Bio 2051 – Microbiology – Flashcards

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1. Cytoplasm

2. Cytoplasmic Membrane

3. Nucleus or nucleid
1. Eukaryotic has nucleus
prokaryote has nucleoid

4. ribosomes- site of protein synthesis in eukaryotes and is also found in prokaryotes

5. Cell Wall - found in plants & most prokaryotes; not in animals
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What are the basic cellular structures?
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Algae (chlorophyll), fungi, protozoa, plants, animals
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What are some Eukaryotes?
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Prokaryote
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• Simpler internal structure
• lack membrane bound organelles
• has 2 domains: Bacteria & Archaea
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Eukaryotic
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• larger & more complex
• __membrane enclosed organelles__ (nucleus, chloroplast, mitochondria, etc)
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Viruses
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• Reproduce only inside a host cell
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HIV virus, Rhinoviruses (colds)
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What are some examples of viruses?
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rabies
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The virus Rhabdovirus causes what?
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•Cytoplasm surrounded by envelope
o Cytoplasm contains DNA in nucleoid

• Envelope has lipid membrane boundary
oPlus structural cell wall
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What does the bacterial cell consist of?
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Cytoplasmic membrane
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"fluid” selective permeability barrier made of phospholipids & proteins that form a bilayer with hydrophilic exteriors & a hydrophobic interior
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Phospholipid bilayer
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The Cytoplasmic membrane is also known as what?
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leaflet
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Each layer of the CM is called what?
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1. Hydrophilic heads

2. Hydrophobic tails

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1. group faces cytoplasm or periplasm 2. fatty acids line up inside membrane
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phospholipid
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ester-linkage links glycerol to fatty acid to form what?
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very small UNcharged particles
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What can easily cross through the selectively permeable CM
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integral membrane protein
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spans the width of the CM
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peripheral membrane proteins
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These are bound to the surfaces of the CM
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Permeability barrier
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Prevents leakage of cytoplasmic metabolites into environment
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Permeability barrier
structural support
Energy conservation
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The CM functions as what?
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Cytoplasmic membrane
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Where does respiration occur in prokaryotes?
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mitochondria
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Where does respiration occurr in eukaryotes?
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cytoplasmic membrane
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where do photosynthetic prokaryotes carry out photosynthesis?
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chloroplast
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what do eukaryotes have in order to carry out photosynthesis?
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cholesterol
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What do eukaryotes use in order to reinforce membranes?
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Hopanoids
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What do bacteria have in order to reinforce their membranes?
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Terpenoids
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What do Archae have in order to reinforce their membranes in high temp and low pH?
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Peptidoglycan (a porous cage-like structure)
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What is the bacteria cell wall (sacculus) composed of?
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Peptidoglycan
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? sugar chains wrapped in circles around cell
• “glyco” = “sweet”
? Sugar chains linked to each other by short polymers of amino acids
• amino acid = “peptide”
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N-acetylglucosamine (NAG)
N-acetylmurmaic acid (NAM)
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What two sugars make up the backbone of Peptidoglycan?
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Crosslinks (short chains of acids)
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Chains of Peptidoglycan are held together by _________ between N-acetylmuramic acids (NAMs)
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True
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Crosslinks differ among species. T/F?
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meso-diaminopimelate (mDAP)
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Gram negative bacteria have unusual amino acid __________ in crosslink
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Gram Negative
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If you see mDAP then you know the bacteria is what?
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True
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proteins can give a cell its shape. T/F?
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provides rigidity and shape to cell and prevents it from exploding due to high pressure inside cell.
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What is the function of the bacterial cell wall?
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transpeptidase
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how peptidoglycan can be used as an antibiotice:
Penicillin inhibites what that crosslinks the peptide bonds in peptidoglycan?
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beta-lactamase
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Sometimes strains of illnesses become resistant to certain antibiotics:
Many organisms produce __________ which cleaves the lactam ring of penicillin, inactivating the penicillin
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It is made up of polysaccharides and it lacks peptidoglycan
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What are Archae's cell walls made of?
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True. It is a "false" peptidoglycan
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Some Archae's cell walls consist of a pseudopeptidoglycan. T/F?
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Gram negative bacteria has a small amount of layers of peptidoglycan and Gram Positive bacteria has very many layers of peptido glycan (UP TO 40!)
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What is the main difference between gram negative bacteria and gram positive bacteria?
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Gram Positive Bacteria
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What is reinforced by negatively charged Techoic Acids?
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The crosslinks within peptidoglycan often have L-lysine instead of
Meso-DiAminoPimelate(mDAP)
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How are the crosslinks in Gram Positive Bacteria different from other bacteria?
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Lysozome
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- Enzyme thats common in many bodily
fluids. Destroys beta-1-4 linkage.
- Destroys peptidoglycan, leading to
cell lysis
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Lysozomes
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found in animal secretions & thought to be a major line of defense against infection of bacteria
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Outer - Lipopolysaccharide layer (LPS)

