Page 1
Biology Booster Dose for NEET
Chapter- Biological Classification
Biological classification - process of grouping organisms according to certain similarities.
Linnaeus proposed the two kingdoms of classification - Animalia and Plantae
RH Whittaker suggested the five-kingdom classification.
Five kingdoms are as follows: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
Monera
Bacteria – Sole member
Habitat – Desert, Snow, Deep ocean (everywhere)
Shape – Coccus, Bacillus, (Most common) Vibrio, Spirillum
Structure
Glycocalyx
(mucopolysaccharide)
Slime layer – Loose
Capsule – thick, tough
Cell wall Peptidoglycan (NAG + NAN + chain of amino acid
Cell membrane Lipid by layer (Similar to eukaryotes)
Mesosomes Infolding of cell membrane, tubule, vesicle, lamellae,
Cell wall formation secretion process, respiration, DNA
replication
Chromatophore Chl a present, infolding only in cyanobacteria
Flagella present in motile cell – Hook, basal body, filament,
Absent in – cyanobacteria, and coccus
Pilli Less numerous, tubular shape
Fimbriae Bristle shape, Attachment
Plasmid Circular, double stranded, self-replicating, extra chromosomal
(non-essential
features- ex- Ti plasmid – Agrobacterium,
R – plasmid – Antibiotics resistance
Nucleoid Genomic DNA, essential genes present, single chromosome,
circular, histone absent
Page 2
Biology Booster Dose for NEET
Chapter- Biological Classification
Biological classification - process of grouping organisms according to certain similarities.
Linnaeus proposed the two kingdoms of classification - Animalia and Plantae
RH Whittaker suggested the five-kingdom classification.
Five kingdoms are as follows: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
Monera
Bacteria – Sole member
Habitat – Desert, Snow, Deep ocean (everywhere)
Shape – Coccus, Bacillus, (Most common) Vibrio, Spirillum
Structure
Glycocalyx
(mucopolysaccharide)
Slime layer – Loose
Capsule – thick, tough
Cell wall Peptidoglycan (NAG + NAN + chain of amino acid
Cell membrane Lipid by layer (Similar to eukaryotes)
Mesosomes Infolding of cell membrane, tubule, vesicle, lamellae,
Cell wall formation secretion process, respiration, DNA
replication
Chromatophore Chl a present, infolding only in cyanobacteria
Flagella present in motile cell – Hook, basal body, filament,
Absent in – cyanobacteria, and coccus
Pilli Less numerous, tubular shape
Fimbriae Bristle shape, Attachment
Plasmid Circular, double stranded, self-replicating, extra chromosomal
(non-essential
features- ex- Ti plasmid – Agrobacterium,
R – plasmid – Antibiotics resistance
Nucleoid Genomic DNA, essential genes present, single chromosome,
circular, histone absent
Ribosome 70S type, associate with plasma membrane form polyribosome
Inclusion bodies Role Storage, without membrane, insoluble form,
• Glycogen granule, sulfur granule,
• Phosphorus granule, gas vacuole (Cyanobacteria green sulfur
bacteria)
• Cyanophycean granule
Nutrition - Autotrophic
Chemoautotrophic Oxidation of inorganic compound, Recycling of Fe, S, N, P
Exp. Nitrifying bacteria (Nitrobacter, Nitrosomonas
Photoautotrophic Chl a and PS II present, Breaking of H2O, Oxygen By product –
oxygenic
Example -Cyanobacteria
Anoxygenic – not use H2, Chlorophyll absent, green sulfur bacteria,
purple sulfur bacteria , Green non-Sulphur bacteria ,purple non-Sulphur
bacteria
Heterotrophic
Saprophytic Example- Lactobacillus (most abundant bacteria)
Symbiotic Example - Rhizobium, Frankia
Parasitic Citrus canker, typhoid, cholera, tetanus (Disease)
Reproduction
Asexual Favorable – Fission, Unfavorable – Spore formation
Sexual -three type Some primitive mode of DNA transfer
Transformation DNA enter from medium
Transduction Transfer from one bacterium to other by virus
Conjugation Bacteria to bacteria plasmid (F-plasmid) transfer by conjugation tube
Page 3
Biology Booster Dose for NEET
Chapter- Biological Classification
Biological classification - process of grouping organisms according to certain similarities.
Linnaeus proposed the two kingdoms of classification - Animalia and Plantae
RH Whittaker suggested the five-kingdom classification.
