The Many Ways Microbes Eat, Get Eaten, and Poop | Compilation
Sintesi
TLDRThe video delves into the intricate lives of microbes, showcasing their feeding strategies and the predator-prey relationships that define their existence. It explains how microorganisms obtain food through methods like filter feeding, raptorial feeding, and diffusion feeding, and details the digestion process that follows. The narrative also highlights the historical significance of yeast in human culture, particularly in fermentation, and discusses the evolution of digestive systems across different organisms. Ultimately, it emphasizes the interconnectedness of life in the microcosmos, including the inevitable production of waste, and the role of microbes in sustaining ecosystems.
Punti di forza
- 🔍 Microbes are fascinating and complex organisms.
- 🍽️ All living organisms get food, digest it, and excrete waste.
- 🌊 Filter feeding allows organisms to consume suspended particles.
- 🦈 Raptorial feeding involves hunting and capturing prey.
- 💧 Diffusion feeding relies on prey accidentally contacting the predator.
- 🍞 Yeast plays a crucial role in fermentation and human culture.
- 🧬 The evolution of digestive systems is a complex process.
- 💩 All organisms produce waste, regardless of their size.
- 🔄 Continuous feeding is made possible by having a distinct digestive system.
- 🌍 Microbes are essential for sustaining ecosystems.
Linea temporale
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The microcosmos is a fascinating yet brutal world where microbes exist as both predators and prey. This video explores various feeding strategies employed by microorganisms, highlighting their unique adaptations for survival and nourishment.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Microorganisms, particularly heterotrophs, utilize different methods to obtain food, including filter feeding, raptorial feeding, and diffusion feeding. These strategies allow them to efficiently gather nutrients from their environment, showcasing the diversity of life at the microscopic level.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
Filter feeding is a common strategy among microorganisms, where structures like cilia create currents to draw in food particles. Examples include Paramecia and rotifers, which effectively consume algae and bacteria using specialized feeding mechanisms.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Raptorial feeding involves microorganisms that actively hunt and capture prey. Organisms like Dileptus and Bursaria use toxicysts to immobilize their targets before ingestion, demonstrating the predatory nature of certain microbes in the microcosmos.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Histophagy is another form of raptorial feeding where organisms like Coleps consume tissue from injured prey. This method highlights the opportunistic feeding behaviors of some microorganisms, akin to scavengers in the macro world.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Diffusion feeding is a passive strategy where predators rely on prey to come into contact with them. Heliozoa and Suctorians exemplify this method, using specialized structures to capture and consume their food, illustrating the varied approaches to feeding in the microcosmos.
- 00:30:00 - 00:36:31
The video concludes by discussing the inevitable cycle of life and death in the microcosmos, emphasizing that all organisms, regardless of size, contribute to the ecosystem through their feeding habits and waste production, ultimately connecting the intricate web of life.
Mappa mentale
Video Domande e Risposte
What are the three basic things all living organisms do?
They get food, digest it, and excrete waste materials.
What is the difference between autotrophs and heterotrophs?
Autotrophs produce their own food, while heterotrophs consume other organisms for food.
What is filter feeding?
A method where organisms consume suspended food particles or smaller organisms by creating a current.
What is raptorial feeding?
A feeding strategy where organisms selectively capture and hunt other organisms.
What is diffusion feeding?
A method where predators rely on prey to accidentally make contact with them.
What role does yeast play in human history?
Yeast is essential for fermentation, used in making bread, beer, and wine.
How do amoebas excrete waste?
Amoebas use exocytosis to remove waste from their bodies.
What is a cytoproct?
The unicellular equivalent of an anus found in ciliates.
What is the significance of the anus in evolution?
The anus allows for a more efficient digestive system, enabling continuous feeding.
How do tardigrades feed?
Tardigrades use a stylet to suck out the insides of their prey.
Visualizza altre sintesi video
- 00:00:13On Journey to the Microcosmos, we love microbes.
- 00:00:18We love to see them swim and wander and live out their unique lives.
- 00:00:23But we’ve also had to make peace with the fact that the microcosmos is not a peaceful utopia.
- 00:00:31This is a world where microbes are both residents and food, which means that occasionally, we’ll
- 00:00:39have to spend our time together watching organisms, whose bodies are fractions upon fractions
- 00:00:45upon fractions of a millimeter in size, turn into vicious predators.
