Thursday, October 16, 2025

Archaea Bacteria

 The word Archaea is derived from the Greek word Archaios which means ancient.

The Archaeabacteria, are quite diverse, both in morphology and physiology. They may be spherical, rod-shaped, spiral, lobed, cuboidal, triangular, plate-shaped, irregularly shaped, or pleomorphic. Some are single cells, whereas others form filaments or aggregates. They range in diameter from 0.1 to over 15 µm, and some filaments can grow up to 200 µm in length. Multiplication may be by binary fission, budding, fragmentation, or other mechanisms.

The Archaea are diverse physiologically- can be aerobic, facultatively anaerobic, or strictly anaerobic. They include psychrophiles, mesophiles, and hyperthermophiles that can grow above 100°C. Nutritionally they may be chemolithoautotrophs to organotrophs.

Ecology

Archaea are found in areas with either very high or low temperatures or pH, concentrated salts, or completely anoxic. These are generally referred to as “extreme environments.”

Extreme and hypersaline are situations where humans could not survive. Most of the Earth (the oceans) is an “extreme environment” where it is very cold (about 4°C), dark, and under high pressure. Many Archaea are well adapted to these environments, where they can grow to high numbers. Archaea constitute at least 34% of the prokaryotic biomass in some Antarctic coastal waters. In some hypersaline environments, the brine is red with archaeal pigments. Some archaea are symbionts in the digestive tracts of animals. Archaeal gene sequences have been found in soil and temperate and tropical ocean surface waters.

Thus, the Archaea are highly diverse with respect to morphology, reproduction, physiology, and ecology. Although best known for their growth in anoxic, hypersaline, and high-temperature habitats they also inhabit marine arctic, temperate, and tropical waters. Their RNA, ribosomes, elongation factors, RNA polymerases, and other components distinguish Archaea from Bacteria and eukaryotes. Much of archaeal metabolism appears similar to that of other organisms, but the Archaea differ with respect to glucose catabolism, pathways for CO2 fixation, and the ability of some to synthesize methane.

Archaeal Cell Walls

The Archaeal cell wall, like the bacterial cell wall, is a semi-rigid structure which provide protection to the cell from the environment and from the internal cellular pressure. The cell walls of bacteria typically contain peptidoglycan, but it is absent in Archaea. 

The chemistry of Archaeal cell walls is different from that of Eubacteria. Archaea lack the muramic acid and D-amino acids that make up peptidoglycan. Thus they resist attack by lysozyme and β lactam antibiotics such as penicillin. 

Archaeal cell walls stain either Gram positive or Gram negative, depending on the thickness and mass of cell wall. 

Gram positive Archaea have a variety of complex polymers in their cell wall. Methanobacterium and some other methanogenic archaea have pseudomurein (a peptidoglycan-like polymer that is cross-linked with L-amino acids), N-acetyl talosaminuronic acid instead of N-acetyl muramic acid and β (1- 3) glycosidic bonds instead of β (1-4) glycosidic bonds. Methanosarcina and Halococcus lack pseudomurein and contain complex polysaccharides similar to the chondroitin sulfate of animal connective tissue. Other heteropolysaccharides are also found in Gram positive cellwalls. 

Gram negative Archaea have a layer of protein or glycoprotein (20-40 mm thick) outside their plasma membrane. Some methanogens (Methanolobus), Halobacterium, extreme thermophiles (Sulfolobus, Thermoproteus, Pyrodictium) have glycoproteins in their walls. Other methanogens (Methanococcus, Methanomicrobium, Methanogenium) and extreme thermophile Delsuphurococcus have protein walls.

Structure, function and chemical composition of archaeal cell membranes

One of the most distinctive archaeal features is their membrane lipids. 

Archaeal membrane lipids differ from those of other organisms in having glycerol connected to branched chain hydrocarbons by ether links. 

Bacterial and eukaryotic lipids have glycerol connected to fatty acids by ester bonds.


    Sometimes, two glycerol groups are linked to form long tetraethers. Usually, the diether hydrocarbon chains are 20 carbons in length, and the tetraether chains are 40 carbons. Cells adjust the  length of the tetraethers by forming pentacyclic rings
    Such pentacyclic rings are used by thermophilic archaea to help maintain the delicate balance of the membrane at high temperatures. Biphytanyl chains contain 1 to 4 cyclopentyl rings. 

        Phosphate, sulfur- and sugar-containing groups can be attached to the third carbons of the diethers and tetraethers, making them polar lipids -phospholipids, sulfolipids, and glycolipids.  These predominate in the membrane, making up 70 to 93% of the membrane lipids.  The remaining lipids (7-30%) are nonpolar and are usually derivatives of squalene.



