1 / 12

Prokaryotic Cells

Prokaryotic Cells. The Prokaryotic Cell. Members of the prokaryotic world make up a vast heterogeneous group of very small unicellular organisms. Include bacteria and archae , although the majority are bacteria The thousands species of bacteria are differentiated by many factors such as

sanne
Télécharger la présentation

Prokaryotic Cells

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prokaryotic Cells

  2. The Prokaryotic Cell • Members of the prokaryotic world make up a vast heterogeneous group of very small unicellular organisms. • Include bacteria and archae, although the majority are bacteria • The thousands species of bacteria are differentiated by many factors such as • Morphology (shape), chemical composition (often detected by staining reactions), nutritional requirements, biochemical activities, and sources of energy (sunlight or chemicals)

  3. Size, Shape, and Arrangement • Bacteria come in many sizes, and several shapes. • Most range from 0.2 to 2.0 µm in diameter and 2-8 µm in length • Basic shapes include: spherical coccus(cocci in plural), rod-shaped bacillus (bacilli in plural), and spiral. • When cocci divide to reproduce, they can remain attached to each other • In pairs they are called diplococci • Chainlike structures are called streptococci

  4. Shape, and Arrangement • Spiral bacteria have one or more twists • Those that look like curved rods are called vibrio • Spirilla have a helical shape like a corkscrew, and have rigid bodies. Use flagella to move • Spirochetes are helical and flexible. These move by means of axial filaments. These filaments resemble flagella but are found within a flexible external sheath

  5. Shape and Arrangement • The shape of bacteria is determined by heredity. • Most bacteria are monomorphic: maintain a single shape • Environmental factors can alter that shape • Some bacteria like Rhizobium and Corynebacterium are pleomorphic: can have many shapes, not just one.

  6. Structures External to the Cell Wall • Possible structures external to the prokaryotic cell wall are: • Glycolax • Flagella • Axial filaments • Fimbrae • and Pili

  7. What is the Glycolax? • Means sugar coat & is the general term used for substances that surround cells • Bacterial glycolax is a viscous (sticky), gelatinous polymer that is external to the cell wall • Composed of a polysaccharide, polypeptide, or both • Two types • Capsule: substance is organized and is firmly attached to the cell wall • Slime layer: substance is unorganized and only loosely attached to the cell wall glycolax Fig. 1 Source for Fig. 1: http://emp.byui.edu/wellerg/The%20Cell%20Lab/Prokaryotic%20Cells/The%20Prokaryotic%20Cell.html

  8. Glycolax • Very important component of biofilms • Biofilms are densely packed communities of microbial cells that grow on living or inert surfaces • A glycolax that helps cells in a biofilm attach to their target environment and to each other is called an extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) • EPS protects the cells within it • Facilitates communication among them • and enables the cells to survive by attaching to various surfaces in their natural environment Fig. 2 Source for Fig. 2 http://www.microbiologybytes.com/blog/2010/09/08/the-biofilm-matrix/

  9. Flagella • Some prokaryotes have flagella which are long filamentous appendages that propel bacteria • Bacteria that lack flagella re referred to as atrichous (without projections) • Peritrichous: flagella distributed over the entire cell • Polar: at one or both poles or ends of the cell • Monotrichous: A single flagellum at one pole • Lopothrichous: a tuft of flagella coming from on pole • Amphitrichous: flagella at both poles of the cell

  10. Axial Filaments • Spirochetes have unique structure and motility • Move my means of axial filaments • Bundles of fibrils that arise at the ends of the cell beneath an outer sheath and spiral around the cell • The rotation of the filaments produces a movement of the outer sheath that propels the spirochetes in a spiral motion

  11. Fimbriae and Pili • Many gram-negative bacteria contain hair-like appendages that are shorter, straighter, and thinner than flagella • are used for attachment and transfer of DNA rather than for motility • Fimbrae can occur at the poles of the bacterial cell or entire surface of cell • Have a tendency to adhere to each other and to surfaces • Pili are usually longer than fimbrae and are found as one or two per cell • Involved in motility and DNA transfer

More Related