- 00:00:51So today, in honor of both predator and prey, we’re going to be revisiting some of our
- 00:00:57favorite videos about eating in the microcosmos.
- 00:01:02Grab a snack, and join our microbes as they snack.
- 00:01:06And we’ll start by revisiting some of the clever
- 00:01:08strategies that microbes use to gather their prey.
- 00:01:17Despite huge differences in morphology and biological structures, all living organisms
- 00:01:24do the same three basic things;
- 00:01:27they get food, digest it, and excrete waste materials.
- 00:01:31Living organisms require energy to live.
- 00:01:35Some produce their own food, usually through photosynthesis, we call these autotrophs,
- 00:01:40but many organisms cannot make their own food.
- 00:01:43We call these heterotrophs and they...eat.
- 00:01:50Among heterotrophic single-celled eukaryotes, food is taken into the cell in various methods
- 00:01:57but once it’s there, it's wrapped by a membrane
- 00:02:01and forms something called a food vacuole.
- 00:02:04Then the cell flushes digestive enzymes inside the food vacuole to start the digestion.
- 00:02:10Nutrients are taken into the cytoplasm and the waste material left in the vacuole then
- 00:02:16basically fuses with the outer membrane of the cell and what's left in the
- 00:02:20vacuole is discharged into the environment
- 00:02:24In some cases, like inside this beautiful single-celled Nassula ornata which feeds on
- 00:02:30filamentous cyanobacteria, content of the food vacuole reacts with the digestive enzymes
- 00:02:36and changes color.
- 00:02:37But that process takes time.
- 00:02:39Because each vacuole formed at a different time, they are in different stages of digestion
- 00:02:45which gives this cell it’s colorful polka dots.
- 00:02:49But how do these heterotrophic organisms get their food?
- 00:02:55Well, in spite of a remarkable amount of diversity, a lot of microorganisms
- 00:02:59use one of the same three strategies for getting their food.
- 00:03:03Some of this will be familiar to the macro world
- 00:03:06some of it will not.
- 00:03:10One of the less familiar is filter feeding
- 00:03:13which allows larger organisms to consume suspended food particles or much smaller organisms.
- 00:03:21There are filter-feeders in the macro-world, baleen whales come to mind.
- 00:03:25But while a whale must swim through giant clouds of small organisms, in the microcosmos,
- 00:03:32your food can come to you.
- 00:03:36Some filter feeders use hair-like structures called cilia to create a vortex that brings
- 00:03:42other microorganisms or food particles to the cell mouth.
- 00:03:47These cilia are specialized for this task and their beating creates a current that expediently
- 00:03:53and beautifully directs every nearby thing into the waiting mouth of the microorganism.
- 00:03:59The cilia are often too small for us to see, but you can see their effects.
- 00:04:04Take a look at these Paramecia.
- 00:04:06They're consuming tiny, tiny bacteria.
- 00:04:09and you can see their cilia causing small organisms to tumble across them.
- 00:04:15You can also see all of their food vacuoles on the inside,
- 00:04:18and if you look very carefully, you can see a new food vacuole forming,
- 00:04:22getting filled up with those tiny, bacterial cells.
- 00:04:30Some of the best and most obvious filter feeders are rotifers, micro-animals that use cilia
- 00:04:36to create swirling vortices around their mouth parts.
- 00:04:40You can see how successful this feeding strategy is by it’s belly full of algae cells.
- 00:04:46Every time its mouth fills with more algea, it contracts to swallow the food.
- 00:04:54Now observe these single-celled organisms called stentors,
- 00:04:58they are much bigger than most other microorganisms.
- 00:05:02You can actually see them with the naked eye.
- 00:05:04and they also use filter feeding to push all of their algal food into their cell mouths.
- 00:05:18Our second feeding mechanism, maybe the most familiar,
- 00:05:21and the most exciting is called raptorial feeding.
- 00:05:25Raptorial feeders selectively capture prey and hunt other organisms.
- 00:05:31In this video you can see Dileptus hunting.
- 00:05:34It paralyzes one organism with the touch of its trunk-like proboscis, and then it pulls
- 00:05:39that organism into itself
- 00:05:41in a process called phagocytosis.
- 00:05:48Many of these microorganisms are armed with something called toxicysts.
- 00:05:53These are little harpoon-like structures filled with toxins and they are located on a particular
- 00:05:58part of the cell which the microorganism uses for hunting.
