Lecture 4 - Prokaryote Cell Structure (Bacterial Cell) Flashcards

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1
Q

Since prokaryotes are small, what happens with the surface area/volume ratio?

A
  • dilution problem = the plasma membrane is a selective barrier and only so much can pass through the ‘doors’ at once
  • surface area increase by a factor of 2
  • volume increase by a factor of 3
    note:
    surface area = membrane
    volume = cytoplasm
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2
Q

What do eukarya have that increases surface area?

A

internal membranes

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3
Q

Describe the bacterial cell structure

A
  • NO membrane-bound organelles
  • they have: cell membrane, cell wall, cytoplasm, ribosomes, fimbriae, flagella, DNA in a nucleoid region
  • they perform all the functions of a eukaryotic cell without compartmentalization
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4
Q

What do bacterial cells have to make them motile?

A
  • flagellum = rotates like a corkscrew
  • filament = polymer of flagellin (protein with quaternary structure)
  • hook = rotation about the hook allows movement
  • basal apparatus = anchor filament into the cell wall/membrane (contains a gear system that drives rotations and this energy for rotation comes from [H+] gradient
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5
Q

What does the bacterial cell wall do?

A
  • prevents osmotic lysis

- cell wall required for cell defense, permeability barrier, and for structure

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6
Q

What are Gram-positive bacteria?

A
  • thick layer of peptidoglycan -> PM (structural polysaccharide, a polymer of NAG and NAM which are monosaccharides)
  • teichoic acid = molecules that link layers of PM
  • lipoteichoic acid = links the cell wall to the membrane
  • refer to notes for drawing
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7
Q

What are Gram-negative bacteria?

A
  • thin layer of peptidoglycan and an outer membrane

- refer to notes for drawing and more info

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8
Q

What is the function of antibiotics?

A
  • kill bacterial pathogen by targeting bacterial specific structures (ribosomes and cell walls)
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9
Q

What are fimbrae?

A
  • small hair-like structures that allow attachment to surfaces
  • not present in all bacteria but often in pathogens
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10
Q

What is biofilm?

A
  • “slim cities”
  • some bacteria secrete a mucous that surrounds the cell
  • protects the cell from dehydration and allows attachment ( very difficult to remove )
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11
Q

What is a microbiome?

A
  • collection of organisms normally found on and in our bodies
  • we are covered in trillions of microbes
  • these are viewed as essential to our health
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12
Q

What is colonization?

A
  • establishment of microbial growth in host tissue
  • begins at birth
  • sources of colonizing bacteria: birth canal, feeding
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13
Q

What are the purposes of normal flora?

A
  1. protection from pathogens
  2. required for developmental processes
  3. provide vitamins and nutrients
  4. aid in digestion
  5. modulates the immune system
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14
Q

What is the hygiene hypothesis?

A
  • exposure to microbes helps maintain a healthy immune system
  • lack of exposure to healthy microbes leads to hyperactive immune systems
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