Archaeal membranes may contain a mix of diethers, tetraethers and other lipids. These lipids are combined in different ways to yield membranes of various rigidity and thickness. A regular bilayer membrane is formed when C20 diethers are used. A much more rigid monolayer membrane is formed when the membrane is constructed of C40 tetraethers. 

The membranes of extreme thermophiles such as Thermoplasma and Sulfolobus contain  tetraether monolayers which provide stability. Archaea that live in moderately hot environments have a mixed membrane containing some regions with monolayers and some with bilayers.


Differences between Archaebacteria and Eubacteria


 Eu Bacteria and Archaea – The Major Differences  

 

ArchaeaBacteria

EuBacteria

 

-Ancient bacteria-

-True bacteria-

Complexity

Simple in their organization

Complex than archaebacteria

 

Habitat

Can sustain in extremely harsh environment such as oceans, hot springs, marshlands, hot springs and gut of animals

Found everywhere - soil, organic matter, earth’s crust, water, bodies of animals and plants, radioactive wastes, hot springs

Size

0.1-15 μm in diameter

 

0.5-5 μm in diameter

Shape

spheres, rods, plates, spiral, flat or square-shaped

cocci, bacilli, vibrio, rods, filaments or spiral in shape

Cell wall

Pseudopeptidoglycan

Lipopolysaccharide/ Peptidoglycan with muramic acid

Membrane lipids

Ether-linked, branched, aliphatic chains, containing D-glycerol phosphate

Ester-linked, straight chains of fatty acids, containing L-glycerol phosphates

RNA

Consists of single RNA

 

Three types of RNA

RNA polymerase

Complex subunit pattern

 

Simple subunit pattern

Introns

(a long stretch of noncoding DNA found between exons (or coding regions) in a gene)

Present in archaebacteria

 

Absent in eubacteria

Metabolism

Methanogenesisexhibit neither glycolysis nor Kreb’s cycle

Autotrophy, Aerobic and Anaerobic Respiration, Fermentation and Photosynthesis-exhibit both glycolysis and Kreb’s cycle

Reproduction and Growth

Asexual Reproduction, by fragmentation, budding and binary fission

Other than binary fission, budding and fragmentation, eubacteria can produce spores in order to remain dormant during unfavorable conditions

Types

 

Methanogens, halophiles and thermophiles

Gram positive and Gram negative

Examples

Halobacterium, Thermoproteus, Pyrobaculum, Thermoplasma and Ferroplasma

Mycobacteria, Bacillus, E. coli, Pseudomonas, Clostridium etc

 

Thus, in short, Archaebacteria are called ancient bacteria whereas the eubacteria are called true bacteria. Eubacteria are usually found in soil, water, living in and on of large organisms. Eubacteria are divided into two groups known as gram positive and gram negative bacteria. Archaebacteria are found in salt brines, ocean depths and hot springs.  Three types of archaebacteria are found: methanogens, halophiles and thermoacidophiles.

The Archaea (Archaebacteria)

  • Archaea are ancient bacteria - believed to have evolved just after the evolution of first life on earth.
  • Archaea are prokaryotic cells. The cell walls of Archaea contain no peptidoglycan, hence Archaea are not sensitive to some antibiotics that affect the Bacteria.
  • Archaea have membranes composed of branched hydrocarbon chains (many also containing rings within the hydrocarbon chains) attached to glycerol by ether linkages
  • The ether-containing linkages in the Archaea membranes is more stable than the ester-containing linkages in the Eubacteria  and are better able to withstand higher temperatures and stronger acid concentrations. 
  • Archaea often live in extreme environments and include methanogens, extreme halophiles, and hyperthermophiles.
  • Archaea contain rRNA that is unique to the Archaea, distinctly different from the rRNA of Bacteria and Eukarya.

  Archaea are found in Volcanic hot springsGrand Prismatic Spring of Yellowstone National Park

                            The very cold and ultra-salty Deep Lake in East Antarctica is home to haloarchaea.

Hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor, where the surrounding water can reach over 300° Celsius, are home  for some archaeal species.

The Bacteria (Eubacteria)

Bacteria (also known as eubacteria or "true bacteria") are prokaryotic cells that are common in human daily life. Eubacteria can be found almost everywhere and serve as antibiotic producers and food digesters, pathogens etc. 