- 00:06:03These tiny harpoons are then fired when they come in contact with prey organisms
- 00:06:08which then become immobilized.
- 00:06:12This is Bursaria, it’s a single-celled organism with a huge mouth, and things have not gone
- 00:06:17well for the Paramecium that is now inside it.
- 00:06:21The Paramecium dies immediately because of the toxicysts on the inside of the Bursaria,
- 00:06:27so at least it was quick.
- 00:06:32Now get ready for some truly gorgeous footage of a micro-animal’s day going south.
- 00:06:37First Paradileptus immobilizes the rotifer with fired toxicysts and the animal is swallowed
- 00:06:44by the single-celled organism as it swims away.
- 00:06:52This is a Frontonia which is a close relative of Paramecia, but lacks the filter-feeding
- 00:06:58habits of its relatives and feeds predaciously on large diatoms and filamentous cyanobacteria
- 00:07:05such as Oscillatoria here.
- 00:07:07Though, in this case, it turns out this Frontonia bit off a little more than he could chew.
- 00:07:14Another raptorial feeding style is called histophagy.
- 00:07:18Histophagous organisms such as these single-celled Coleps attack injured but live animals or
- 00:07:25other single-celled organisms, sucking off hunks of tissue
- 00:07:29rather than consuming whole organisms.
- 00:07:32When they attack an animal, they enter wounds and ingest tissue often attacking in groups
- 00:07:38because their chemical sensing abilities attract many of them from a distance,
- 00:07:43like microscopic vultures.
- 00:07:46When a number of them gather in one place, it’s hard to avoid another macro-world analog...piranhas,
- 00:07:53devouring everything soft in no time at all.
- 00:08:00There is a huge variety of raptorial feeding, this is just the beginning, but we wanted
- 00:08:05to show you one more before we move on.
- 00:08:08This is Vampyrella, an amoeba with a suitable name.
- 00:08:13It specializes in feeding on filamentous algae.
- 00:08:16First, it bores a hole through the algal cell wall and
- 00:08:20then slurps out the gooey, nutritious cytoplasm.
- 00:08:33Our final feeding mechanism, for today at least,
- 00:08:36is diffusion feeding,
- 00:08:38in which the predator just sits in the same place, relying
- 00:08:42on the prey to accidentally make contact.
- 00:08:45This is a Heliozoa, it’s a single celled amoeboid and because of its resemblance to
- 00:08:51the sun due to the rays coming out of its cell, it’s sometimes called the “sun animalcule”.
- 00:08:59The rays are called axopodia.
- 00:09:01These are sometimes used in locomotion and, in this case, for hunting prey.
- 00:09:07Axopodia, are cytoplasmic extensions, meaning they’re a part of the cell membrane, even
- 00:09:13though they look like they’re sticking out of it.
- 00:09:16Each one has a central supporting
- 00:09:18rod of microtubules that gives it this rigid structure.
- 00:09:23The axopodia are coated in organelles that discharge toxins when touched, which impair
- 00:09:29or even paralyze Heliozoa's prey.
- 00:09:33After the organism is captured, those microtubules are drawn back into the cell, thus retracting
- 00:09:39the axopodia and allowing the cell to swallow the unlucky organism, or prey is just engulfed
- 00:09:47by extrusions from the cell called pseudopodia.
- 00:09:51In this video, a rotifer has been captured by a Heliozoa and it is slowly getting eaten by it.
- 00:09:58Now this is something that happens fairly freuently,
- 00:10:00but we did capture something unusal here.
- 00:10:03While it was stuck to Heliozoa's axopodia, this rotifer actually lays its egg.
- 00:10:11But neither egg nor the rotifer is going to escape this.
- 00:10:16Surprisingly heartbreaking.
- 00:10:19This is a Suctorian, it is a ciliate just like Paramecium and Stentor.
- 00:10:25These organisms have hair-like cilia during the early stage of their life, but as adults
- 00:10:30they develop bundles of tentacles.
- 00:10:33Just like in Heliozoa these tentacles are supported by an internal cylinder of microtubules.
- 00:10:40The tip of the tentacles have extrusomes; these are special structures that attach to
- 00:10:46and immobilize any other ciliates that touch them.