Inner - Phospholipid layer
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What is the outer and inner layers made of in the lipid bilayer of the outer membrane of Gram Negative Bacteria
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Porins (= proteins)
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transmembrane proteins allow for permeability through the outer membrane by creating channels that cross the membrane
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Non-specific porins
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In Gram Negative Bacter these are water-filled channels through which small substances can pass.
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Specific Porins
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In Gram Negative Bacteria these are channels with binding sites for certain molecules that only allow those molecules to pass through
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Periplasm
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In Gram Negative bacteria, This is the area between the outer and cytoplasmic membranes
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hydrolytic enzymes & Nutrient transporter binding proteins
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In Gram Negative Bacteria the Periplasm contains proteins such as ________ & __________
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- Polysaccharide capsule
- S layer made of protein
- Thick cell wall with techoic acids
and held together by AA crosslinks
in peptidoglycan
- A thin periplasm
- cytoplasmic membrane
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The Gram Positive envelope consists of what?
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- Polysaccharide capsule
- Lipopolysaccharide Outer Membrane
- Thin Cell Wall
- Thick Periplasm
- Cytoplasmic membrane
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The Gram Negative envelope consists of what?
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Genome
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a cell's complete set of genes. Bacterial cells may have chromosome and plasmid
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Chromosomes
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DNA is arranged to form?
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Prokaryotes
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These have a single circular chromosome & sometimes circular extrachromosomal DNA (Plasmids)
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Eukaryotes
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These have several linear chromosomes
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Nucleus
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membrane-enclosed structure that contains the chromosomes – found in eukaryotes
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•Nucleoid
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mass of DNA not bound by a membrane- found in prokaryotes
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Bacterial Nucleoid
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o Single loop of double-stranded DNA
? ~4x106 bp (base pairs) in many bacteria
? Compacted via supercoiling
- Attached to cell envelope
- No membrane separates DNA from cytoplasm
- Replicates_ once for each cell division
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binary fission
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Growth of most microorganisms occurs by
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binary fission
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Growth of most microorganisms occurs by
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Divisome
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division apparatus in the cell formed by Fts proteins
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Fts Proteins
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required for cell division & chromosome replication
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FtsZ protein
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o Defines (determines) the division plane in prokaryotes
o Polymerizes to form a ring where cell division will occur
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FtsA protein
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o ATP – hydrolyzing enzyme
o Provides Energy for assembly of other proteins to the ring
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FtsI protein
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o involved in peptidoglycan synthesis for the new cell wall

o activity is blocked by penicillin
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MreB
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o helps define cell shape(not just the peptidoglycan that determines shape)