Bacteria are prokaryotic cells. They have membranes composed of unbranched fatty acid chains attached to glycerol by ester linkages

The cell walls of Bacteria contain peptidoglycan. Bacteria are sensitive to  antibacterial antibiotics.

Bacteria contain rRNA that is unique.

Bacteria include mycoplasmas, cyanobacteria, Gram-positive bacteria, and Gram-negative bacteria.


Interesting Read

https://www.ck12.org/c/biology/archaea/lesson/Introduction-to-Archaea-Advanced-BIO-ADV/

https://www.science.org.au/curious/earth-environment/what-are-archaea


Sunday, October 12, 2025

Anoxygenic vs. oxygenic photosynthesis with reference to photosynthesis in cyanobacteria, green bacteria and purple bacteria

 

Anoxygenic and oxygenic photosynthesis differ in their electron donors, byproducts, and bacteriochlorophyll pigments, with anoxygenic types like green sulfur bacteria (GSB) using electron donors like hydrogen sulfide to produce elemental sulfur instead of oxygen. Oxygenic photosynthesis, performed by cyanobacteria and plants, uses water as an electron donor and releases oxygen as a byproduct. 

The Light Reaction in Oxygenic Photosynthesis 

Phototrophic eucaryotes and the cyanobacteria carry out oxygenic photosynthesis, so named because oxygen is generated when light energy is converted to chemical energy. Central to this process, and to all other phototrophic processes, are light-absorbing pigments. In oxygenic phototrophs, the most important pigments are the chlorophylls.

 Several chlorophylls are found in eucaryotes, the two most important are chlorophyll a- absorption peak at 665 nm and chlorophyll b -absorption peak at 645 nm. Chlorophylls absorb primarily in the red and blue ranges and green light is transmitted. Consequently many oxygenic phototrophs are green in color.

 Other photosynthetic pigments also trap light energy. The most widespread of these are the carotenoids, usually yellowish in color. Carotene is present in cyanobacteria belonging to the genus Prochloron and most photosynthetic protists; fucoxanthin is found in protists such as diatoms and dinoflagellates. Red algae and cyanobacteria have photosynthetic pigments called phycobiliproteins-phycoerythrin is a red pigment and phycocyanin is blue (maximum absorption at 620 to 640 nm). 

Carotenoids and phycobiliproteins are often called accessory pigments because of their role in photosynthesis. Accessory pigments are important because they absorb light in the range not absorbed by chlorophylls (the blue-green through yellow range; about 470–630 nm). This light is very efficiently transferred to chlorophyll. In this way accessory pigments make photosynthesis more efficient over a broader range of wavelengths. In addition, this allows organisms to use light not used by other phototrophs in their habitat. For instance, the microbes below a canopy of plants can use light that passes through the canopy. Accessory pigments also protect microorganisms from intense sunlight, which could oxidize and damage the photosynthetic apparatus. 

Chlorophylls and accessory pigments are assembled in highly organized arrays called antennas, which creates a large surface area to trap as many photons as possible. An antenna has about 300 chlorophyll molecules. Light energy is captured in an antenna and transferred from chlorophyll to chlorophyll until it reaches a special reaction-center chlorophyll pair directly involved in photosynthetic electron transport.

 In oxygenic phototrophs, there are two kinds of antennas associated with two different photosystems. Photosystem I absorbs longer wavelength light (680 nm) and funnels the energy to a special chlorophyll a pair called P700. The term P700 signifies that this molecule most effectively absorbs light at a wavelength of 700 nm. Photosystem II traps light at shorter wavelengths (680 nm) and transfers its energy to the special chlorophyll pair P680.

 When the photosystem I antenna transfers light energy to the reaction-center P700 chlorophyll pair, P700 absorbs the energy and is excited; it donates its excited, high-energy electron to a specific acceptor, probably a special chlorophyll a molecule or an iron-sulfur protein. The electron is eventually transferred to ferredoxin and can then travel in either of two directions.

 In the cyclic pathway, the electron moves in a cyclic route through a series of electron carriers and back to the oxidized P700. The pathway is termed cyclic because the electron from P700 returns to P700 after traveling through the photosynthetic electron transport chain. PMF is formed during cyclic electron transport in the region of cytochrome b6 and used to synthesize ATP. This process is called cyclic photophosphorylation because electrons travel in a cyclic pathway and ATP is formed. Only photosystem I participates.