- 00:10:51The tentacles eventually penetrate the cell membrane of the prey, and then the contents
- 00:10:56of the prey is sucked out through the tentacle.
- 00:11:01In the clip, a suctorian has caught 4 individual Vorticella with its tentacles and is slowly
- 00:11:08sucking their cytoplasm.
- 00:11:10It looks a little like the vorticella have the suctorian surrounded, but in fact, they
- 00:11:15are powerless to escape it.
- 00:11:17It’s a dangerous world out there.
- 00:11:19The complex chemicals created by organisms to sustain their life necessarily are useful
- 00:11:26to other organisms, as building blocks and as fuel.
- 00:11:31And so predation evolved.
- 00:11:33It’s beautiful, it’s constant, and it’s brutal.
- 00:11:45Now that we’ve seen how the hunters of the microcosmos get their food, let’s experience
- 00:11:50the more challenging part of the predator-prey dynamic: getting eaten.
- 00:11:55For the organisms in our next video, finding themselves in the belly of the beast is just
- 00:12:01the start of a more grueling process, one that converts their bodies into nutrients.
- 00:12:15Tardigrades are famous for their capacity to survive.
- 00:12:19If you look them up, you will be inundated with long lists of the many things scientists
- 00:12:24have thrown their way to see if the tardigrade will survive.
- 00:12:28We’ve made some lists like those ourselves.
- 00:12:32Tardigrades on the moon, tardigrades in extreme heat.
- 00:12:34You’ve heard about them.
- 00:12:35We’ve talked about them.
- 00:12:37What else is there?
- 00:12:38Well, here’s a surprising fact you might not have known.
- 00:12:41For certain species of tardigrades, like the one in the middle of your screen right now,
- 00:12:46you can tell the difference between a male and a female by looking at their toes.
- 00:12:52That’s right.
- 00:12:53The toes.
- 00:12:54These tardigrades are called Milnesium, and the males of these species have a pair of
- 00:12:59claws on their feet that are shaped a little bit differently from the rest of the claws,
- 00:13:03with only one hook on each claw instead of the usual two.
- 00:13:07But after taking a closer peek at this tardigrade’s toes, we can confirm that she is a female tardigrade.
- 00:13:14Now, that’s a fun fact for us as we watch the clip.
- 00:13:16But it does not actually do anything for the poor rotifers that are surrounding this tardigrade,
- 00:13:21who are currently stretching themselves in and out of danger.
- 00:13:27Around the tip of a tardigrade’s mouth are small bumps that we think act like little sensors.
- 00:13:33And when those bumps make contact with a rotifer, out pops the tardigrade’s stylet—a needle
- 00:13:39that pokes out from the tubular mouth opening.
- 00:13:42That stylet pokes into the rotifer, and from there the tardigrade uses a circular structure
- 00:13:48called a pharynx in its head to create strong suction.
- 00:13:52And then, the stylet goes from functioning as a needle to functioning as a portable,
- 00:13:57built-in straw that lets the tardigrade suck out the inside of its prey.
- 00:14:03You can see some of the bodily fluid leaving the rotifer as the tardigrade’s stylet pumps
- 00:14:08away like a beating heart.
- 00:14:10And when she is done, the rotifer remains, like an empy coffee cup.
- 00:14:20This method of eating works quite well for the tardigrade, letting her eat quickly from
- 00:14:24the prey that is directly in front of her.
- 00:14:26But not all organisms come equipped with a weapon that lets them turn rotifers into Capri Suns.
- 00:14:31These organisms have to turn to other methods to extract nutrients from their food.
- 00:14:37This marine ciliate is called kentrophyllum, and it came to James, our master of microscopes,
- 00:14:42in a large container full of beach sand.
- 00:14:45On a normal day, maybe we would talk more about its funny almond shape that stretches
- 00:14:49as it swims around.
- 00:14:51But today is not a normal day because this kentrophyllum is about to be overshadowed
- 00:14:55by a rotifer.
- 00:14:57Now, where is the rotifer, you might ask?
- 00:15:00It is inside the kentrophyllum, of course.
- 00:15:03We did not catch the moment of its capture, when the toxic needles lining the kentrophyllum
- 00:15:08darted out and paralyzed the rotifer.
- 00:15:10By the time we arrived, the rotifer had already been ingested…but it was not dead yet.
- 00:15:20You can see it wiggling and wrestling at the broad end of the kentrophyllum, causing the
- 00:15:26ciliate’s body to wrinkle and fold in on itself.
