Prokaryotic Cells Flashcards

1
Q

What are the key features of prokaryotic cells and what do they do?

A
  • Fimbrae/Pili (Attachment)
  • Nucleoid (Circular chromosome)
  • Plasma membrane (Cell regulation)
  • Cell wall (cell integrity)
  • Glycocalyx (Extracellular: Cell protection)
  • Flagella (Movement)
  • Ribosomes (Cell movement)
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2
Q

What are the three types of Prokaryotic cells (shapes)?

A
  • Cocci
  • Rods
  • Spirals
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3
Q

Describe the bacterial genome

A
  • Typically a single circular chromosome (nucleoid)
  • No nuclear membrane, however, the chromosome is restricted to defined region of the bacterial cell known as the nucleoid
  • Other small circular self-replicating DNA molecules can be found in the cytosol (separate to the main chromosome) - these are known as ‘plasmids’
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4
Q

Describe the function of the cell wall of bacteria: peptidoglycan

A

Function:
1. Rigid macromolecular layer that provides strength to cell
2. Protects cell from osmotic lysis and confers cell shape

Peptidoglycan = mesh-like structure

Prokaryotes that lack cell walls = Mycoplasmas (group of pathogenic bacteria)

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5
Q

Describe the structure of peptidoglycan

A
  • Long carbohydrate chains that are formed from alternating units of NAG (N-acetylglucosamine) and NAM (N-acetylmuramic acid).
  • The carbohydrate chains are held together by peptide cross-bridges
  • Then sheets/layers of carbohydrate chains held together by peptide-cross bridges are connected together by tetra peptide side chains.

Transpeptidase = the enzyme that cross-links the peptidoglycan chains to form rigid cell walls

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6
Q

Describe the Gram stain - 1877, the most common gram stain reference bacteria (which will be used in Lab 5)

A

A gram stain of mixed staphylococcus aureus which are gram-positive cocci, in purple. And escherichia coli, gram-negative bacilli, in red, the most common gram stain reference bacteria.

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7
Q

What is the gram stain procedure?

A
  1. Application of crystal violet (purple dye: this stains all cells
  2. Application of iodine (mordant): makes the crystal violet bigger so it can’t come out of the cells as easily as it gets in
  3. Alcohol wash (decolorisation): in gram-negative cells the colour gets washed out. in gram-positive cells the colour stays
  4. Application of safranin (counterstain): dyes both cells pink but the purples ones stays purple because its a darker colour
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8
Q

What is the structure of a Gram-positive bacterial cell wall?

A

Its cell wall is a very thick peptidoglycan layer (20-80 nm)
- Peptidoglycan traps crystal violet, which masks the red safranin die

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9
Q

What is the structure of a Gram-negative bacterial cell wall?

A

Its cell wall has an outer membrane and then a thin layer of peptidoglycan (5-10nm)
- Crystal violet is easily washed away, revealing red safranin dye

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10
Q

What is the structure and function of bacterial flagella?

A

Function: some bacteria are capable of movement in liquid medium

How?
- Motile bacteria produce flagella
- Long flexible appendage resembling ‘tails’
- Proteinaceous 10-20nm in diameter, 5-10/cell
- Number of flagella and location on cell surface varies
- Act like a propeller: cell rotates them to move through a liquid medium

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11
Q

Describe a bacterias Tactic response: Chemotaxis

A

Chemotaxis: bacteria move along a concentration gradient towards a chemical attractant (positive) OR away form a chemical repellant (negative)

Experiment findings:
- Control: all the bacteria are evenly dispersed
- Attractant: bacteria are trying to get into the tube with the attractant (favourable conditions)
- Repellant: bacteria are trying to get away from tube with the repellant (unfavourable conditions)

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12
Q

Describe the first type of bacterial adherence factor: Fimbriae

A

These can be called Adherence Pili or Adhesins
- Function: structures with adhesive properties that cause bacteria to adhere/stick to surfactse
- Not all bacteria possess fimbriae: it is an inherited trait
- Can be mistaken for flagella but are NOT involved in motility
- Much shorter and more numerous than flagella ‘hair-like’, 100-1000/cell and 2-8nm in diameter. 1 micrometer in length.

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13
Q

Describe the second type of bacterial adherence factor: Pili/Pilus

A

Can also be called sex Pili or F Pili.
- Attachment to other bacteria
- Transfer genetic material from one cell to another
- The genetic transfer is called Conjugation
- Conjugation is a form of Horizontal Gene Transfer

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14
Q

Define Glycocalyx and what are the two types?

A

Glyxocalyx = a gelatinous polysaccharide and/or peptide outer covering that forms a sticky meshwork of fibres

  • Capsule: Glycocalyx organised into a defined structure attached firmly to cell wall
  • Slime Layer: Gycocalyx disorganised without cell shape, attached loosely to cell wall
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15
Q

What are the functions that capsules can serve? (There are many more, but name the two we are focusing on)

A
  • Virulence factors: protecting bacteria from phagocytosis and engulfment by immune cells
  • Prevent cell from drying out
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16
Q

Describe bacterial endospores and their function

A
  • Bacterial endospores are formed during unfavourable growth conditions and germinate under favourable conditions (protect from stress)
  • The spore is the cells genome with protective things around it that are very resistant
  • Only present in some gram-positive bacteria: members of the genus bacillus and clostridium

Stressors that trigger endospore formation:
- Nutrient starvation
- High cell density