Astrobiology. Charles S. Cockell
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Prokaryotes were discovered in the seventeenth century by Dutch fabric maker, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1632–1723). Van Leeuwenhoek was keen to improve the quality of the cloth that he was selling, which enticed him to develop small microscopes to observe the fibers in his fabrics (Figure 5.1). As he was an inquisitive man, he used his new devices to examine samples of pond water. What he found were tiny creatures, which at the time he called “animalcules,” or little animals.
Figure 5.1 Early microbiology. (a) Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, discoverer of microbes, and (b) one of his first microscopes. The microscope (about 10 cm long) is held up to the eye, and objects are observed through the tiny glass lens.
Source: Reproduced with permission of Jeroen Rouwkema.
The creatures he observed had different shapes and he published numerous papers through The Royal Society in which he described these organisms and their appearances. Remarkably, he managed, even with his primitive microscopes, to observe some of the major shapes (morphologies) of microorganisms, including coccoids (spheres), rods, spiral organisms, and microbes with a bent cell shape. He even observed bacterial movement or motility, which you can see in Figure 5.2.
Figure 5.2 Leeuwenhoek's diagrams in the 1670s showing the first drawing of prokaryotes and their diverse morphologies. In the part labeled “fig: B (C–D)” you can see a depiction of bacterial motility.
Leeuwenhoek even showed that he could kill bacteria. In a letter of 1684, he wrote: “I took a very little wine-Vinegar and mixt it with the water in which the scurf [tooth plaque he had scrapped from his teeth] was dissolved, whereupon the Animals dyed presently.”
For the moment, we leave historical accounts. However, I have no compunction here in recommending the now rather classic book The Microbe Hunters, written in 1926 by Paul de Kruif, an amusing and popular account of the early history of microbiology, which remains relevant today.
5.3 Shapes of Cells
Cells take on a diversity of morphologies (shapes) depending on the species, their local environment, and their function. Eukaryotic cells in multicellular organisms can vary from the rectangular cells of plants whose dimensions range from 10 to 100 μm to the long thin cells of neurons that transmit nerve impulses through organs such as your brain, which although thin (from about 4 to 100 μm in width) can be up to 1 m long.
The most consistent patterns of morphology are found in the prokaryotes. Prokaryotic cells fall into a number of major classes of shapes (Figure 5.3).
Figure 5.3 The wide variety of prokaryote shapes as seen under a microscope. (a) Staphylococcus (coccoid bacteria forming grape-like clusters). Here stained purple with the Gram stain. Scale bar: 10 μm.
Source: Reproduced with permission of Y. Tambe.
(b) Rod-shaped Escherichia coli. Scale bar: 5 μm.
Source: Reproduced with permission of Josef Reischig.
(c) Filamentous cyanobacteria from the Arctic. Scale bar: 10 μm. (d) Spiral-shaped spirochaete bacteria. Scale bar: 10 μm. (e) The square-shaped bacterium, Haloquadratum walsbyi, here shown stained and observed under fluorescence. Scale bar: 2 μm.
Many microbes have a coccoid (spherical) morphology and are referred to as coccus. An example is Staphylococcus (Figure 5.3a), which is responsible for some infections in humans. In some species, coccoids aggregate to form pairs (a diplococcus) or even collections of cells that look like bunches of grapes, such as observed in Staphylococcus. Many organisms are rod-shaped or bacilli, which are round-ended cylinders. An example of these organisms is bacteria in the genus Bacillus, or the gut bacterium Escherichia coli (Figure 5.3b). To complicate matters, there are even prokaryotes that are something of a mix between a coccus and a rod (coccobacillus) and can be considered as a slightly elongated coccus.
Microorganisms can be found that are filamentous, such as many cyanobacteria (Figure 5.3c), fungi, and some species of soil bacteria such as microorganisms in the phylum Actinobacteria. Filamentous organisms can have branched morphologies, most commonly observed in fungi and cyanobacteria. Yet other organisms have a spiral shape, such as Spirochaetes (Figure 5.3d), which are responsible for some diseases such as Lyme disease (Borrelia burgdorferi). There are organisms that are disc-shaped, star-shaped, and tapered.
Perhaps the most unusual shape is found in a member of the archaea, Haloquadratum, which adopts a square shape (Figure 5.3e). The organisms divide into sheets, looking somewhat like a sheet of postage stamps, achieving a layer of microbes up to 40 μm in length. The reason for this shape may be linked to its growth in briny pools and the resulting balance of osmotic stresses inside and outside the cells.
Some microorganisms can change their shape under stress. When exposed to nutrient stress or low temperatures, certain species become filamentous in growth. It is thought that the filamentous shape enhances the surface area for nutrient acquisition. Filamentous shapes may also improve attachment to surfaces and enhance the formation of layers of organisms or biofilms. It is clear that prokaryote shape is not just a serendipitous and ephemeral evolutionary feature, but that there is a whole diversity of environmental pressures that might influence microbial shapes, which are only just beginning to be understood.
5.4 The Structure of Cells
Despite the diversity of cell shapes and types, all cells have three basic components that are essential for an organism to function. These basic components might be considered to be universal. They are: (i) a membrane to hold the cell contents in, (ii) an information storage system to direct molecular synthesis and ultimately reproduction of the cell itself, and (iii) a system for gathering energy from the outside environment to drive chemical reactions, growth, reproduction, and so on. In this chapter, we look at the structure of cells, focusing on the membranes that enclose cells and the information storage system. The ability to gain energy from the external environment dramatically influences whether environments are habitable. There are a very wide diversity of ways to gather energy. For this reason, we spend the whole of the next chapter focusing on how life gets energy to maintain itself, grow, and reproduce.
5.5 The Structure of Cellular Membranes
To create a cell, we require some type of vessel in which to concentrate molecules.