- 00:15:29But it is trapped inside of a food vacuole now, a compartment that exists to break this
- 00:15:35rotifer down.
- 00:15:36Sure, the rotifer can try and fight against the walls of the vacuole holding it hostage.
- 00:15:41But there’s not much it can do against the digestive enzymes pouring in, or the increasing
- 00:15:47acidity of its surroundings.
- 00:15:49A food vacuole is a hostile place to be, and for minutes, its destructive tools will go
- 00:15:55to work.
- 00:15:57In the end, the rotifer will be left in dissolved pieces to be absorbed by the kentrophyllum’s
- 00:16:03cytoplasm, sustaining the organism that was the site of its last battle.
- 00:16:08It’s a lonely death for the rotifer, with only the kentrophyllum to witness it.
- 00:16:13Though I suppose now there is also us, sharing and immortalizing that rotifer’s last moments.
- 00:16:22And if the rotifer had not died in the body of another organism, it may have ended up
- 00:16:27like this gastrotrich.
- 00:16:29Now to be fair, they did find themselves in a very similar situation: they are both dead.
- 00:16:34But the rotifer was eaten alive, digested from the outside
- 00:16:37while trapped in another organism.
- 00:16:39Meanwhile, this gastrotrich is going through the exact opposite situation.
- 00:16:44It is being eaten from the inside out, by a scavenger called a peranema.
- 00:16:50Now, as far as we know, the peranema didn’t do anything to kill the gastrotrich.
- 00:16:55It was likely already dead, though we don’t know what killed it.
- 00:16:58But the peranema is both a hunter and a scavenger.
- 00:17:02Sometimes it can be found with other peranema as they hunt down prey, in a pack of hungry microbes.
- 00:17:08At other times, the peranema scavenges.
- 00:17:11They are notorious for being able to squeeze their way into whatever holes they find to
- 00:17:15get into a dead organism.
- 00:17:17And in this case, the gastrotrich’s exoskeleton was the right combination of available, open,
- 00:17:23and dead for the peranema, which found its way in and decided to begin helping itself
- 00:17:29to the buffet of dead tissue around it.
- 00:17:32After all, the gastrotrich won’t be needing that tissue anymore, so the peranema might
- 00:17:36as well make good use of it.
- 00:17:39The gastrotrich’s body has likely vanished by now.
- 00:17:43Perhaps the peranema will have finished it off entirely, or some other scavenger will
- 00:17:47have joined in on the fun.
- 00:17:49Or perhaps, it will have simply faded, like the rotifer inside the kentrophyllum, its
- 00:17:54body eventually fading into the world that encapsulates it.
- 00:17:59But for this last moment, let’s remember the gastrotrich in a more beautiful moment
- 00:18:05under a fluorescent light, glowing in the glorious purple autofluorescence of its remains.
- 00:18:19If you think that microbes are the only organisms that eat microbes, think again.
- 00:18:25We humans have a particular fondness for one specific fungus called Saccharomyces cerevisiae,
- 00:18:31but you probably know better as “yeast.”
- 00:18:35Often when we talk about the invisible role that microbes have played in human history,
- 00:18:40we’re talking about the destruction wrought by diseases.
- 00:18:44But as we’ll talk about in the next video, the life of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has intertwined
- 00:18:50with our own in ways that are both delicious and mysterious.
- 00:19:03Every time you eat a piece of bread or drink a glass of beer, you are participating in
- 00:19:09what might be (depending on how strict you are about your definitions) one of the longest-running
- 00:19:16microbiology experiments in human history.
- 00:19:20While the earliest scientific studies of microbes usually go back only a few centuries
- 00:19:26when it comes to yeast, the microbe
- 00:19:28at the core of some of our favorite foods and drinks, well...those past few centuries
- 00:19:34barely scratch the surface.
- 00:19:36But before we get to that history, let’s start with some of the basic biology.
- 00:19:42Yeast are a fungus, though unlike many in that kingdom, they don’t grow the branching
- 00:19:47hyphae that characterize organisms like mushrooms.
- 00:19:51Instead, yeast grow primarily through a process of asexual reproduction called “budding.”.
- 00:19:58While there are many yeast species found among different fungal phyla, perhaps the most well-known
- 00:20:05is Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which you might see labelled as brewer’s yeast or baker’s yeast.
