Chapter 4 Flashcards
Eukaryotic Cell
Nucleus: Present Cell Type:Usually multicellular True Membrane bound Nucleus: Present DNA wrapping on proteins: packed with histones. Ribosomes: larger
Prokaryotic Cell
Nucleus: Absent
Cell Type: Usually unicellular
True Membrane bound Nucleus: Absent
DNA wrapping on proteins:Multiple proteins act together to fold and condense prokaryotic DNA
What cells contain peptidoglycan?
Bacterial cell walls are made up of peptidoglycan
What makes up the cell walls of organisms which do not contain peptidoglycan?
Many eurkaryotes have cell walls made of cellulose (all plants and some algae), the cell wall in most fungi is made of chitin, yeasts use glucan and mannan. Other eukaryotes use a glycocalyx as its most outer covering.
What is peptidoglycan anyway?
Peptidoglycan consists of a repeating disaccharide attached by polypeptides to form a lattice that surrounds and protects the entire cell.
What stain identifies cell wall differences in organisms which do contain peptidoglycan and why is it clinically (medically) important?
How does this stain work?
The Gram Stain.
The detection of gram negative bacteria has profound consequences on treatment methods. This is due to the fact that gram negative bacteria have a strong negative charge on their outer membrane, which helps them evade phagocytosis and lysing.
the organisms?
Prokaryotes are able to grow faster in number versus eukaryotes.
What are the names and functions of the various types of glycocalyx?
Glycocalyx (meaning sugar coat) is the general term for substances that surround cells.
Bacterial glycocalyx can be composed of polysaccharide, polypeptide, or both.
What cells possess glycocalyx?
Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
What are flagella?
Long filamentous appendages that propel the cell.
How does flagella differ between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells?
Prokaryotic flagella rotate while eukaryotic flagella move in a wavelike manner.
How can flagella be arranged on a cell?
Atrichous (without flagella)
Peritrichous (distributed over the entire cell)
polar (at one or both ends of the cell).
If polar, flagella may be monotrichous (a single flagellum at one pole), lophotrichous (a tuft of flagella coming from one pole), or amphitrichous (flagella at both ends of the cell).
How do axial filaments differ?
Axial filaments are bundles of fibrils that arise at the ends of the cell beneath an outer sheath and spiral around the cell.
How are flagella and axial filaments beneficial to cells?
It allows the cell to move in response to stimulus, presence or absence of food
What are pili? What are their functions?
Appendages on a bacterial cell used for conjugation and gliding motility