April
12
Predatory Bacteria
Predatory Bacteria
- Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes
- Epibiotic Predators
- Attach to surface of prey and acquire nutrients form its cytoplasm/periplasm
- Alphaproteobacteria
- Cytoplasmic Predators
- Invade host cells and replicate in the cytoplasm
- Epsilopnproteobacteria
- Periplasmic Predators
- Invade and replicate within the periplasmic space of their prey cells
- Bdellovibrio
- Social Predators
- Use swarming behavior to find prey, which they lyse and feed upon
- Gammoproteobacteria and Deltaproteobacteria
Bdelllovibrio
- Small, highly mobile and curved bacteria
- After attachment to prey it penetrates the cell wall of prey and replicates in periplasmic space forming a spherical structure, bdelloplast
- Obligate anaerobe
- Obtains energy from oxidation of amino acids and acetate
- Assimilates nucleotides, fatty acids, peptides, and even some intact proteins directly form host without hydrolyzing first
- Deltaproteobacteria are widespread in aquatic habitats
Myxobacteria
- Most complex behavioral pattern
- Formation of fruiting bodies
- Vegetative cells
- Simple, nonflagellated, gram-negative rods that glide across surfaces and obtain their nutrients by using extracellular enzymes to lyse other bacteria and use the released nutrients
- Excretes slime, leaving trail
- Form swarm that exhibits self-organizing behavior
- Allows them to behave as a single coordinated entity in response to environmental cues
- Exhaustion
- Vegetative cells migrate toward each other
- Aggregation is mediated by chemotactic or quorum-sensing
- Myxospores
- Resistant to drying, UV radiation, heat(endospore more resistant)
- Fruiting bodies
- Masses of myxospores embedded in slime, or complex, consisting of stalk and heads
- Stalk composed of slime
- Majority of cells migrate to head where they undergo differentiation into myxospores