Lecture 5: Cell Structure Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the two storage structures in bacteria and what do they store? Give bacterial examples.

A
  1. Poly-hydroxybutyrate, glycogen - carbon storage (Ralstonia eutropha)
  2. Polyphosphate granules - phosphate storage
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2
Q

What are gas vesicles, what do they do, and what are they made of?

A

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.

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3
Q

What do magnetosomes do? What are they composed of?

A

Function: orientation of the bacterium
Composition: magnetite particles

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4
Q

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?

A

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

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5
Q

What are endospores? what bacteria can this be seen in?

A

A second form of life cycle phase in some gram-negative bacteria, occurs during SPORULATION.

Very hardy.

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6
Q

What are external bacterial structures? what do they do?

A
  1. Flagellum - movement: used in various ways to provide movement
  2. Pili (fimbrae) - 10-250/cell; attachment, sex, and motility
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7
Q

What are axial filaments? Where are they seen within the cell? How do they work?

A

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

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8
Q

What is the Glycocalyx coat? What is it composed of?

A

A slimey outer layer.

It is a glycoprotein coat (protein and carbohydrates)

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9
Q

What are the two forms of glycocalyx coat?

A
  1. Slime (loosely attached coat) - easily washed off - cause problems in industries with pipes where they leave and abundance of slime (plumbing)
  2. Capsule (firmly attached coat) - can be seen with gram stains
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10
Q

What are the functions of the glycocalyx?

A
  1. Protection against: drying, phagocytosis, buffer between cell-environment
  2. Adhesion
  3. Cell-cell communication
  4. Modulation of immune responses
  5. Pathogenicity
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