Cyclic photophosphorylation

 

Electrons also can travel in a noncyclic pathway involving both photosystems. P700 is excited and donates electrons to ferredoxin as before. In the noncyclic route, however, reduced ferredoxin reduces NADP_ to NADPH. Because the electrons contributed to NADP cannot be used to reduce oxidized P700, photosystem II participation is required. It donates electrons to oxidized P700 and generates ATP in the process. The photosystem II antenna absorbs light energy and excites P680, which then reduces pheophytin a. Pheophytin a is chlorophyll a in which two hydrogen atoms have replaced the central magnesium. Electrons subsequently travel to the plastoquinone pool and down the electron transport chain to P700. Although P700 has been reduced, P680 must also be reduced if it is to accept more light energy. Thus, H2O can be used to donate electrons to P680 resulting in the release of oxygen. ATP is synthesized by noncyclic photophosphorylation. One ATP and one NADPH are formed when two electrons travel through the noncyclic pathway.

 

 

In cyanobacteria, photosynthetic light reactions are located in thylakoid membranes within the cell.


The dark reactions require three ATPs and two NADPHs to reduce one CO2 and use it to synthesize carbohydrate (CH2O). 

CO2 + 3ATP + 2NADPH +2H+ H2O ⎯⎯→ (CH2O) + 3ADP + 3Pi +2NADP_ 

The noncyclic system generates one NADPH and one ATP per pair of electrons; therefore four electrons passing through the system will produce two NADPHs and two ATPs. A total of 8 quanta of light energy (4 quanta for each photosystem) is needed to propel the four electrons from water to NADP_. Cyclic photophosphorylation operates independently to generate the extra ATP. This requires absorption of another 2 to 4 quanta.

 

Thus, around 10 to 12 quanta of light energy are needed to reduce and incorporate one molecule of CO2 during photosynthesis.


The Light Reaction in Anoxygenic Photosynthesis

 Certain bacteria carry out a second type of photosynthesis called anoxygenic photosynthesis. This phototrophic process derives its name from the fact that water is not used as an electron source and therefore O2 is not produced. 

The process also differs in terms of the photosynthetic pigments used, the participation of just one photosystem, and the mechanisms used to generate reducing power. Three groups of bacteria carry out anoxygenic photosynthesis: phototrophic green bacteria, phototrophic purple bacteria, and heliobacteria. 

Sulfur bacteria use hydrogen sulfide which they oxidize to elemental sulfur, while non-sulfur bacteria can use a wider range of compounds, including some organic molecules (lactate, succinate etc)

 

 

Many differences found in anoxygenic phototrophs are due to their having a single photosystem. Because of this, they are restricted to cyclic electron flow and are unable to produce O2 from H2O. Indeed, almost all anoxygenic phototrophs are strict anaerobes.

 Anoxygenic phototrophs have photosynthetic pigments called bacteriochlorophylls. The absorption maxima of bacteriochlorophylls (Bchl) are at longer wavelengths than those of chlorophylls. Bacteriochlorophylls a and b have maxima in ether at 775 and 790 nm, respectively.

This shift of absorption maxima into the infrared region better adapts these bacteria to their ecological niches.

 

Purple bacteria

Purple bacteria has only one photosystem (similar to Photosystem II) with Pheophytin-Quinone/Type II Reaction Center.  Bacteriochlorophyll molecules absorb light energy, which is transferred to a reaction center called P870. This process takes place in anoxic (oxygen-free) conditions, which are common in aquatic environments where these bacteria are found.

 

When bacteriochlorophyll P870 is excited, it donates an electron to bacteriopheophytin. Electrons then flow to quinones (Pheophytin-Quinone/Type II Reaction Center) and through an electron transport chain back to P870.  PMF created is used to drive ATP synthesis.

Purple bacteria

Both green and purple bacteria lack two photosystems, but the purple bacteria have a photosynthetic apparatus similar to photosystem II, whereas the green sulfur bacteria have a system similar to photosystem I.

 

Green bacteria

Photosynthesis in green sulfur bacteria (GSB) is similar to purple bacteria. Green sulfur bacteria has Fe-S Reaction Center (Type I Reaction Center). Excitation causes an electron to pass through a quinone (MK, Menaquinone) to the cytochrome bc1 complex and back to P 840.  PMF created is used for ATP synthesis.

Green Bacteria


GSB possess specialized light-harvesting chlorosomes containing bacteriochlorophyll, which are efficient at absorbing light energy, even in low-light conditions. Chlorosomes consist of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) pigments, carotenoids, quinones, and proteins in a lipid-monolayer envelope. They efficiently capture light energy, even at very low light levels, and funnel it to the reaction center for photosynthesis.  They are essential for GSB to grow in extremely low-light environments, such as the deep parts of lakes and oceans. 




