Organization of the Bacterial Cell pt.1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is 16S rRNA / why is it important to the tree of life

A

it is a small-subunit of rRNA and it is highly conserved across all organism which makes it the perfect thing to track throughout organisms to make the tree of life

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2
Q

How many regions in 16S rRNA are there that can tolerate mutations

A

two

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3
Q

why does 16S rRNA make a good molecular clock

A

because it is highly conserved

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4
Q

how did carl woese use 16S rRNA to show the divergence of the three domains of life

A

he used the sequence divergence of the variable regions of 16S as a proxy of genetic relatedness - the phylogenetic trees he made indicate the divergence (number of differences) between sequences

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5
Q

which two branches of life are more similar to each other

A

Archaea and Eukarya

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6
Q

what is endosymbiosis

A

one partner population grow within the body of another organism

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7
Q

what does endosymbiosis suggest

A

reductive evolution

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8
Q

what is reductive evolution

A

essentially co-evolution that led to one of the organisms no longer being able to love on its own - loses unused genes

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9
Q

what bacteria was incorporated in pre-animals to create mitochondria

A

proteobacteria

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10
Q

what bacteria was incorporated in pre-plants to create chloroplasts

A

cyanobacteria

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11
Q

what is the gram stain / what is its main purpose

A

determines which bacteria are gram + or gram - / to classify the bacteria

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12
Q

what is the process of the gram stain

A
  1. add methanol to fix cells to the surface 2. add crystal violet stain (reversible) 3. add iodine (binds stain to gram positive cells 4. wash with ethanol 5. add safranin (turns gram negative pink)
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13
Q

why does the gram stain turn gram positive cells purple and gram negative pink

A

the many layers of peptidoglycan in gram positive cells is what the iodine binds to - the more peptidoglycan the more stain retained

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14
Q

what are the main components of a bacterial cell from greatest to least respectively

A

water, proteins, nucleic acids (RNA/DNA), lipids, inorganic compounds

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15
Q

in the cell membrane, what motions occur in the lipid bi-layer / which movement is rare

A

lateral diffusion, rotation, and flexion / flip flop from leaflet to leaflet

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16
Q

why is the composition of the outer leaflet and the inner leaflet different

A

because flip-flop does not occur often

17
Q

what does the cell membrane do

A
  1. site of energy generation 2. effective barrier to polar & charged molecules (permeability barrier)
18
Q

what is an unsaturated fatty acid / how does it affect the permeability of the membrane

A

unsaturated fatty acid has double bonds in the fatty acid (mostly cis) / leads to a less rigid formation of the lipids so it becomes more permeable and fluid

19
Q

what causes cardiolipin to be produced / what does it do for the cell

A

alteration in stress or starvation / supports the concavity of the cell and helps the cell get smaller and more round - can interact with proteins and change their function to benefit the cell in stressful situations

20
Q

what do hopanoids do / in what cells are they present

A

provide membrane rigidity and stability / present in bacteria

21
Q

what do archaea use to strengthen their membrane

A

L-glycerol, ether links between glycerol and fatty acids, cyclopentane rings, crosslinked lipids