as the cell envelope.

22:28 so again every cell has a boundary defines it as a cell. That's

22:35 we call the cytoplasmic membrane sometimes called plasma membrane but that's what defines a

22:41 . So what we're talking about is beyond that inner membrane if you will

22:47 that psychopathic membrane, that's what we the cell envelope. Um And so

22:53 you wanna be able to do, know, as you go to this

22:55 part which basically focuses on um the . So really the cell envelope structure

23:03 what's going on there. Okay. um so we'll go through cell membranes

23:09 in gradients uh the nature of the . So gram negative, gram

23:14 The variations of that. Not every all bacteria fall into either being gram

23:19 , gram positive. There are variations that. Okay. And then external

23:23 , capital slime layer and biofilm. . So uh so well the second

23:31 of this uh video lecture will start this question here which is procure itself

23:38 which is false. Okay, so end it here and then the next

23:45 electoral pickup at this point. Thank

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