Anoxygenic phototrophs also require reducing power (NAD[P]H or reduced ferredoxin) for CO2 fixation and other biosynthetic processes.

They generate reducing power in at least three ways, depending on the bacterium. Some have hydrogenases that are used to produce NAD(P)H directly from the oxidation of hydrogen gas.

Others, such as the photosynthetic purple bacteria, must use reverse electron flow to generate NAD(P)H. In this mechanism, electrons are drawn off the photosynthetic electron transport chain and “pushed” to NAD(P)_ using PMF or the hydrolysis of ATP. Electrons from electron donors such as hydrogen sulfide, elemental sulfur, and organic compounds replace the electrons removed from the electron transport chain in this way.

Phototrophic green bacteria and heliobacteria also must draw off electrons from their electron transport chains. Because the reduction potential of the component of the chain where this occurs is more negative than NAD_ and oxidized ferredoxin, the electrons flow spontaneously to these electron acceptors. Thus, these bacteria exhibit a simple form of noncyclic photosynthetic electron flow.

 

 

Carbon fixation

The thylakoids of cyanobacteria use the energy of sunlight to drive photosynthesis, a process where the energy of light is used to synthesize organic compounds from carbon dioxide..

The dark reaction, or Calvin cycle, is the second stage of photosynthesis where carbon dioxide is fixed into organic compounds like glucose. This process is independent of direct light but requires the ATP and NADPH produced during the light-dependent reactions. Microorganisms use these to convert atmospheric CO2 into sugars for energy and growth with the involvement of the enzyme RuBisCO. Cyanobacteria have microcompartments known as carboxysomes, which store this CO2-fixing enzyme, RuBisCO.

In eukaryotes like algae, the dark reaction occurs in the stroma of the chloroplast. In prokaryotes like cyanobacteria, it happens in the cytoplasm. It is "light-independent" because it doesn't use light energy directly, but it relies on the products (ATP and NADPH) of the light-dependent reactions, meaning it can only happen when light is available for the first stage to occur. 

Calvin cycle is driven by a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. It ultimately produces glucose from carbon dioxide, with ADP and NADP+ being recycled back to the light reactions

 

In short,

Phototrophs use light to generate a proton motive force (PMF), which is then used to synthesize ATP by a process called photophosphorylation (photo phos). The process requires light-absorbing pigments. When the pigments are chlorophyll or bacteriochlorophyll, the absorption of light triggers electron flow through an electron transport chain, accompanied by the pumping of protons across a membrane.

 The electron flow can be either cyclic (dashed line) or noncyclic (solid line), depending on the organism and its needs. Many phototrophs are autotrophs and must use much of the ATP and reducing power they make to fix CO2. 

In oxygenic photosynthesis, eucaryotes and cyanobacteria trap light energy with chlorophyll and accessory pigments and move electrons through photosystems I and II to make ATP and NADPH (the light reactions). 

Cyclic photophosphorylation involves the activity of photosystem I alone and generates ATP only. In noncyclic photophosphorylation photosystems I and II operate together to move electrons from water to NADP+ producing ATP, NADPH, and O2

 Anoxygenic phototrophs differ from oxygenic phototrophs in possessing  bacteriochlorophyll and having only one photosystem. They use cyclic photophosphorylation to make ATP. They are anoxygenic because they do not use water as an electron donor for electron flow though the photosynthetic electron transport chain.


Purple sulfur bacteria contribute to nutrient cycling and play a significant role in primary production. These organisms contribute to the carbon cycle through carbon fixation and the phosphorus cycle & the iron cycle. Although purple sulfur bacteria are found in the anoxic layer of their habitat, they supply inorganic nutrients to the above oxic layer. Purple sulfur bacteria act as a source of food to other organisms.


Why are Cyanobacteria the most significant group of photosynthetic microorganisms?

Cyanobacteria are the largest group of photosynthetic prokaryotes, which harvest solar energy and perform photosynthesis through chlorophyll-a by fixing CO2 and generating O2. Cyanobacteria are important in global carbon fixation, and reduce atmospheric CO2 levels. In addition to chlorophyll-a (green pigment), cyanobacteria produce accessory photosynthetic pigments carotenoids, which are protect against photooxidative damages & blue and red pigments known as phycobilin (phycocyanin (PC) and phycoerythrin (PE)), which enable them to grow under low-light conditions. Some cyanobacteria can also fix atmospheric nitrogen.

Archaea Bacteria

  The word Archaea is derived from the Greek word  Archaios  which means ancient. The  Archaeabacteria, are quite  diverse ,  both in  morph...