Microbiology Chapter 4
Basic shapes of bacteria
1. Coccus 2. Bacillus 3. Spiral
Distinguishing characteristics of prokaryotes
1. DNA isn't enclosed w/in membrane-singular circularly arranged chromosome 2. DNA not associated w/histones 3. Lack membrane enclosed organelles 4. Cell walls almost always contain complex polysaccharide peptidoglycan 5. Divide by binary fission
Parts of a flagellum
1. Filament 2. Flagellin 3. Hook 4. Basal body
Two types of hairlike appendages in gram negative bacteria
1. Fimbriae 2. Pilli
Structure of plasma membrane
1. Lipid bilayer with hydrophilic polar head and nonpolar hydrophobic tails 2. Have protein molecules like peripheral proteins, integral proteins, and transmembrane proteins
More shapes
1. Stella-Star shaped 2. Haloarcula- rectangular flat cells (halophilic archaea) 3. Triangular cells
Two types of motility of pilli
1. Twitching motility 2. Gliding motility
Distinguishing characteristics of eukaryotes
1.DNA found in nucleus which is separated from cytoplasm by nuclear membrane and DNA is found in multiple chromosomes 2.DNA is consistently associated w/chromosomal proteins called histones 3. Have a # of membrane enclosed organelles 4. Cell walls are chemically simple 5. Cell division using mitosis-chromosomes replicate and an identical set is distributed into each of two nuclei. Guided by mitotic spindle
Extracellular polymeric substance (EPS)
A glycocalyx that helps cells in a biofilm attach to their target environment and to each other
Plasma (cytoplasmic) membrane
Aka inner membrane, is a thin structure lying inside the cell wall and enclosing the cytoplasm of the cell, consists primarily of phospholipids in prokaryotes
Motility
Altered by the basal body of flagella, bacteria cells can alter the speed and direction of rotation of flagella and thus are capable of various patterns, the ability of an organism to move by itself
Core polysaccharide
Attached to lipid A and contains unusual sugars, provides stability
Types of prokaryotes
Bacteria and archaea
Monomorphic
Bacteria maintain a single shape mostly, but environmental conditions can alter the shape
Atrichous
Bacteria that lack flagella
Peptidoglycan
Bacterial cell wall is composed of a macromolecular network of this, which is present alone or in combo w/ other substances. Composed of repeating disaccharide attached by polypeptides to form a lattice that surrounds entire cell. Disaccharide portion made of monosaccharides N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM)
Integral proteins
Can be removed from membrane only after disrupting lipid bilayer and most penetrate membrane completely
Pleomorphic
Can have many shapes, not just one
Fimbriae
Can occur at poles of bacterial cell or can be distributed over entire surface of cell, have tendency to adhere to each other and to surfaces. Help form biofilms and help bacteria adhere to epithelial surfaces In body
Functions of glycocalyx
Can protect pathogenic bacteria from phagocytosis by cells of host, important component of biofilms, and can protect a cell against dehydration and viscosity may inhibit movement of nutrients out of the cell
Protoplast
Cellular contents that remain surrounded by the plasma membrane may remain intact if lysis doesn't occur, this is the wall-less cell and is typically spherical and still capable of carrying on metabolism
Repellant
Chemical signal is negative, and the frequency of tumbles increases as bacteria move away from stimulus
Chemotaxis
Chemical stimuli of bacteria
What happens when fimbriae are absent
Colonization can't happen and no disease ensues
Outer membrane of gram negative cell
Consists of lipopolysaccharides, lipoproteins, and phospholipids. Provides barrier to certain antibiotics
Vibrios
Curved rods
Application of alcohol
Dehydrates peptidoglycan of gram + cells to make it more impermeable to the crystal violet iodine but on gram - cells it dissolves outer membrane and leaves small holes in thin peptidoglycan layer thru which crystal violet diffuse
Penicillin
Destroys bacteria by interfering with formation of peptide cross-bridges of peptidoglycan thus preventing formation of functional cell wall
Lysis
Destruction caused by rupture of plasma membrane and loss of cytoplasm
Streptococci
Divide and remain attached in chain like patterns
Sarcinae
Divide in 3 planes and remain attached in cube like groups of eight
Staphylococci
Divide in multiple planes and form grape like clusters or broad sheets
Tetrads
Divide in two planes and remain in groups of four