Five kingdoms are as follows: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
Monera
Bacteria – Sole member
Habitat – Desert, Snow, Deep ocean (everywhere)
Shape – Coccus, Bacillus, (Most common) Vibrio, Spirillum
Structure
Glycocalyx
(mucopolysaccharide)
Slime layer – Loose
Capsule – thick, tough
Cell wall Peptidoglycan (NAG + NAN + chain of amino acid
Cell membrane Lipid by layer (Similar to eukaryotes)
Mesosomes Infolding of cell membrane, tubule, vesicle, lamellae,
Cell wall formation secretion process, respiration, DNA
replication
Chromatophore Chl a present, infolding only in cyanobacteria
Flagella present in motile cell – Hook, basal body, filament,
Absent in – cyanobacteria, and coccus
Pilli Less numerous, tubular shape
Fimbriae Bristle shape, Attachment
Plasmid Circular, double stranded, self-replicating, extra chromosomal
(non-essential
features- ex- Ti plasmid – Agrobacterium,
R – plasmid – Antibiotics resistance
Nucleoid Genomic DNA, essential genes present, single chromosome,
circular, histone absent
Ribosome 70S type, associate with plasma membrane form polyribosome
Inclusion bodies Role Storage, without membrane, insoluble form,
• Glycogen granule, sulfur granule,
• Phosphorus granule, gas vacuole (Cyanobacteria green sulfur
bacteria)
• Cyanophycean granule
Nutrition - Autotrophic
Chemoautotrophic Oxidation of inorganic compound, Recycling of Fe, S, N, P
Exp. Nitrifying bacteria (Nitrobacter, Nitrosomonas
Photoautotrophic Chl a and PS II present, Breaking of H2O, Oxygen By product –
oxygenic
Example -Cyanobacteria
Anoxygenic – not use H2, Chlorophyll absent, green sulfur bacteria,
purple sulfur bacteria , Green non-Sulphur bacteria ,purple non-Sulphur
bacteria
Heterotrophic
Saprophytic Example- Lactobacillus (most abundant bacteria)
Symbiotic Example - Rhizobium, Frankia
Parasitic Citrus canker, typhoid, cholera, tetanus (Disease)
Reproduction
Asexual Favorable – Fission, Unfavorable – Spore formation
Sexual -three type Some primitive mode of DNA transfer
Transformation DNA enter from medium
Transduction Transfer from one bacterium to other by virus
Conjugation Bacteria to bacteria plasmid (F-plasmid) transfer by conjugation tube
Type of Bacteria
Archaebacteria Differ in cell wall, 16s rRNA and cell membrane from eubacteria
Methanogen Anaerobic, produce methane
Halophile High salt conc
Thermoacidophile
(Thermus
aquaticus)
Living acid (H2SO4)
High temp. 80°C
Cyanobacteria Fresh water, marine, moist soil, Unicellular, Filamentous, colonial
Chl a on Chromatophore, Cyanophycean Granule, Flagella absent,
Blooms in
polluted water
Example-. Nostoc, Anabaena, Oscillatoria, Spirulina
Mycoplasma No cell wall, smallest size, Parasitic on plant or animal
Protista
Feature – Unicellular, eukaryotes, well defined nucleus, autotrophic (oxygenic) and
Heterotrophic
Flagella – 9 + (2) type, Membrane bound organelle, fusion to form zygote, meiosis present
Chrysophytes Dinoflagellates Eugleinoids
Habitat Diatoms and desmid (golden algae)
Marine water and freshwater
Marine water
Flagella Float passively – no flagella Two flagella,
longitudinal
and transverse
Cell
wall
Cellulose cell wall + silica
(overlapping) shell like soap
case
Stiff cellulose plate
Pigment Chl a mainly Chl a and
phycoerythrin
Chl a and Chl b – like
higher plant
Nutrition Oxygenic
Diatomaceous earth
(indestructible cell wall) Chief
producer – ocean ,filtration,
polishing
Oxygenic
Rapid multiplication
Form red tide (sea
appear
rod), Toxins release
Photosynthetic
(oxygenic) +
Predator (in absence
of light)
Page 4
Biology Booster Dose for NEET
Chapter- Biological Classification
Biological classification - process of grouping organisms according to certain similarities.
Linnaeus proposed the two kingdoms of classification - Animalia and Plantae
RH Whittaker suggested the five-kingdom classification.