- 00:20:12Along with a few other yeasts, these various strains of S. cerevisiae are what we’ve
- 00:20:17come to rely on for our beer, wine, and bread--and all through the magic of fermentation.
- 00:20:25Yeast, like many organisms, rely on different metabolic pathways to break down sugar and
- 00:20:31create energy.
- 00:20:33These processes usually rely on oxygen.
- 00:20:37But to deal with situations where oxygen may be less readily available or some of their
- 00:20:42key metabolic processes are shut down, yeast turn to alcoholic fermentation.
- 00:20:48Fermentation helps the yeast get the energy it needs, but the particular chemical path
- 00:20:55they follow also produces ethanol and carbon dioxide.
- 00:21:00The yeast doesn’t need these byproducts—in fact, too much ethanol could be toxic for them.
- 00:21:06But what is waste to a yeast is treasure to us, and that shift in metabolic activity has
- 00:21:13been making our bread rise and our brains woozy for millennia.
- 00:21:22Molecular studies of pottery jars found in China found that they may have held some kind
- 00:21:28of fermented beverage as far back as 7000 BCE.
- 00:21:34And archaeological evidence has turned up for leavened bread from 2000 BCE in Egypt
- 00:21:40and 1000 BCE in North Western China.
- 00:21:44It’s easy to see why our use of yeast has persisted for millennia.
- 00:21:48To quote one group of scientists, it helped us make food and drinks with a
- 00:21:52“enriched sensorial palate” and also a “euphoriant effect.”
- 00:21:59But the long-standing ubiquity of yeast also emphasizes how mysterious their origins are.
- 00:22:06We don’t actually know how yeast became involved with our cooking.
- 00:22:10We just know that it was ancient, likely starting with wine, and would come to span continents,
- 00:22:17potentially spreading through trade.
- 00:22:20The results were food and drinks produced through a series of observations about how
- 00:22:24factors like temperature, time, and air might affect the final product.
- 00:22:30To quote Samuel Johnson’s 18th century dictionary, barm--a type of yeast--is “the ferment put
- 00:22:37into drink to make it work, and into bread to lighten and swell it.”
- 00:22:43At the time they didn’t know what was actually in yeast or how it worked to shape those results.
- 00:22:49We just knew it was a thing that provided…something…somehow….
- 00:22:55Moreover, the earliest glimpses of yeast under the microscope seemed to support the idea
- 00:23:00that yeast was just some sort of chemical, a fermenting agent, not a biological entity
- 00:23:07of its own.
- 00:23:08When Antoni van Leeuwenhoek observed yeast in the 17th century, he thought they were
- 00:23:12just bits of globular particles.
- 00:23:16Against the new and incredible bits of life he was seeing for the first time through the
- 00:23:20microscope, yeast seemed useful but ultimately unliving.
- 00:23:26But over the next few centuries, as more scientists worked to try and understand how fermentation
- 00:23:32actually worked, they identified not just the chemical reactions that shaped the process,
- 00:23:39but that yeast was an actual living organism essential to fermentation.
- 00:23:44Eventually, Louis Pasteur would put all the pieces together, publishing a paper titled
- 00:23:50“The Memoir of the Fermentation of Alcohol”, or something like that, but in French.
- 00:23:56It was published in 1857 and it established the interplay between chemistry and biology
- 00:24:03that allowed yeast to turn to alcoholic fermentation to survive.
- 00:24:09He would also later uncover another form of fermentation carried out by bacteria, which
- 00:24:14is called lactic acid fermentation.
- 00:24:17Pasteur’s work didn’t just change our understanding of how bread was made, it would
- 00:24:23go on to inform our understanding of germ theory, and how the invisible world of microbes
- 00:24:30connects to the grim realities of disease.
- 00:24:34From this early history, yeast have gone on to become perhaps one of the most studied
- 00:24:40eukaryotic organisms in modern biological research.
- 00:24:44Saccharomyces cerevisiae in particular has had an illustrious research career.
- 00:24:50In 1996, its genome was fully sequenced, making it the first eukaryotic organism to be genetically
- 00:24:57mapped out.
- 00:24:58Part of what makes yeast such great research organisms is that they are easy to grow and
- 00:25:04manipulate--both through environmental and genetic means--which has allowed us to use
- 00:25:10them to study everything from DNA replication to prion diseases.