Gram negative cell walls
Don't contain teichoic acids, consist of one or very few layers of peptidoglycan and an outer membrane. Peptidoglycan bonded to lipoproteins in outer membrane and is in periplasm
Axial filaments (endoflagella)
Especially found in spirochetes, these are bundles of fibrils that arise at the ends of the cell beneath an outer sheath and spiral around the cell
O polysaccharide
Extends outward from core polysaccharide and is composed of sugar molecules. Functions as an antigen and is useful for distinguishing species of gram negative bacteria
Amphitrichous
Flagella at both poles of the cell
Polar
Flagella that are at one or both poles or ends of the cell
Peritrichous
Flagella that are distributed over the entire cell
Monotrichous
Flagella that are polar and are a single flagellum at one pole
H antigen
Flagellar protein that is useful for distinguishing among serovars
Bacteria shape size
From 0.2 to 2.0 nanometers in diameter and 2-8 nanometers in length
Periplasm
Gel like fluid between the outer membrane and the plasma membrane, has a high concentration of degradation enzymes and transport proteins.
Flagellin
Globular protein of flagella that is arranged in several chains that intertwine and form a helix around a hollow core
Possible structures external to the prokaryotic cell wall
Glycocalyx, flagella, axial filaments, fimbriae, sand pili
Safranin
Gram negative bacteria are colorless after alcohol wash so this turns cell pink or red
Spirochetes
Helical and flexible, move by means of axial filaments which resemble flagella but are contained within a flexible external sheath
Spirilla
Helical shape like a corkscrew and fairly rigid bodies
Attractant
If a stimulus has a chemotactic signal that is positive
Capsule
If glycocalyx is organized and firmly attached to the cell wall. Presence of this can be determined by negative staining
Slime layer
If glycocalyx is unorganized and only loosely attached to the cell wall
Teichoic acids
In cell walls of gram positive bacteria, consist primarily of an alcohol and phosphate. Two types are lipoteichoic acid and wall teichoic acids. Regulates movement of cations and polysaccharides provide antigenic variation
Hook of flagella
In flagella attached to Flagellin and is slightly wider and contains a different protein
Mycolic acid
In mycobacterium and nocardia is a hydrophobic waxy lipid in their cell wall that prevents uptake of dyes including those used in the gram stain. Forms a layer outside thin layer of peptidoglycan
Diplobacilli
In pairs after division, always divide across short axis so fewer groupings then cocci
Transmembrane proteins
Integral proteins that penetrate the membrane completely
Archaea cell walls
Lack cell walls or have unusual walls composed of polysaccharides and proteins but not peptidoglycan and contain substance similar to peptidoglycan called pseudomurein which contains N-acetylalosaminuronic acid instead of NAM and lacks D-amino acids found in bacterial cell walls. Cannot be gram stained but appear gram - bc don't have peptidoglycan
Phototaxis
Light stimulus of bacteria
Wall teichoic acid
Links to peptidoglycan
Lipoteichoic acid
Links to plasma membrane
Lipid A
Lipid portion of LPS and is embedded in the top layer of the outer membrane. When gram - bacteria die they release lipid A which functions as an endotoxin. Also responsible for symptoms associated with infections by gram - bacteria (fever, dilation of blood vessels, shock, and blood clotting)
Glycolipids
Lipids attached to carbohydrates, help protect and lubricate cell and involved in cell to cell interactions
Flagella filament
Long outermost region of flagella, constant in diameter and contains the globular protein Flagellin
Selective permeability
Main function of plasma membrane is to serve as a selective barrier through which materials enter and exit the cell
Hairlike appendages of gram negative bacteria
Many gram negative bacteria contain hairlike appendages that are shorter, straighter, and thinner then flagella and are used for attachment and transfer of DNA rather than motility. Consist of a protein called pillin arranged helically around central core
Streptobacilli
Occur in chains
Cell wall
Of bacterial cell, a complex semirigid structure responsible for the shape of the cell, surrounds underlying fragile plasma membrane. Prevents bacterial cells from rupturing when the water pressure inside the cell is greater than that outside the cell, helps maintain shape, and point of anchorage for flagella.