o forms filamentous spiral shaped bands aroud the inside of the cell under the cytoplasmic membrane (CM)
o defines cell shape by directionally exerting pressure against CM (cytoplasmic membrane)
o _Coccus__ shaped bacteria lack MreB gene
? Coccus is the default shape
o default bacterial shape- Sphere
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Autolysins
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create opening in existing cell wall to make space for new cell wall glycans to be inserted
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Autolysis (spontaneous cell lysis)
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may occur if there is an error in inserting new cell wall material
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bactoprenol
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During peptidoglycan synthesis:
helps transport these new glycan units through Cell membrane to become part of growing cell wall
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Hydrophobic lipid alcohol
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bactoprenal is a?
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Bactoprenol
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binds the N-acetylglucosamine / N-acetylmuramic acid / pentapeptide peptidoglycan precursors
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Transpeptidation
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• formation of peptide cross links between NAMs
• bonds peptidoglycan precursors into expanding peptidoglycan layer
• reaction is inhibited by penicillin (cell lysis occurs)
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Inclusion Granules
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Densely compacted material in cytoplasm
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Magnetosomes
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intracellular particles of magnetite (Fe3O4); allow organisms to respond to a magnetic field
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Glycogen
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bacteria stores these as carbon & energy source
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Polyphosphate
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bacteria stores this as inorganic phosphates to make cellular structure
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Poly-B-hydroxybutyrate
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Excess nutrients are stored as this and later if they don’t have enough carbon and energy then they convert this into carbon & energy source
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Sulfur
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stored in cytoplasm or periplasm and can use this as an energy source.
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Fimbriae
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? Non-motile extensions that help bacteria attach to surfaces and to other bacteria
(Neisseria, biofilms)
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Porphyromonas gingivalis
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has fimbriae that help attach to teeth
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Pili
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-Hollow, non-motile tubes made of protein called pilin that connect some cells.
-Longer than fimbriae, shorter than flagella; may have 1-10 per cell
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Pili
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- Used to move DNA from 1 cell to
another by conjugation
- It reaches out and connects to
another cell, then becomes shorter
and brings 2 cells together
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Fimbriae
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Shorter than flagella and cell's have 100's per cell
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capsule/slime layer/ glycocalyx
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• Sticky polysaccharide or polypeptide
layer surrounding cell
• Protects cell from:
o Phagocytosis
o Desiccation (drying out)
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Proton passage
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What drives the rotation of flagella?
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TRUE
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Flagella can turn either clockwise or counterclockwise. Which way it turns determines the way which the cell moves. T/F?
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1. Monotrichous

2. Lophotrichous

3. Peritrichous

4. Amphitrichous
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1. single flagellum at 1 end

2. several flagella at 1 or both ends

3. several flagella all around cell

4. one on each end
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1. Basal body
2. Hook – connects to filament
3. Filament
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What are the three parts of a flagella?
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C ring

MS ring

P ring

L ring
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In Basal Body of Flagella:

in G+ & G-

in G+ & G-

in G- only

in G- only
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Basal Body
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In Basal Body of Flagella:

• Imbedded within cell envelope

• Made of 2 or 4 protein rings connected by a central rod
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C Ring
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In Basal Body of Flagella:


- In cytoplasm. Attached to inner surface of cytoplasmic membrane
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MS ring
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In Basal Body of Flagella:


In cytoplasm membrane. End of central rod is attached to MS ring.
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P Ring
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In Basal Body of Flagella:

In peptidoglycan layer
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L ring
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In Basal Body of Flagella:

In LPS layer
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Hook
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Curved structure made of protein; connects filament to basal body
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Filament
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• Long, rigid, helical structures made of protein called flagellin
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filamentous cyanobacteria, Myxococcus, Cytophaga & Flavobacterium
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Prokaryotes such as _________ move by gliding motility instead of flagella
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slime secretion
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Gliding can occur from ________ that moves cell along solid surfaces
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chemical & physical gradient
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Motile bacteria can respond to _______________ in environment by moving toward or away from the signal molecule.
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Chemotaxis

Phototaxis
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o directed movement of organisms in response to chemical signals.

o directed movement of organisms in response to light.
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TRUE
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Phototrophic bacterium rhodospirillum moves toward light. T/F?
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Aerotaxis


