Lecture 2 - Bacterial Cell Structure and Function
Lecture 2 - Bacterial Cell Structure and Function
Robert Hooke
(1635-1703)
English Scientist
First to use the
microscope to observe
cells
Coined the term “cell”
Anton van Leeuwenhoek
1632-1723
Dutch scientist
Invented the first
compound microscope
First to observe
LIVING cells
Blood cells and
protists
Robert Brown
1773-1858
Scottish botanist
In 1831 he was the
first person to observe
the nucleus of a cell
Schleiden & Schwann
1804-1881 1810-1882
Developing Cell Theory
1838
Schleiden Schwann
Said“all plants Said“all animals
are made up of are made up of
cells” cells”
Cell Theory Overview
1. All organisms are made of one or
more cells [Unicellular or Multicellular].
2. All cells carry on life activities.
3. New cells arise only from other living
cells.
Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic
PROKARYOTIC EUKARYOTIC
Simplest form Most common
Lack membrane Possess membrane
bound structures bound structures
Lack true nucleus and a nucleus
Example: bacteria Found in most living
and cyanobacteria things
Sizes of Cells
Eukaryotic are
usually larger than
prokaryotic
Both nutrients and
wastes are
constantly entering
and exiting cells
Vary in size and
shape
Size relationships among
prokaryotes
Bacterial Morphology Arrangement
1. Rod or Bacilli
a.Streptobacilli
b. Bacilli
2. Cocci
a. Cocci
b. Diplococci ( e.g. Neisseria meningitidis)
c. Streptococci ( e.g. Streptococcus pyogenes)
d. Staphylococci (e.g. Staphylococcus aureus)
e. Sarcina
f. tetrads ( Micrococcus species)
Bacterial Shapes, Arrangements,
and Sizes
Variety in shape, size, and arrangement but typically
described by one of three basic shapes:
coccus - spherical
bacillus – rod
coccobacillus – very short and plump ( Brucella abortus)
Streptobacilli ( Bacillus subtilus)
diplobacilli
spirillum - helical, comma, twisted rod,
spirochete – spring-like- flexible ( Treponema pallidum)
vibrio – gently curved ( Vibrio cholera)
Spirilla- rigid ( Borrelia species)
12
13
Bacterial Shapes, Arrangements,
and Sizes
Arrangement of cells is dependent on pattern of
division and how cells remain attached after
division:
cocci:
singles
diplococci – in pairs
tetrads – groups of four
irregular clusters
chains
cubical packets
bacilli:
chains
palisades 14
15
Streptococcus sp.
Bacterial morphologies (1)
Bacterial morphologies (2)
Bacterial morphologies (3)
Bacterial Morphology Arrangement
3 Spirl
a. Vibrio
b. Spirillum
c. Spirochete
Bacterial morphologies (4)
Borrelia (spirochete)
Bacterial Cell Structures &
Functions
Pili
Bacterial Cell Structure
Appendages - flagella, pili or fimbriae
Surface
layers - capsule, cell wall, cell
membrane
Cytoplasm- nuclear material, ribosome,
mesosome, inclusions etc.
Special structure - endospore
Appendages
1. flagella
Some rods and spiral form have this.
a). function: motility
b). origin : cell membrane flagella attach to
the cell by hook and basal body which
consists of set(s) of rings and rods
Gram - : 2 sets of ring and rods, L, P, S, M rings and
rods . e.g. E. coli
Gram + : S, M rings and rods .e.g. B. megaterium
Flagella
Motility
- movement
Swarming occurs with some bacteria
Spread across Petri Dish
Proteus species most evident
* Antigenic determinant
Thin peptidoglycan
glucosamine- glucosamine-long
FA FA FA FA
58
2. Cell Membrane
Function:
a. control permeability
b. transporte’s and protons for cellular metabolism
c. contain enzymes to synthesis and transport
cell wall substance and for metabolism
d. secret hydrolytic enzymes
e. regulate cell division.
Fluid mosaic model. phospholipid bilayer and
protein (structure and enzymatic function). Similar
to eukaryotic cell membrane but some differs. e.g.
sterols such as cholesterol in Euk not in Prok.
60
Functions of
the cytoplasmic membrane(1)
Functions of
the cytoplasmic membrane(2)
Transport proteins
Classes of membrane
transporting systems(1)
Classes of membrane
transporting systems(2)
Bacterial Internal Structures
Cell cytoplasm:
dense gelatinous solution of sugars, amino
acids, and salts
70-80% water
serves as solvent for materials used in all cell
functions
66
Bacterial Internal Structures
Chromosome
single,circular, double-stranded DNA
molecule that contains all the genetic
information required by a cell
DNA is tightly coiled around a protein,
aggregated in a dense area called the
nucleoid.
67
The bacterial chromosome and
supercoiling
Bacterial Internal Structures
Plasmids
small circular, double-stranded DNA
free or integrated into the chromosome
duplicated and passed on to offspring
not essential to bacterial growth and
metabolism
may encode antibiotic resistance, tolerance to
toxic metals, enzymes and toxins
used in genetic engineering- readily
manipulated and transferred from cell to cell
69
Bacterial Internal Structures
Ribosomes (70 S)
made of 60% ribosomal RNA and 40%
protein
consist of two subunits: large and small
70
71
3. Mesosomes ( mostly in Gram +ve)
* Endospores
Spore former: Sporobactobacilli and Sporosarcinae
(Gram + cocci)- no medical importance.
Bacillus and Clostridium ( Gram + Rod) have medical
importance. Coxiella ( Gram –ve Rod) cause Q fever.
70S (30S+50S)
Ribosomes 70S (30S+50S)
80S (40S+60S)
Lysosomes, peroxisomes Absent Present