Lecture 5: Cell Structure Flashcards
What are the two storage structures in bacteria and what do they store? Give bacterial examples.
- Poly-hydroxybutyrate, glycogen - carbon storage (Ralstonia eutropha)
- Polyphosphate granules - phosphate storage
What are gas vesicles, what do they do, and what are they made of?
Gas vesicles are a form of bouyancy regulator, allowing bacteria to alter how much they ‘float’. They are made of proteins and are GAS PERMEABLE but NOT WATER PERMEABLE.
What do magnetosomes do? What are they composed of?
Function: orientation of the bacterium
Composition: magnetite particles
What is meant by the term magneto-taxis?
What is the purpose of using northern and southern hemispheres to magneto-tax? What bacteria can this be seen in?
Magneto-taxis: orienting and coordinating movement in relation to earths magnetic field
This allows cells to efficiently find their optimum oxygen concentration at the microaerobic oxic-anoxic transition zone (OATZ) in water columns. Alters whether their flagella move clockwise or counter clockwise
Gram negative bacteria
What are endospores? what bacteria can this be seen in?
A second form of life cycle phase in some gram-negative bacteria, occurs during SPORULATION.
Very hardy.
What are external bacterial structures? what do they do?
- Flagellum - movement: used in various ways to provide movement
- Pili (fimbrae) - 10-250/cell; attachment, sex, and motility
What are axial filaments? Where are they seen within the cell? How do they work?
Also termed “endoflagella”.
They are located between cell wall and outer sheath (periplasmic)
They are anchored at one cell wall and rotation causes cell to move like a cork screw
What is the Glycocalyx coat? What is it composed of?
A slimey outer layer.
It is a glycoprotein coat (protein and carbohydrates)
What are the two forms of glycocalyx coat?
- Slime (loosely attached coat) - easily washed off - cause problems in industries with pipes where they leave and abundance of slime (plumbing)
- Capsule (firmly attached coat) - can be seen with gram stains
What are the functions of the glycocalyx?
- Protection against: drying, phagocytosis, buffer between cell-environment
- Adhesion
- Cell-cell communication
- Modulation of immune responses
- Pathogenicity