Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
Protists WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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identify proteins that are unique to the infection. Some of
these could become targets for diagnosis, therapy, or for pre-
vention of the infection.
The study of proteins is difficult. The amount of protein
cannot be amplified as easily as can the amount of DNA, mak-
ing the detection of minute amounts of protein challenging.
The structure of proteins must be maintained, which can be
difficult. For example, enzymes, heat, light, or the energy of
mixing can break down some proteins.
With the advent of the so-called DNA chips, the expres-
sion of thousands of genes can be monitored simultaneously.
But DNA is static. It exists and is either expressed or not.
Moreover, the expression of a protein does not necessarily
mean that the protein is active. Also, proteins can be modified
after being produced. Proteins can adopt different shapes,
which can determine different functions and levels of activity
after they have been produced. These functions provide the
structural and operational framework for the life of the bac-
terium. Proteomics represents the next step after gene expres-
sion analysis
Proteomics utilizes various techniques to probe protein
expression and structure. The migration of proteins can
depend on their net charge and on the size of the protein mol-
ecule. When these migrations are in two dimensions, as in 2-
D polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, thousands of proteins
can be distinguished in a single experiment. A technique called
mass spectrometry analyzes a trait of proteins known as the
mass-to-charge ratio, which essentially enables the sequence
of amino acids comprising the protein to be determined.
Techniques exist that detect modifications after protein manu-
facture, such as the addition of phosphate groups. Analogous
to DNA chips, so-called protein microarrays have been devel-
oped. In these, a solid support holds various molecules (anti-
bodies and receptors, as two examples) that will specifically
bind protein. The binding pattern of proteins to the support can
help determine what proteins are being made and when they
are synthesized.
Proteomics typically operates in tandem with bioinfor-
matics, which is an integration of mathematical, statistical,
and computational methods to unravel biological data. The
vast amount of protein information emerging from a single
experiment would be impossible to analyze by manual com-
putation or analysis. Accordingly, comparison of the data with
other databases and the use of computer modeling programs,
such as those that calculate three-dimensional structures, are
invaluable in proteomics.
The knowledge of protein expression and structure, and
the potential changes in structure and function under different
conditions, could allow the tailoring of treatment strategies.
For example, in the lungs of those afflicted with cystic fibro-
sis, the bacterium Pseudomonas aeuruginosaforms adherent
populations on the surface of the lung tissue. These popula-
tions, which are enclosed in a glycocalyxthat the bacteri pro-
duce, are very resistant to treatments and directly and
indirectly damage the lung tissue to a lethal extent. Presently,
it is known that the bacteria change their genetic expression as
they become more firmly associated with the surface. Through
proteomics, more details of the proteins involved in the initial

approach to the surface and the subsequent, irreversible sur-
face adhesion could be revealed. Once the targets are known,
it is conceivable that they can be blocked. Thus, biofilms
would not form and the bacteria could be more expeditiously
eliminated from the lungs.

See alsoBiotechnology; Molecular biology and molecular
genetics

PProtistsROTISTS

The kingdom Protista is the most diverse of all the five
Eukaryotic kingdoms. There are more than 200,000 known
species of protists with many more yet to be discovered.
Protists can be found in countless colors, sizes, and shapes.
They inhabit just about any area where water is found some or
all of the time. They form the base of ecosystems by making
food, as is the case with photosynthetic protists, or by them-
selves being eaten by larger organisms. They range in size
from microscopic, unicellular organisms to huge seaweeds
that can grow up to 300 ft (100 m) long.
The German zoologist Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919) first
proposed the kingdom Protista in 1866. This early classifica-
tion included any microorganism that was not a plant or an
animal. Biologists did not readily accept this kingdom, and
even after the American botanist Herbert F. Copeland again
tried to establish its use 90 years later, there was not much sup-
port from the scientific community. Around 1960, R. Y.
Stanier and C. B. van Neil(1897–1985) proposed the division
of all organisms into two groups, the prokaryotes and the
eukaryotes. Eukaryotes are organisms that have membrane-
bound organelles in which metabolic processes take place,
while prokaryotes lack these structures. In 1969, Robert
Whittaker proposed the five-kingdom system of classification.
The kingdom Protista was one of the five proposed kingdoms.
At this time, only unicellular eukaryotic organisms were con-
sidered protists. Since then, the kingdom has expanded to
include multicellular organisms, although biologists still dis-
agree about what exactly makes an organism a protist.
Protists are difficult to characterize because of the great
diversity of the kingdom. These organisms vary in body form,
nutrition, and reproduction. They may be unicellular, colonial,
or multicellular. As eukaryotes, protists can have many differ-
ent organelles, including a nucleus, mitochondria, contractile
vacuoles, food vacuoles, eyespots, plastids, pellicles, and fla-
gella. The nuclei of protists contain chromosomes, with DNA
associated with proteins. Protists are also capable of sexual, as
well as asexual reproduction, meiosis, and mitosis. Protists can
be free-living, or they may live symbiotically with another
organism. This symbiosis can be mutualistic, where both part-
ners benefit, or it can be parasitic, where the protist uses its host
as a source of food or shelter while providing no advantage to
the other organism. Many protists are economically important
and beneficial to mankind, while others cause fatal diseases.
Protists make up the majority of the planktonin aquatic sys-
tems, where they serve as the base of the food chain. Many pro-
tists are motile, using structures such as cilia, flagella, or

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