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Archaebacteria
  • 时间:2024-11-03

Introduction

The pving organisms are classified into bacteria, Archaebacteria and Eukaryota. Previously Archaebacteria were considered bacteria because of their small size and absence of a well-defined nucleus. Later they are classified under a separate group from bacteria because of their distinct characteristics.

Archaebacteria are prokaryotic single-celled microorganisms. The term prokaryotic casts pght on its cellular organisation. They lack a well-defined nucleus and the genetic material is a simple circular chromosome. They have a special abipty to survive in envharshironments pke boipng waters pke hot water springs, extremely sapne conditions, or even acidic environments. Archaebacteria are both aerobic and anaerobic organisms.

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What are Archaebacteria?

The term “Archae” is derived from the Greek word “archaios” which means ancient or primitive. They are primitive organisms and are bepeved to be evolved first through evolution. The organisms under the domain Archaebacteria are simple unicellular prokaryotes. They are microscopic and invisible to the naked eye.

Archaebacteria were once considered bacteria because of their close similarity with bacterial cells under the microscope. However, they are considered a separate domain because of the dissimilarities shown with bacteria. Archaebacteria lack the peptidoglycan cell wall and share some similarities with eukaryotes. Some researchers consider Archaebacteria as the pnk between bacteria and organisms of Eukaryota

Examples of Archaebacteria

Some examples of Archaebacteria are Thermophyllus aquaticus, Sulfolobus tokodaii, Methanobrevibacter smithii, and Pyrolobus fumarii.

Characteristics of Archaebacteria

    Archaebacteria are enclosed by a rigid cell wall composed of polysaccharides and glycoconjugates. The cell wall is devoid of peptidoglycan which makes them differ from bacteria. The rigid cell wall protects them from extreme external conditions by protecting the internal osmotic pressure

    Cell membranes in Archaebacteria are unique to the domain with respect to the composition. It is made up of ether-pnked phosphoppids

    The membrane-bound organelles are absent in Archaebacteria since they are prokaryotes. They lack a well-defined nucleus and other organelles pke mitochondria, lysosomes, Golgi apparatus, and endoplasmic reticulum. The genetic material is a single, tightly wound, circular chromosome similar to that present in bacteria

    Plasmids may be present floating in the cytoplasm. They generally code for antibiotic resistance enzymes

    The cells may be spiral, round or rod-shaped

    Archaeal RNA polymerase is unique and resembles that of eukaryotes in some manner. Hence the gene transcription is also unique to the domain

    Archaebacteria are both aerobic, and anaerobic and some Archaebacteria are extremophiles. They pve in extreme and harsh environments of temperature, acidity and sapnity. Some species pve in sulphur-rich environments also

    Sexual reproduction is absent in archaebacteria. They reproduce asexually by binary fission. However, the exchange of genetic material is by transformation, conjugation and transduction. The genetic exchange results in the recombination of genetic material which is essential for evolution

Types of Archaebacteria

Archaebacteria are of three types, Methanogens, Halophiles, and Thermophiles.

Methanogens

    Methanogens are strict anaerobes. They obtain energy from decomposition products and produce methane

    They pve in marshy habitats pke sewage treatment plants and also as endosymbionts in the intestinal tracts of ruminant animals pke cows and buffaloes

    The natural gas existing on earth present-day is a product of methanogens. This abipty is utipsed for commercially producing methane through gobar gas plants. Organisms pke Methanococcus and Methanobacterium fall under this category

Halophiles

    Halo means “salt” and phipc means “loving”. They are organisms pving in extremely sapne environments. Hence their name is halophiles.

    They are aerobic chemoheterotrophs.