Five kingdoms are as follows: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
Monera
Bacteria – Sole member
Habitat – Desert, Snow, Deep ocean (everywhere)
Shape – Coccus, Bacillus, (Most common) Vibrio, Spirillum
Structure
Glycocalyx
(mucopolysaccharide)
Slime layer – Loose
Capsule – thick, tough
Cell wall Peptidoglycan (NAG + NAN + chain of amino acid
Cell membrane Lipid by layer (Similar to eukaryotes)
Mesosomes Infolding of cell membrane, tubule, vesicle, lamellae,
Cell wall formation secretion process, respiration, DNA
replication
Chromatophore Chl a present, infolding only in cyanobacteria
Flagella present in motile cell – Hook, basal body, filament,
Absent in – cyanobacteria, and coccus
Pilli Less numerous, tubular shape
Fimbriae Bristle shape, Attachment
Plasmid Circular, double stranded, self-replicating, extra chromosomal
(non-essential
features- ex- Ti plasmid – Agrobacterium,
R – plasmid – Antibiotics resistance
Nucleoid Genomic DNA, essential genes present, single chromosome,
circular, histone absent
Ribosome 70S type, associate with plasma membrane form polyribosome
Inclusion bodies Role Storage, without membrane, insoluble form,
• Glycogen granule, sulfur granule,
• Phosphorus granule, gas vacuole (Cyanobacteria green sulfur
bacteria)
• Cyanophycean granule
Nutrition - Autotrophic
Chemoautotrophic Oxidation of inorganic compound, Recycling of Fe, S, N, P
Exp. Nitrifying bacteria (Nitrobacter, Nitrosomonas
Photoautotrophic Chl a and PS II present, Breaking of H2O, Oxygen By product –
oxygenic
Example -Cyanobacteria
Anoxygenic – not use H2, Chlorophyll absent, green sulfur bacteria,
purple sulfur bacteria , Green non-Sulphur bacteria ,purple non-Sulphur
bacteria
Heterotrophic
Saprophytic Example- Lactobacillus (most abundant bacteria)
Symbiotic Example - Rhizobium, Frankia
Parasitic Citrus canker, typhoid, cholera, tetanus (Disease)
Reproduction
Asexual Favorable – Fission, Unfavorable – Spore formation
Sexual -three type Some primitive mode of DNA transfer
Transformation DNA enter from medium
Transduction Transfer from one bacterium to other by virus
Conjugation Bacteria to bacteria plasmid (F-plasmid) transfer by conjugation tube
Type of Bacteria
Archaebacteria Differ in cell wall, 16s rRNA and cell membrane from eubacteria
Methanogen Anaerobic, produce methane
Halophile High salt conc
Thermoacidophile
(Thermus
aquaticus)
Living acid (H2SO4)
High temp. 80°C
Cyanobacteria Fresh water, marine, moist soil, Unicellular, Filamentous, colonial
Chl a on Chromatophore, Cyanophycean Granule, Flagella absent,
Blooms in
polluted water
Example-. Nostoc, Anabaena, Oscillatoria, Spirulina
Mycoplasma No cell wall, smallest size, Parasitic on plant or animal
Protista
Feature – Unicellular, eukaryotes, well defined nucleus, autotrophic (oxygenic) and
Heterotrophic
Flagella – 9 + (2) type, Membrane bound organelle, fusion to form zygote, meiosis present
Chrysophytes Dinoflagellates Eugleinoids
Habitat Diatoms and desmid (golden algae)
Marine water and freshwater
Marine water
Flagella Float passively – no flagella Two flagella,
longitudinal
and transverse
Cell
wall
Cellulose cell wall + silica
(overlapping) shell like soap
case
Stiff cellulose plate
Pigment Chl a mainly Chl a and
phycoerythrin
Chl a and Chl b – like
higher plant
Nutrition Oxygenic
Diatomaceous earth
(indestructible cell wall) Chief
producer – ocean ,filtration,
polishing
Oxygenic
Rapid multiplication
Form red tide (sea
appear
rod), Toxins release
Photosynthetic
(oxygenic) +
Predator (in absence
of light)
Saprophytic protist
Slime mould – Saprophytic, main stage – plasmodium, grow on decaying twig
Zygote? Grow in several feet ? Fruiting body develop ? Spore produces ? Disperse by Air current
Protozoan – Predator and Parasitic
Amoeboid Flagellated Ciliated Sporozoans
Fresh water +
Marine
water Pseudopodia
(to
capture prey and
movement)
Marine form have
silica shells
Free living or parasitic
Have flagella
Disease – sleeping
sickness(Trypanosoma)
Aquatic Thousands of cilia
Gullet – open
outside cell surface
Exp. Paramaecium
Spore stage
present
Exp.
