Chapter 4- Functional Anatomy of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells Flashcards
Prokaryotic cell shape
Monomorphic mainly, (rhizobium and Corynebacterium are pleomorphic), 0.2 - 2 microns in diameter, about 2-8 microns in length
Glycocalyx
viscous polymer composed of polysaccharide and/or polypeptide external to the cell wall; can be a capsule if tightly attached to the cell wall, or slime layer if unorganized and diffuses easily; important for biofilms, adherence, inhibit nutrient loss, virulence and dehydration.
Flagella (prokaryotic)
Long filamentous appendages outside the cell wall for propulsion. Consists of non membranous filament (globular flagellin that carries H antigen), basal body (rod and series of rings that attaches flagellum to the wall/membrane), hook (flexible coupling between the filament and the basal body.
Bacterial flagella arrangement
Peritrichous- flagella surrounding the whole cell
Lophotrichous/polar- tuft of flagella like a ponytail
monotrichous- single flagellum
amphitrichous- flagella on each end
Axial filaments
Specialized flagella in spirochetes that lie between the cell wall and outer sheath
Fimbriae and Pili
Both: comprised of pilin, hairlike appendages that are shorter/straighter/thinner than flagella, present in most gram-negative bacteria.
Fimbriae: on poles or evenly distributed, few-hundreds, allow attachment to each other and surfaces.
Pili: normally longer than fimbriae, only 1-2 per cell, facilitate DNA transfer, used for twitching/gliding motility.
Gram + cell walls
cell membrane>thick peptidoglycan cell wall.
contains teichoic acids that provide rigidity, negative charge to regulate cation movement, and that are antigenic.
Gram - cell walls
inner cell membrane > thin peptidoglycan layer > outer cell membrane
has periplasm, lipopolysaccharide, strong negative charge (which is beneficial against phagocytes and complement system), provides a barriere against antibiotics/lysozyme but not small metabolites due to porins.
Lipopolysaccharide
Lipid A>Core polysaccharide> O polysaccharide
Lipid a- released when they die which is highly antigenic and is an endotoxin.
Core polysaccharide- contains unusual sugars which provide stability
o polysaccharide- antigen useful for distinguishing gram - species.
Atypical cell walls
Mycoplasma- lacks cell walls/sterols in plasma membrane
Archaea- wall-less or walls of pseudomurein, which has N-acetyltalosaminuric acid instead of NAM and lacks D-amino acids).
Protoplast
cell wall entirely removed (lysozyme digestion of gram + cells)
Spherplasts
cell wall only partially removed (lysozyme digestion of gram - cells) EDTA is necessary for lysozyme efficacy on gram - cells because it’s a divalent cation chelator that removes Mg+ cations so the lipid A portions repel each other, disrupting the outer membrane which will expose the cell wall.
L form
cells that lose their cell walls and swell into irregular shapes in response to lysozyme or penicillin.
Mesosomes
Irregular folds that happen from preparing a specimen for microscopy.
antimicrobial agents that damage the plasma membrane
Disinfectants: alcohols and quarternary ammonium compounds
antibiotics: polymyxins that interact with phospholipids and disrupt membrane structure resulting in leakage of intracellular contents.