Bacterial Cell Structure (continued)

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1 Bacterial Cell Structure (continued) You are here.

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Bacterial Cell Structure (continued). You are here. Peptidoglycan structure. Bacteria typically face hypotonic environments Peptidoglycan provides support, Limits expansion of cell membrane Bacteria need other protection from hypertonic situations. Gram negative cell wall. Outer membrane. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Bacterial Cell Structure (continued)

Page 1: Bacterial Cell Structure (continued)

1Bacterial Cell Structure (continued)

You are here.

Page 2: Bacterial Cell Structure (continued)

2Peptidoglycan structure•Bacteria typically face hypotonic environments•Peptidoglycan provides support, Limits expansion of cell membrane•Bacteria need other protection from hypertonic situations

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3Gram negative cell wall

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4Outer membrane

• Lipid bilayer membrane– Inner and outer leaflets

• Inner leaflet made of phospholipids; outer leaflet is made of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)

• LPS = endotoxin– Proteins for transport of substances

• Porins: transmembrane proteins– Barrier to diffusion of various substances

• Lipoprotein: anchors outer membrane to PG

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5Structure of LPS

www.med.sc.edu:85/fox/ cell_envelope.htm

extends from cell surface.

contains odd sugarse.g. KDO.

Gln-P and fatty acids take the place of phospholipids.

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7Periplasmic space:

• A lot like cytoplasm, with– Peptidoglycan layer– Proteins that aid in transport– Proteins that break down molecules– Proteins that help in synthesis.

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8Glycocalyx: capsules and slime layers

www.activatedsludge.info/ resources/visbulk.asp

capsule cell

“Sugar covering”: capsules are firmly attached, slime layers are loose.

Multiple advantages to cells:prevent dehydrationabsorb nutrientsprotection from predators, WBCsprotection from biocides (as part of biofilms)attachment to surfaces and site of attachment by others.

S-layers are highly structured protein layers that function like capsules

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9Fimbriae and pili

www.ncl.ac.uk/dental/oralbiol/ oralenv/images/sex1.jpg

Both are appendages made of protein

Singular: fimbria, pilus

Both used for attachment

Fimbriae: to surfaces (incl. host cells) and other bacteria.Pili: to other bacteria for exchanging DNA (“sex”).

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10Flagella

www.ai.mit.edu/people/ tk/ce/flagella-s.gif www.bmb.leeds.ac.uk/.../icu8/ introduction/bacteria.html

•Flagella: protein appendages for swimming through liquid or across wet surfaces.•Rotate like propellers.•Different from eukaryotic flagella.

Arrangements on cells: polar, Lophotrichous,amphitrichous,peritrichous.

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11Prokaryotic vs. eukaryotic flagella

img.sparknotes.com/.../monera/ gifs/flagella.gif www.scu.edu/SCU/Departments/ BIOL/Flagella.jpg

Prokaryotic flagella:

•Made of protein subunits

•Protrude through cell wall and cell membrane.

•Stiff, twirl like a propeller

Eukaryotic flagella:

•A bundle (9+2) of microtubules (made of protein)

•Covered by cell membrane

•Whipping action

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12Chemotaxis• Bacteria change how they move in

response to chemicals• Bacteria move toward attractants

(e.g. nutrients).• Bacteria move away from

repellants.• In this figure, bacteria use up

nutrients in the agar, then move outward to where more nutrients are, producing rings of growth.

http://class.fst.ohio-state.edu/fst636/SP2004_mustafa/chemotaxis%20demo_SP04.htm

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13Runs and Tumbles: bacteria find their way

http://www.bgu.ac.il/~aflaloc/bioca/motil1.gif

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14Spirochetes have internal flagella

• Axial filament: a bundle of internal flagella– Between cell membrane and outer membrane

in spirochetes– Filament rotates, bacterium corkscrews

through mediumSome bacteria move without flagella• Gliding

– No visible structures, requires solid surface– Slime usually involved.

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15Axial filaments

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://microvet.arizona.edu/Courses/MIC420/lecture_notes/spirochetes/gifs/spirochete_crossection.gif&imgrefurl=http://microvet.arizona.edu/Courses/MIC420/lecture_notes/spirochetes/spirochete_cr.html&h=302&w=400&sz=49&tbnid=BOVdHqepF7UJ:&tbnh=90&tbnw=119&start=1&prev=/images%3Fq%3Daxial%2Bfilament%2Bbacteria%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26sa%3DG

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16Gliding Motility

Movement on a solid surface.No visible organelles of locomotion.Cells produce, move in slime trails.Unrelated organism glide:myxobacteria, flavobacteria, cyanobacteria; appear to glide by different mechanisms.Cells glide in groups, singly, andcan reverse directions.

www.microbiology.med.umn.edu/ myxobacteria/trails.jpg

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17From the membrane in: the bacterial cytoplasm• Cytoplasm is a gel made of

water, salts, LMW molecules, and lots of proteins.

• DNA = nucleoid, w/ proteins• Plasmids = small circular DNA• Ribosomes: site of protein

synthesis.

Cytoplasm may also contain inclusions, gas vacuoles, extended membrane systems, or magnetosomes. But generally NO membrane-bound organelles.

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18Inclusions and granules

• Storage molecules found as small bodies within cytoplasm.

• Can be organic (e.g. PHB or glycogen) or inorganic (Sulfur, polyphosphate.– PHB, a type of PHA, degradable

plastic (polyester); glycogen, a polymer of glucose.

– Sulfur, a metabolic by-product; polyphosphate, polymer of PO4

www.qub.ac.uk/envres/EarthAirWater/ phosphate_removal.htm

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19Magnetosomes

www.calpoly.edu/~rfrankel/ mtbphoto.html

Membrane coated pieces of magnetite, assist bacteria in moving to microaerophilic environments. An organelle?North is down.

Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum

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20How things get in (and out) of cells• Eukaryotic cells

– Have transport proteins in membrane– Have a cytoskeleton made of microtubules

• Allows for receptor mediated endocytosis, phagotcytosis, etc.• Cell membrane pinches in, creates vesicle

• Prokaryotic cells– Have very little cytoskeleton– Can NOT carry out endocytosis– Entry of materials into cell by diffusion or transport

processes ONLY.

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21Illustrations: entry into cells

http://bio.winona.msus.edu/bates/genbio/images/endocytosis.gifhttp://www.gla.ac.uk/~jmb17n/Teaching/JHteaching/Endocytosis/figures/howdo.jpg

Both prokaryotes and eukaryotes.

Only eukaryotes.

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22How molecules get through the membrane

Small molecules like gases can diffuse through the bilayer.

Larger or more hydrophilic molecules require transport proteins.

Active transport requires metabolic energy.

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23Review of eukaryotic cells

Mitochondrion Plasmalemma (cell membrane)nucleus, ribosomeslysozomeendoplasmic reticulumgolgi body

www.steve.gb.com/ science/cell_biology.html