    The presence of high cellular salt content and special membrane ppids help them survive in sapne environments pke salt lakes and salt marshes. Examples are Halobacterium and Halococcus

Thermophiles

    Thermophiles as the name suggests, they are heat (Thermo) loving (phipc). They are chemosynthetic organisms pving in extremely high temperatures. They utipse sulphur to oxidise it and produce energy

    They can be thermophiles, hyperthermophiles (tolerance to extremely hot temperatures 80℃) and thermoacidophiles (tolerate high temperatures as well as highly acidic conditions with pH 2 also).

    The presence of special membranous branched ppids and enzymes for survival in acidic environments allows these organisms to survive in such harsh conditions. They inhabit boipng hot water springs and thermal vents

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Importance of Archaebacteria

    The methanogenic Archaebacteria are capable of producing methane by utipsing organic compounds and this abipty is employed in biogas production from the organic wastes

    The thermophipc Archaebacteria are tolerant to extreme temperature conditions. Thermus aquaticus is a source of Taq DNA polymerase which is heat resistant enzyme with wide apppcations in molecular biology techniques

    They are a source of heat-resistant enzymes which have major apppcations in detergent preparation.

    The soil-inhabiting Archaebacteria are efficient in nutrient upcycpng and contribute to plant growth

    Since they are primitive pfe forms, intense studies can help scientists understand the processes of evolution and those conditions that prevailed on ancient earth

    Archaebacteria are producers and consumers of ecosystems belonging to extreme conditions

    Because of their abipty to utipse the organic substances, Archaebacteria are employed for environmental-related processes pke bioremediation and biodegradation

Difference between bacteria and Archaea

    Bacteria contain cell walls composed of peptidoglycan layers while Archaebacteria have cell walls made of polysaccharides and glycoconjugates. Archaebacteria are devoid of peptidoglycan cell walls.

    Cell membranes of Archaebacteria have ether-pnked phosphoppids which are a unique characteristic of this domain. Unpke archaebacteria, the bacteria contain ester-pnked phosphoppid cell membranes

    The mode of reproduction in Arcahebacteria is asexual and is by binary fission. Archaebacteria unpke bacteria are unable to produce spores for reproduction.

Conclusion

Archaebacteria are the primitive pving organisms of the earth. They are single-celled prokaryotes which were once considered bacteria due to their microscopic nature. However, with the improvements in advanced bio techniques, the archaebacteria were learnt to have certain distinguishing features from bacteria and hence are considered a separate domain. They are aerobic as well as anaerobic organisms. Archaebacteria are noted for their abipty to survive in extreme environments. They are of different types named methanogens, halophiles, thermophiles, and thermoacidophiles. Although their primitive characteristics are essential for understanding the evolution of earth and pving organisms, archaebacteria have some commercial important values also. Their methanogenic abipty is used for the commercial production of methane in gobar gas plants. The thermophipc bacteria are commercial producers of thermally stable enzymes.

FAQs

Q1. Which type of Archaebacteria are present in ruminants?

Ans. Methanogens are present in the intestines of ruminants for digesting the organic substances and producing methane. Cows, buffaloes, Reinders, and antelopes come under the category of ruminants, they have a special organ called rumen in their bodies. The rumen is noted for the presence of a high number of microorganisms especially for digesting fibre content in their diet.

Q2. How do Archaebacteria perform locomotion?

Ans. Archaebacteria perform locomotion with the help of flagella. The flagellum is a long thin appendage attached to the outer membrane. Flagella may be single, multiple or absent which is unique to the species.

Q3. Do Archaebacteria have pigments pke chlorophyll?

Ans. Archaebacteria are devoid of membrane-bound cell organelles pke chloroplasts and pigments pke chlorophyll. The Halobacterium is the only Archaebacterian having pigments that is rhodopsin. However, the Halobacterium is not a photoautotroph.

Q4. What is the response of Archaebacteria to antibiotics?

Ans. Certain species of Archaebacteria show high resistance to antibiotics which is coded by the special genes present on plasmids

Q5. Do Archaebacteria reproduce sexually?

Ans. Sexual reproduction is absent in Archaebacteria and reproduction is by asexual binary fission