- 00:25:15In the same way that cultures have refined the ways we use yeast in our food and drinks,
- 00:25:21scientists have refined the way we use yeast in our lab experiments.
- 00:25:26They’ve even developed genetic engineering techniques that repurpose yeast to brew the
- 00:25:31ingredients for everything from perfumes to antimalarial drugs.
- 00:25:37When you consider just how far we’ve come with yeast, you might begin to wonder: did
- 00:25:42we domesticate them?
- 00:25:45After all, our early days of yeast use likely coincided with our early days of plant and
- 00:25:52animal domestication.
- 00:25:54So in the same way that we’ve come to rely on domesticated animals for food and labor,
- 00:25:59maybe yeast are our microbial workhorses.
- 00:26:04The answer to that question is one scientists are still studying, in part because the history
- 00:26:10of yeast is so large and mysterious, and in part because domestication has a very specific
- 00:26:18definition in these conversations.
- 00:26:20One paper we found describes it as “human selection and breeding of wild species to
- 00:26:27obtain cultivated variants that thrive in man-made environments, but behave sub-optimally
- 00:26:35in nature,” now that’s quite a number of nuanced requirements to check off.
- 00:26:40But with this definition in mind, beer yeast seems to show the most evidence for having
- 00:26:45been domesticated, which is likely connected to specific aspects of the brewing process
- 00:26:51that have limited the exposure of the domesticated yeast to wild yeast.
- 00:26:56But all yeasts considered, the genetic analysis of beer yeast strains show that this domestication
- 00:27:04is actually relatively recent—as in, it only happened a few centuries ago.
- 00:27:09While it did happen before we even knew that yeast was a living thing that we were domesticating,
- 00:27:16it still came long after we started using yeast to make beer, leaving much of the organism’s
- 00:27:22history still a mystery.
- 00:27:25It is often tempting to think that we have a microbial world and a human world that intersect
- 00:27:32only in chemical reactions and biological connections.
- 00:27:35But yeast reminds us that microbes are more than just a scientific reality, they are a
- 00:27:43cultural one--even when we didn’t know they were around.
- 00:27:47Yeast have created our foods, shaped our traditions, and both bonded and divided us.
- 00:27:55And how we use and change yeast will only continue to shape our lives.
- 00:28:01Their future, tied so much to our own, is every bit as grand and mysterious as their
- 00:28:08past has been.
- 00:28:14There is but one inevitable way to end all this, with poop.
- 00:28:20Because yes, even microbes do it.
- 00:28:23Not all that we eat can be retained in our bodies, something must exit.
- 00:28:28So come for the funny videos of microbes pooping, stay for the extra lesson on how they do it
- 00:28:34without a butthole.
- 00:28:41Ah, food, one of life’s great pleasures.
- 00:28:45Whether you’re an organism whose body can create its own food, or you make do with the
- 00:28:50consumption of other organisms, food sustains and connects life both large and small.
- 00:28:58But we’re not going to talk about food today.
- 00:29:00We’re going to talk about what happens…after.
- 00:29:03No great meal comes without consequences.
- 00:29:08Even photosynthetic microbes produce oxygen they don’t need, a byproduct that is quite
- 00:29:14useful to many other organisms, including us.
- 00:29:18And for organisms that have to digest their food to extract nutrients, well, there’s
- 00:29:23all sorts of stuff left behind when the process is done.
- 00:29:28In the world of the microcosmos, there are not only many varied tiny organisms.
- 00:29:34There are also many varied ways to produce even tinier poop.
- 00:29:46And when we say “tinier,” we mean it.
- 00:29:49If you’re worried about being grossed out by this video, or you really want to make
- 00:29:53sure you’re not missing anything, just know that some of this pooping will require you
- 00:29:58to pay very close attention.
- 00:30:03Some of this will probably look similar to macroscopic bowel movements,
- 00:30:07and some will seem less so.
- 00:30:10So let’s start with the more poop-like poop that comes from some of the multicellular
- 00:30:15members of the microcosmos, particularly the ones with digestive systems complete with
- 00:30:22specialized regions for digesting food and releasing solid waste.
- 00:30:31Our dragon-like friend the gastrotrich is doing the old scrunch-and-poop, probably after
- 00:30:38having finished a nice meal made up of bacteria or protozoa.