Plasmodium
Fungi
Moist humid place, mainly filamentous (except yeast), network of hyphae is mycelium,
Hyphae (Two type) – Aseptate, multinucleated coenocytic or septate and branched
Cell wall – Chitin (mainly) and polysaccharide Nutrition-Saprophytic – main nutrition, Parasitic
Symbiotic – mycorrhizae (root of higher plant), Lichen – Fungi + Algae
Reproduction – Vegetative – Fission, budding, Fragmentation
Asexual – By spore, (Conidia and sporangiospore)
Sexual steps – Plasmogamy – (Dikaryon form) Karyogamy (Zygote form), Meiosis – (spore
form)
Basis of classification- fruiting body, spore(sexual) , fruiting body(sexual)
Algae Phycomycetes Ascomycetes Basidiomycetes Deuteromycetes
Habitat Some aquatic
and parasitic
Decomposer Decomposer Found in soil on
decaying organic
matter
Hyphae Aseptate Septate branched Septate branched septate and
branched
Vegetative Fragmentation Fragmentation
fission budding
Fragmentation Fragmentation
Page 5
Biology Booster Dose for NEET
Chapter- Biological Classification
Biological classification - process of grouping organisms according to certain similarities.
Linnaeus proposed the two kingdoms of classification - Animalia and Plantae
RH Whittaker suggested the five-kingdom classification.
Five kingdoms are as follows: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
Monera
Bacteria – Sole member
Habitat – Desert, Snow, Deep ocean (everywhere)
Shape – Coccus, Bacillus, (Most common) Vibrio, Spirillum
Structure
Glycocalyx
(mucopolysaccharide)
Slime layer – Loose
Capsule – thick, tough
Cell wall Peptidoglycan (NAG + NAN + chain of amino acid
Cell membrane Lipid by layer (Similar to eukaryotes)
Mesosomes Infolding of cell membrane, tubule, vesicle, lamellae,
Cell wall formation secretion process, respiration, DNA
replication
Chromatophore Chl a present, infolding only in cyanobacteria
Flagella present in motile cell – Hook, basal body, filament,
Absent in – cyanobacteria, and coccus
Pilli Less numerous, tubular shape
Fimbriae Bristle shape, Attachment
Plasmid Circular, double stranded, self-replicating, extra chromosomal
(non-essential
features- ex- Ti plasmid – Agrobacterium,
R – plasmid – Antibiotics resistance
Nucleoid Genomic DNA, essential genes present, single chromosome,
circular, histone absent
Ribosome 70S type, associate with plasma membrane form polyribosome
Inclusion bodies Role Storage, without membrane, insoluble form,
• Glycogen granule, sulfur granule,
• Phosphorus granule, gas vacuole (Cyanobacteria green sulfur
bacteria)
• Cyanophycean granule
Nutrition - Autotrophic
Chemoautotrophic Oxidation of inorganic compound, Recycling of Fe, S, N, P
Exp. Nitrifying bacteria (Nitrobacter, Nitrosomonas
Photoautotrophic Chl a and PS II present, Breaking of H2O, Oxygen By product –
oxygenic
Example -Cyanobacteria
Anoxygenic – not use H2, Chlorophyll absent, green sulfur bacteria,
purple sulfur bacteria , Green non-Sulphur bacteria ,purple non-Sulphur
bacteria
Heterotrophic
Saprophytic Example- Lactobacillus (most abundant bacteria)
Symbiotic Example - Rhizobium, Frankia
Parasitic Citrus canker, typhoid, cholera, tetanus (Disease)
Reproduction
Asexual Favorable – Fission, Unfavorable – Spore formation
Sexual -three type Some primitive mode of DNA transfer
Transformation DNA enter from medium
Transduction Transfer from one bacterium to other by virus
Conjugation Bacteria to bacteria plasmid (F-plasmid) transfer by conjugation tube
Type of Bacteria
Archaebacteria Differ in cell wall, 16s rRNA and cell membrane from eubacteria
Methanogen Anaerobic, produce methane
Halophile High salt conc
Thermoacidophile
(Thermus
aquaticus)
Living acid (H2SO4)
High temp. 80°C
Cyanobacteria Fresh water, marine, moist soil, Unicellular, Filamentous, colonial
