CHAPTER 4 Functional Anatomy of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells Stem Cells.

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CHAPTER 4 Functional Anatomy of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells Stem Cells

Transcript of CHAPTER 4 Functional Anatomy of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells Stem Cells.

Page 1: CHAPTER 4 Functional Anatomy of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells Stem Cells.

CHAPTER 4Functional Anatomy of

Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells

Stem Cells

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PROKARYOTES

Greek “prenucleus”

• DNA not enclosed within a membrane

• DNA is usually a singular circularly chromosome

• DNA not associated with histones

• Lack membrane bound organelles

• Cell walls contain polysaccharide peptidoglycan

• Divide by binary fission

EUKARYOTES

“true nucleus”• DNA in a nucleus• DNA found in multiple

chromosomes• Histones with DNA• Membrane bound

organelles• Cell walls chemically

simple• mitosis

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Prokaryote Characteristics• 0.2 to 2.0 μm in diameter and 2 to 8 μm in length• Shapes: coccus, bacillus, spiral

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ARRANGEMENTS OF COCCI

Diplococci (remain in pairs)

Streptococci (remain in chain)

Tetra (divide in 2 planes, remain in groups of four)

Sarcinae (divide in 3 planes, remain in cube)

Staphylococci (divide in multiple planes, remain in grapelike clusters)

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ARRANGEMENT OF BACILLI• Diplobacilli: appear in pairs

• Streptobacilli: appear in chains

• Coccobacilli: oval, look like cocci

• Palisades: picket fence

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ARRANGEMENT OF SPIRILIUM

Vibrios: curved rods

Spirilla: helical shape, rigid bodies

Spirochetes: helical and fexible

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External StructuresGLYCOCALYX (sugar coat): • sticky, gelatinous polymer outside the cell

wall• Composed of polysaccharide, polypeptide

or both• If attached to cell wall, considered a

capsule• If unorganized and loosely attached,

considered a slime layer• Contributes to bacterial virulence• Important component of biofims• Help attach to various surfaces, protects,

facilitates communication (Extracellular polymeric substance EPS)

CyanobacteriumCapsule in olive green

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FLAGELLA Atichous: cell without flagella

Monotrichous: a single flagellum at one pole

Lophotrichous: tuft of flagella from one or both poles

Amphitrichous: single flagella at both boles

Peritrichous: distributed over the entire cell

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FLAGELLA MOVEMENT

http://www.wwnorton.com/college/biology/mbio/animations/main.asp?chno=ch03a02file:///E:/Chapter_04/A_PowerPoint/a_Lecture_Outline/flagella_arrange.html

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Fimbriae and PiliShort, straight, thin hair-like

appendagesFIMBRIAE occur at poles or evenly

distributed Few to several hundred / cell Adhere to surfaces forming

biofilmsPILI Usually longer Only one or two /cell Involved in motility (twitching

and gliding motility) and DNA transfer (conjugation)

Geobacter sulfurreducens

Electron Micrograph of E. coli

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CELL WALL

FUNCTION• Responsible for shape• Prevents cell from rupturing from too much

water• Contributes to ability of some to cause diseaseSTRUCTURE• Peptidoglycan: repeating disaccharide attached

by polypeptides forming a lattice• Disaccharides: N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and

N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM)

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Figure 4.13a

Peptidoglycan in Gram-Positive Bacteria

• Linked by polypeptides

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Gram-Positive Bacterial Cell Wall

Figure 4.13b

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Gram-Negative Bacterial Cell Wall

Figure 4.13c

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• Thick peptidoglycan

• Teichoic acids

Gram-positiveCell Wall

Figure 4.13b–c

Thin peptidoglycan Outer membrane Periplasmic space

Gram-positiveCell Wall

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Internal Structures: Plasma

(cytoplasmic) Membrane

STRUCTURE: Phospholipid bilayer- Polar head: phosphate group

and glycerol that is hydrophilic- Nonpolar tails: hydrophobic

fatty acidsProteins- Peripheral proteins: lie at

inner or outer surface- Integral proteins: inside

membrane- Glycoproteins: proteins

attached to carbohydrates- Glycolipids: lipids attached to

carbohydratesHelp protect/lubricate cell

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FUNCTION• Selective permeability• Breakdown of nutrients and production of energy• Some have pigments and enzymes involved in

photosynthesis in foldings– Chromatophores or thylakoids

file:///E:/Chapter_04/A_PowerPoint/a_Lecture_Outline/membrane_permeability.html

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CYTOPLASM• 80% water, proteins,

carbos, lipids, inorganic ions

• Thick, aqueous, semitransparent, elastic

NUCLEOID• Single long, continuous circular

thread of double-stranded DNA• Attached to plasma membrane

PLASMID• Circular, double-stranded DNA• Replicate independently• 5 to 100 genes

RIBOSOMES• Site of protein synthesis

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Inclusions (reserve deposits)Metachromatic granules• Volutin: reserve of inorganic

phosphate used in the synthesis of ATP

• Corynebacterium diphtheriae (agent of diphtheria)

• ID: stain red with blue dyesPolysaccharide Granules• Glycogen (reddish brown) and

starch (blue)• ID: iodine Sulfur Granules

Lipid Inclusions• ID: fat-soluable dyesCarboxysomes• Enzyme ribulose 1,5-

diphosphate carboxylase• Use as sole source of

carbonGas Vacuoles• Maintain buoyancyMagnetosomes• Iron oxide, act as magnets

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Endospores• Cells formed when essential nutrients are depleted

• Very resistant to heat, chemicals, hard to kill

• Can be dormant for thousands of years

• Gram positive bacteria – Bacillus: anthrax,

food poisoning– Clostridium:

gangrene, tetanus, botulism

Core: DNA and proteinCortex: peptidoglycan (rigid protective)Spore Coat: proteinExosporium: protective layer

Endospore formation in Bacillus subtilis.

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• http://student.ccbcmd.edu/courses/bio141/labmanua/lab1/images/u1coccus.gif

• http://www.slic2.wsu.edu:82/hurlbert/micro101/images/SpirochetesEx2.gif

• http://www.nslc.wustl.edu/courses/Bio2960/labs/04Microscopy/11299D.jpg

• http://images.iop.org/objects/nano/news/4/6/14/pili.jpg

• http://www.agen.ufl.edu/~chyn/age2062/OnLineBiology/OLBB/www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/14_1.jpg

• http://bioinfo.bact.wisc.edu/themicrobialworld/endospore.jpeg

• http://www.brighamandwomens.org/publicaffairs/Images/Cells.jpg