Week 12 Recall Questions Flashcards
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What it the function of a cell wall?
Overall cell walls provide
Structure and shape, and protection from osmotic stress, lysis or disintegration, chemicals and biological responses
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What is the function of a cell wall in prokaryotes?
Most pro- have cell walls
Function:
Structure (semi-rigid) and shape, protection from osmotic stress, lysis or disintegration, chemicals and biological responses
Determines if cell shape is cocci, bacilli, cubed shaped , helical, spiral.
B/c water can move freely through cell walls, cell wall prevents bursting of cell by counteracting the osmotic pressure from the inside.
Can mechanically make wall harder to protect from pathogens or predators or immune system to attack cells
Type and composition of cell well is a diagnostic trait
— Archaeal cell walls are diff from all other groups
— bacteria are grouped in gram + and gram - based on their cell wall structure
Eukaryotic cell walls:
What is the function of a cell wall in eukaryotes?
Function:
- determine shape and size and provide support (outside scaffold) (support stronger than ECM)
- mediate cell to cell interactions
- protection from environmental stress: mechanical, osmotic, pH, pathogens
(Cell wall much more rigid and firm outer structure than ECM)
- Occur is most main eukaryotic groups
— cell walls of different organisms such as plants, fungi, and protists, are distinctly different. Made from different cell wall components and are used to characterize groups of organisms = part of scientific classification.
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What are similarities and differences in the structure of bacterial, plant and fungal cell walls?
Bacterial (unicellular prokaryote):
- only ones that produce peptidoglycan (PG) layer
Plant (multicellular eukaryotes):
Fungal (uni- or multicellular eukaryotes):
Prokaryotic cell walls:
How is peptidoglycan constructed?
Is a large polymer
Is made from linked glucose derivatives (NAM + NAG) in long chains, cross linked by shorten polypeptide chains
Process of synthesis of it is still largely unknown
Prokaryotic cell walls:
How do common penicillin-based antibiotics work?
Antibiotics are compounds generally produced by microorganisms to defend against bacteria.
Some common antibiotics like penicillin, beta-lactams, interfere with PG cross-linkages
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What is the function or teichoic acid?
teichoic acid is a polymer that makes cells walls more resistant to high temps, salt []s, and 1 kind of antibiotic
Prokaryotic cell walls:
How does the gram staining procedure work?
- Cells are stained with crystal violet
- Then with gram’s iodine, which forms a complex of crystal violet and iodine
- Cells are rinsed with ethanol
- counter stained with safranin
Cells that retain crystal violet-iodine complex appear purple when viewed under microscope = gram +
Cells where crystal violet-iodine complex is washed off by ethanol are colourless until stained with safranin which appear pink under the microscope = gram -.
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What are similarities and differences between a gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial cell?
Both have peptidoglycan (PG)
Gram +:
- thick PG layer (outside plasma membrane) makes cell wall very rigid
- therefore, during gram strain procedure it traps violet stain, that can’t be washed out = dark purple.
- the stain remains when washed with acid = making this an acid fast stain
- contains teichoic acid polymers, making cells more resistant to high temps, salt []s, 1 kind of antibiotic
Ex:
- harmless/beneficial: Staphylococcus epidermis (part of protective layer of skin), Lactobacillus sp. (use to make yogurt)
- pathogenic: Staphylococcus aureus, S. pneumoniae, Bacillus anthracis (anthrax pathogen)
Gram -:
- all other bacteria are considered gram -.
- thin PG layer covered by second (porous/permeable) membrane.
- appears pink under microscope
- outer membrane covers PG layer and sometimes contains lipopolysaccharides (LPS) with lipid A (endotoxin).
— when lipid A [] in body are very high, immune system can get out of control, sending body into shock and potential death
Ex:
- harmless/beneficial: many E.coli strains
- pathogenic: Salmonella sp., Yersenia pestis (plague bacteria), Treponema pallidum (syphilis), STDs such as chlamydia and gonorrhea.
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What are some medically important (pathogenic) examples of bacteria?
E.coli
— if get infected if pathogenic E.coli strain, it starts replicating, entering bloodstream and can result in an out of control immune response caused or triggered by lipid A.
Treponema pallidum (syphilis)
— if left untreated can cause major problems
— but is easily treated with antibiotics, specifically, penicillin.
Prokaryotic cell walls:
How do bacteria acquire antibiotic resistance, how does it form?
Antibiotics are compounds generally produced by microorganisms to defend against bacteria. Will target diff structures or processes that in bacteria that are diff from eukaryotes
- such as target synthesis of bacterial cell wall
- others target bacterial ribosomes (which are diff from euk- ribos)
- target bacterial membrane that has diff components from euk-
- Some common antibiotics like penicillin, beta-lactams, interfere with cross linking of the short peptides in PG. making PG layer and whole cell weaker.
Antibiotic resistance:
Over years of use of antibiotics, bacteria evolve and become resistant to antibiotics.
Prokaryotic cell walls:
How are bacteria able to block the actions of antibiotics?
What are the mechanisms?
Altered target site
Decreased uptake
Enzymatic inactivation or modification
Bypass pathways
Mechanisms:
The builder:
Affects cell wall by reinforcing it with proteins or other structural molecules making wall less permeable.
The pretender:
Altered target site. Change target site for the drug. Such as a side chain or 2. Effects most,u tertiary protein structure.
The cleaner:
A pump (integral membrane protein) pumps antibiotic out of cell, keeping inside clean resulting in decreased uptake of the drug and decreased concentration of the drug and therefore affects drug efficacy.
The inventor:
Bypass pathways, With few tweaks or some major modifications bacteria create a new enzyme that Carries out same reaction as old enzyme. But b/c diff enzyme it is not inhibited by antibiotic
The destroyer:
‘Enzymatic sledgehammer’ and destroys the drug. Degrades, digests or attaches to the drug and inactivates it.
Which human actions promote antibiotic resistance?
Taking antibiotics for prolonged time
Prokaryotic cell walls:
What are some examples of highly antibiotic resistant strains of bacteria?
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) (gram +) or any multidrug-resistant bacterium.
B/c we have used antibiotics wildly for last few decades, it resulted in nightmare bacteria.
Nightmare bacteria are resistant to all antibiotic treatments and can share their genes for resistance with other germs. (Through plasmids and horizontal gene transfer).
What are superbugs?
An informal term for a bacterium that has become resistant to serval antibiotics that are used to treat it,