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS)
Of outer membrane, large complex molecule that contains lipids and carbohydrates and consists of three components 1) lipid A 2) core polysaccharide 3) an O polysaccharide
Spiral bacteria
One or more twists
Coccobacilli
Oval and look a lot like cocci
Basal body
Part of flagella, anchors flagellum to cell wall and plasma membrane
Fluid mosaic model
Phospholipids and protein molecules in membranes aren't static but move freely within membrane surface
Chromatophores (thylakoids)
Pigments and enzymes involved in photosynthesis are found in infoldings of plasma membrane that extend into cytoplasm
Twitching motility
Pilli extends by addition of subunits of pilin, makes contact with a surface or another cell, and then reacts (power stroke) as pillin subunits are disassembled (grappling hook model)
Lophotrichous
Polar flagella that are a tuft of flagella coming from one pole
Mycoplasma
Prokaryote that have no cell walls or very little wall material, these are the smallest known bacteria that can grow and reproduce outside living host cells. First mistaken for viruses bc of size and lack of cell walls. Have sterols in plasma membrane that protect from lysis
Glycocalyx
Prokaryotes secrete this on the surface of the cell, means sugar coat, general term for substances that surround the cell -viscous gelatinous polymer that is external to the cell wall and composed of polysaccharide or polypeptide
Glycoproteins
Proteins attached to carbohydrates, help protect and lubricate cell and involved in cell to cell interactions
Porins
Proteins in outer membrane that form channels and permit the passage of molecules like nucleotides, disaccharides, peptides, amino acids, vitamin B12 and iron
Bacillus
Rod shaped, "Little staffs"
Movement of bacteria
Run in a continuous direction and tumble to change direction
L forms
Some members of the genus Proteus as well as other genera can lose their cell walls and swell into these irregularly shaped cells. May form spontaneously or in response to penicillin or lysozyme and can live and divide repeatedly or return to walled state
Flagella
Some prokaryotic cells have this, long filamentous appendages that Propel bacteria
Lysozyme
Specifically targets cell wall of prokaryote and damages it
Coccus
Spherical, "berries" can be oval, round, elongated, or flattened on one side
Spiral
Spiral shaped
Crystal violet stain
Stains both gram positive and gram negative cells purple because the due enters cytoplasm of both cell types
Structure of polypeptide
Tetrapeptide side chains-4 amino acids attached to NAMs in the backbone, occur in alternating pattern of D and L forms. Parallel Tetrapeptide side chains bonded by peptide cross-bridge
Single bacilli
The majority, single rods
Taxis
The movement of a bacterium toward or away from a particular stimulus
Polypeptides
The peptide portion of peptidoglycan
Gliding motility
Type of motility associated with pilli, the smooth gliding movement of myxobacteria.
Conjugation (sex) pilli
Type of pilli that are used to bring bacteria together allowing transfer of DNA from one cell to another. This pilus called an F+ cell connects to receptors on the surface of another bacterium of its own species or a different species
Pilli
Usually longer then fimbriae and number only one or two per cell. Involved in motility and DNA transfer.
Iodine
When applied it forms large crystals with dye that are too large to escape thru the cell wall
Spheroplast
When lysozyme is applied to gram - cells the wall isn't destroyed to same extent as gram + cells and some of outer membrane remains and cellular contents, plasma membrane, and remaining outer wall layer are called this which is also a spherical structure
Osmotic lysis
When protoplasts and spheroplasts burst in pure water or very dilute salt or sugar solutions bc water molecules from surrounding fluid rapidly move into and enlarge the cell which has a much lower internal concentration of water
Diplococci
When they divide to reproduce they remain attached to each other, these are pairs
Peripheral proteins
are easily removed from membrane by mild treatments and lie at inner and outer surface of membrane
Serovars
variations within a species of gram negative bacteria