- 00:30:43The food came in through its pharynx and was then sent through the intestine, a straight
- 00:30:49tube full of digestive cells.
- 00:30:51After, the remains continued their way to the end of the tube, where lies the anus--a
- 00:30:58microscopic gateway out of the gastrotrich and into the world.
- 00:31:04That’s all well and good for the more complex organisms, but how does one poop when one
- 00:31:10does not have a butthole?
- 00:31:13Well, for some single-celled organisms, one becomes the butthole.
- 00:31:23Such is the case for amoebas.
- 00:31:26Their formlessness allows them to easily shift their shape around to take in food via phagocytosis.
- 00:31:34The amoeba here happens to have found a nice meal made of a ciliate, which is now contained
- 00:31:40in a food vacuole filling with digestive enzymes.
- 00:31:44Those enzymes will eventually break the ciliate down, allowing the amoeba to absorb nutrients
- 00:31:50into its cytoplasm.
- 00:31:53But then what happens with the remains?
- 00:31:56Well, as we see with this amoeba here, it gets released.
- 00:32:01Amoebas and other similar organisms use a process called exocytosis to send waste back
- 00:32:08to the membrane where it is removed from their body.
- 00:32:14You can see it again here in this Mastigamoeba, slowly gliding along the microscope slide
- 00:32:20while a round bit seems to come off up top.
- 00:32:24It almost looks like it’s leaving behind a little piece of itself, which I mean,
- 00:32:30maybe it is.
- 00:32:33Ciliates have a more refined approach to pooping, which is to say they have the unicellular
- 00:32:39equivalent of an anus called the cytoproct.
- 00:32:44Ciliates gather food into an oral groove, and then consume it in the digestive vacuoles
- 00:32:51that travel through the cell.
- 00:32:52Eventually, when the vacuole makes its way to the cytoproct, the contents get out, and
- 00:32:59there you have ciliate poop.
- 00:33:04The way organisms poop—the way microbes poop—are even more varied and wonderful
- 00:33:10than we’ve been able to show you here.
- 00:33:12But you might be wondering how you even get from something relatively simple like this
- 00:33:17ciliate releasing a small bit of waste to something more complex, like this tardigrade
- 00:33:23with its more compartmentalized approach to defecation.
- 00:33:27Well the answer, of course, is evolution, but it’s an answer that leads to many more
- 00:33:33unanswered questions.
- 00:33:35Even within animals, the evolution of the anus—or in some species, the cloaca—is
- 00:33:41not well understood, as discussed in a 2015 review paper with the spectacular title, “Getting
- 00:33:48to the bottom of anal evolution”.
- 00:33:52While the anus itself is linked to the evolution of a digestive system, not all metazoans have
- 00:33:59a designated anus.
- 00:34:01The hydra gut has only one opening, which means that the organism’s mouth has to pull
- 00:34:07digestive double duty and open back up to release the waste.
- 00:34:12And how that system fits in with the evolution of digestion overall is unclear.
- 00:34:18Much like the evolution of sex, anuses are a trait that appears and disappears in evolutionary
- 00:34:25lineages, reflecting the fact that they might be useful for some animals and less so for others.
- 00:34:33The duality of the hydra’s mouth seems to be working out great for them after all.
- 00:34:38But having a digestive system with a distinct entrance and exit is pretty handy too.
- 00:34:45For one, it’s just a little less disgusting.
- 00:34:48But it also keeps food flowing in one direction.
- 00:34:52And that means animals like the tardigrade and us don’t have to wait to finish digesting
- 00:34:58to eat more food.
- 00:35:00That would be annoying.
- 00:35:02We just get to keep eating, all thanks to that evolutionary mystery that is the anus.
- 00:35:10In the end though, anus or not, everybody poops.
- 00:35:13Food, after all, might be one of life’s great pleasures, but all good things must
- 00:35:19come to an end.
- 00:35:21And perhaps, with the microcosmos, we can find some pleasure in that as well.
- 00:35:31Thank you for coming on this journey with us as we explore the unseen world that surrounds us.
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- 00:35:49thank them so much for their continued support.
- 00:35:54If you want to see more from our master of microscopes, James Weiss, check out Jam & Germs
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- microbes
- feeding mechanisms
- predator-prey dynamics
- filter feeding
- raptorial feeding
- diffusion feeding
- yeast
- fermentation
- digestion
- waste production