Bacterial Structure Flashcards

1
Q

prokaryotes lack _____ and divide via _____

A

lack nuclear membrane and organelles

divide via transverse fission (2 identical daughters)

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2
Q

shapes:
bacilli =
cocci =
spirochetes =

A

shapes:
bacilli = rods
cocci = spheres (like berries)
spirochetes = spirals

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3
Q

what are mreB and parM required for in bacteria?

A

actin homologues required for chromosome/plasmid segregation

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4
Q

the 3 layers of the bacterial envelope:

A
  1. plasma membrane (lipid bilayer + proteins)
  2. cell wall (peptidoglycan)
  3. structures outside wall

protects, provides virulence, target of antibodies

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5
Q

where does respiratory metabolism occur in bacteria?

A

plasma membrane of bacteria contains respiratory chain equivalent to mitochondrial inner membrane

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6
Q

how are peptidoglycans assembled in bacteria?

A
  1. NAM (N-acetylmuramic acid) and NAG (N-acetylglucosamine) disaccharide assembled with peptide in cytosol on lipid carrier
  2. exported across plasma membrane, assembled into long chains
  3. chains cross-linked via peptide bonds between side chains —> essential for strength and osmotic protection
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7
Q

the amino acids in peptidoglycan are D or L amino acids?

A

D amino acids are found in prokaryotes

[L amino acids are found in eukaryotes]

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8
Q

how does penicillin work?

A

penicillin is analogue of D-ala-D-ala of peptidoglycan side chain —> binds active site of cross-linking enzyme and forms irreversible covalent bond

new peptidoglycan is formed without cross-links —> osmotic lysis

*note that penicillin works on growing cells only, which are creating new peptidoglycan formation

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9
Q

with Gram staining, which bacteria stain purple, which pink? explain why

A

Gram+ = purple, due to thick peptidoglycan layer which holds in dye (Crystal violet or Gentian)

Gram- = pink, due to thin peptidoglycan layer which cannot hold dye (pink safranin dye is added later so you can see bacteria at all)

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10
Q

what is the general procedure of gram staining?

A
  1. heat fix bacteria (polysaccharides become sticky)
  2. stain with Gentian or Crystal violet
  3. add iodine, which complexes with dye (Gram+ purple are fixed - thick peptidoglycan wall)
  4. decolorize to get dye out of Gram- (thin peptidoglycan wall)
  5. counterstain with safranin (pink dye, fixes Gram-)
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11
Q

what are 4 components you will find in gram+ bacteria envelope?

A
  1. thick peptidoglycan
  2. fimbriae/pili: adhere to mammalian cells and ETC matrix (also in Gram-)
  3. teichoic acid: polymers of sugar alcohols linked by phosphate groups
  4. group carbohydrates (Lancefield carbohydrates): linked to peptidoglycan on some Gram+ bacteria
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12
Q

what are the 3 layers of Gram- bacteria envelope? what do they contain?

A
  1. outer plasma membrane with LPS attached (highly impermeable)
  2. periplasm: space between outer/inner plasma membrane, contains thin peptidoglycan
  3. inner plasma membrane containing respiratory chain complexes
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13
Q

what are the 3 components of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), found attached to the outer plasma membrane of gram- bacteria?

A
  1. O antigen (sugar repeats, long length keeps MAC of complement far away from membrane)
  2. core (oligosaccharide)
  3. lipid A (endotoxin, disaccharide + fatty acids)
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14
Q

what is the structure of porin proteins, which allow solutes to traverse the outer plasma membrane of gram- bacteria?

A

monomer is a cylinder, walls of beta sheets, that is made into trimmer

hydrophobic exterior, hydrophilic interior

pore diameter determines ability of antibiotics to enter cell

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15
Q

which part of LPS prevents destruction from MAC complex of complement, and how does it do so? (on Gram- bacteria outer plasma membrane)

A

O antigen: polymer of 3-5 sugars

long length keeps MAC far away from membrane (can’t reach)

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16
Q

endotoxin vs exotoxin vs enterotoxin

A

endotoxin: polysaccharide, part of cell wall

exotoxin: secreted protein

enterotoxin: exotoxin in the GI

17
Q

how does Lipid A endotoxin of LPS in Gram- bacteria cause toxicity?

A

TLR receptors on monocytes bind LPS —> inflammatory cytokines

in septicemia (bacteria in bloodstream) - systemic reaction —> septic shock, organ dysfunction, death

*note that Lipid A endotoxin is released only when cell lyses and present in dead or alive bacteria (not removed via sterilization)

18
Q

what is a Jarish-Herxheimer reaction?

A

reaction (fever, hypotension) to Lipid A endotoxin of Gram- bacteria (part of LPS in outer membrane) following antibiotic treatment (causes endotoxin release)

remember that Lipid A is only released when cell lyses and is present in both living and dead bacteria (not removed via sterilization)

19
Q

what is the function of flagella vs pili vs conjugation pili in bacteria?

A

flagella (H antigen) = locomotion
pili (fimbrae) = adhesion
conjugation pili = DNA transfer

20
Q

how does flagella of bacteria provide locomotion?

A

basal body rotates in envelope via H+ influx

rotating flagellum propels cell, and reversing direction changes direction

(counter-clockwise = smooth, clockwise = tumbling)

21
Q

why are bacterial fimbriae/pili so important for virulence?

A

protein fimbriae/pili bind membrane proteins of mammalian cells and ETC matrix

covalently linked to peptidoglycan, appear as fuzz in EM

22
Q

capsules protect bacteria from phagocytes - what are they made of?

A

K antigen, mostly high molecular weight polysaccharides

often many antigenic types per species

not visible in Gram stain, requires EM

23
Q

bacterial spores are formed in response to ____ and are made only by some ____ bacteria

A

formed in response to starvation, only by some Gram+ rods

specialized cells for dispersal, metabolically inert, omnipresent in soil/plants, very resistant (requires autoclave to destroy)

break open in rich media and cell continues to divide

24
Q

selective vs differential media for growing bacteria?

A

selective: selects for or against certain types (contain antibiotics or missing key nutrients, etc)

differential: distinguishes between types of bacteria (pH indicators for formation, hemolysis on blood plates, etc)

25
Q

alpha vs beta vs gamma hemolysis on blood agar plates

also, what kind of plates are blood agar plates?

A

blood agar: 5% sheep blood, differential media (looks for capability to lyse RBC)

alpha hemolytic: partial hemolysis, green
beta hemolytic: complete hemolytic, yellow
gamma hemolytic: no hemolysis, no color change

26
Q

how is MacConkey agar both selective and differential?

A

MacConkey agar: contains bile salts, crystal violet, pH indicator

selective: grows only Gram- bacteria (bile salts and crystal violet)

differential: pH indicator differentiates lactose fermenting vs non-lactose fermenting bacteria

27
Q

describe how mannitol salt agar is both selective and differential?

A

mannitol salt agar: contains mannitol, high NaCl concentration, pH indicator dyes

selective: many bacteria cannot survive high salt environment

differential: only certain bacteria can metabolize mannitol