Osmotaxis
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odirected movement of organisms in response to oxygen.


directed movement of organisms in response to ionic strength (salt).
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Attractant
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- cause counterclockwise rotation
o Flagella bundle together and all
spin together
o Push cell forwards
• “Run”
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Repellents
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- cause clockwise rotation
o Flagella fly apart
• “Tumble” = change of direction
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"random walk"
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Runs + Tumbles = ?
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Receptors
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- detect attractant concentrations
• Examples of attractants are sugars and amino acids
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• ELECTRON FLOW, to drive all life
processes
• Drives ions into, out of
cells
• Ion flow is Used to create
ATP

• ENERGY, to move electrons

• MATERIALS to make cell parts
• Macro-Nutrients – CHONPS
(carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, …
•organisms absolutely need a lot
of these to survive
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All life requires what?
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Lithotrophs and Organotrophs
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What are two sources of electrons that contribute to electron flow?
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Lithotrophs
-Iron
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What are Inorganic molecule that donates elctrons? ex.?
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Organotrophs -Glucose
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What are Organic molecules that act as;electron donors? Ex.?
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Nitrogen and Oxygen

Respiration
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What are examples of ultimate Inorganic electron acceptors
If these Inorganic acceptors are being used then the molecule is growing by _____________
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Pyruvate


Fermentation
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What is the most common ultimate Organic electron acceptor
If this is being used then the molecule is growing by __________________
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Phototrophs and Chemotrophs
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Sources of enery for microbes?
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Phototrophs
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• Light energy excites electrons

• Excited molecules are electron donors
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Chemotrophs
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• Chemicals are electron donors
• oxidation of chemical
o Oxidation = donation of electrons
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Macro-Nutrients
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• Major elements in cell
macromolecules needed in large amounts
o C, H, O, N, P, S

• Ions necessary for protein function
o Mg2+, Ca2+, Fe2+, K+
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Mg2+, Ca2+, Fe2+, K+
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Macro-Nutrients:
Ions necessary for protein function?
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C, H, O, N, P, S
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Major elements in cell macromolecules needed in large amounts
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Micro-Nutrients
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•Needed in very small amounts
•Trace elements (Co, Cu, Zn, etc)
•Growth factors (organic compounds) necessary for enzyme function
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Carbon
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large amount needed by cells to form organic compounds (amino acids (proteins), fatty acids, sugars, & nitrogenase bases) to carry out cellular functions
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Autotrophs
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prokaryotes that can make all cellular structures from CO2
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Heterotrophs
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must obtain carbon from organic compounds (most prokaryotes)
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79%
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What percent of the air we breathe is nitrogen gas?
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Ammonia and Nitrate
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Most prokaryotes obtain nitrogen from compounds such as
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Chemoorganitrophs
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energy from oxidation (removing electrons) of organic compounds
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Chemolithotrophs

There is less competition
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Energy from oxidation of Inorganic compounds. Only in Prokaryotes.

Why is this an advantage?
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Heterotrophs
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Carbon sources:

Carbon source is Organic Carbon compounds
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Autotroph
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Carbon source is carbon dioxide
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Photoautotroph
"Photo"autotroph"
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What obtains energy from light and carbon from CO2?
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Passive diffusion
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• Some substances pass freely through membranes
O2, CO2
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Facilitated diffusion
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- Protein transporters pass material
into/out of cell
- follows gradient
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ATP binding cassette(ABC)Transporters

Symport and Anitport

Phosphotransferase (PTS) system (type of group translocation)
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Examples of Active Transport
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Active Transport
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type of transport when materials are passed against the gradient
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ATP binding cassette transporters
(ABC transporters)
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- Use ATP to pass material into cell
- Efflux ___ transporters can pump
antibiotics out of cell
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Symport and Antiport
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- The gradient of one molecule
transports another
- K ion or Na ion helps sometimes and
must determine the charge.
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