Chl a on Chromatophore, Cyanophycean Granule, Flagella absent,
Blooms in
polluted water
Example-. Nostoc, Anabaena, Oscillatoria, Spirulina
Mycoplasma No cell wall, smallest size, Parasitic on plant or animal
Protista
Feature – Unicellular, eukaryotes, well defined nucleus, autotrophic (oxygenic) and
Heterotrophic
Flagella – 9 + (2) type, Membrane bound organelle, fusion to form zygote, meiosis present
Chrysophytes Dinoflagellates Eugleinoids
Habitat Diatoms and desmid (golden algae)
Marine water and freshwater
Marine water
Flagella Float passively – no flagella Two flagella,
longitudinal
and transverse
Cell
wall
Cellulose cell wall + silica
(overlapping) shell like soap
case
Stiff cellulose plate
Pigment Chl a mainly Chl a and
phycoerythrin
Chl a and Chl b – like
higher plant
Nutrition Oxygenic
Diatomaceous earth
(indestructible cell wall) Chief
producer – ocean ,filtration,
polishing
Oxygenic
Rapid multiplication
Form red tide (sea
appear
rod), Toxins release
Photosynthetic
(oxygenic) +
Predator (in absence
of light)
Saprophytic protist
Slime mould – Saprophytic, main stage – plasmodium, grow on decaying twig
Zygote? Grow in several feet ? Fruiting body develop ? Spore produces ? Disperse by Air current
Protozoan – Predator and Parasitic
Amoeboid Flagellated Ciliated Sporozoans
Fresh water +
Marine
water Pseudopodia
(to
capture prey and
movement)
Marine form have
silica shells
Free living or parasitic
Have flagella
Disease – sleeping
sickness(Trypanosoma)
Aquatic Thousands of cilia
Gullet – open
outside cell surface
Exp. Paramaecium
Spore stage
present
Exp.
Plasmodium
Fungi
Moist humid place, mainly filamentous (except yeast), network of hyphae is mycelium,
Hyphae (Two type) – Aseptate, multinucleated coenocytic or septate and branched
Cell wall – Chitin (mainly) and polysaccharide Nutrition-Saprophytic – main nutrition, Parasitic
Symbiotic – mycorrhizae (root of higher plant), Lichen – Fungi + Algae
Reproduction – Vegetative – Fission, budding, Fragmentation
Asexual – By spore, (Conidia and sporangiospore)
Sexual steps – Plasmogamy – (Dikaryon form) Karyogamy (Zygote form), Meiosis – (spore
form)
Basis of classification- fruiting body, spore(sexual) , fruiting body(sexual)
Algae Phycomycetes Ascomycetes Basidiomycetes Deuteromycetes
Habitat Some aquatic
and parasitic
Decomposer Decomposer Found in soil on
decaying organic
matter
Hyphae Aseptate Septate branched Septate branched septate and
branched
Vegetative Fragmentation Fragmentation
fission budding
Fragmentation Fragmentation
Asexual
spore
Endogenous
(motile and
nonmotile)
Exogenous –
conidia (on
conidiophore)
Absent conidia present
Sexual
spore
Endogamous
(dikaryon not
visible)
zygospore show
meiosis
Dikaryon visible
Endogenous
inside Ascus
develop on
ascocarp (Spore
ascospore)
Delayed karyogamy,
Basidiocarp have
basidium
develop
basidiospore by
karyogamy and
meiosis(exogenous)
Perfect (sexual)
stage absent
Example Albugo(white
rust
crucifer)
Rhizopus, mucor
Yeast(non-
filamentous)
Claviceps (LSD)
Aspergillus
(Aflatoxin, citric
acid)Penicillium
(Morels and
truffles (edible)
Neurospora
(Biochemical and
genetic studies
Toadstool, puff ball
Agaricus-edible
ustilago, smut,
Puccinia - Rust
Trichoderma,
Colletotrichum,
Alternaria
Virus
Acellular and non-cellular, not find place in classification, obligate parasite, intracellular parasite,
enzyme present but no pathway
First discover virus – TMV
Pasture Gave Term virus
Ivanowsky (1892 Mosaic disease to tobacco, virus pass through bacterial proof filter
Beijerinek (1898) Structure of infected plant, cause fresh infection, contagium, vivum fluidum
Stanley (1935) Crystallize virus
Virus Protein coat + Genetic material
Protein coat Unit capsomere, Helical or polyhedral
Genetic material Bacteriophage – ds DNA
Read More