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Lecture PowerPoint to accompany

Foundations in
Microbiology
Seventh Edition

Talaro
Chapter 4
An Introduction to the
Prokaryotic Cell, Its
Organization, and Members
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
4.1 Characteristics of Cells and Life
All living things (single and multicellular) are
made of cells that share some common
characteristics:
– Basic shape – spherical, cubical, cylindrical
– Internal content – cytoplasm, surrounded by a
membrane
– DNA chromosome(s), ribosomes, metabolic
capabilities
Two basic cell types: eukaryotic and prokaryotic
2
Characteristics of Cells
Eukaryotic cells: animals, plants, fungi, and
protists
– Contain membrane-bound organelles that
compartmentalize the cytoplasm and perform specific
functions
– Contain double-membrane bound nucleus with DNA
chromosomes
Prokaryotic cells: bacteria and archaea
– No nucleus or other membrane-bound organelles

3
Characteristics of Life
• Reproduction and heredity – genome composed of
DNA packed in chromosomes; produce offspring
sexually or asexually
• Growth and development
• Metabolism – chemical and physical life processes
• Movement and/or irritability – respond to
internal/external stimuli; self-propulsion of many
organisms
• Cell support, protection, and storage mechanisms – cell
walls, vacuoles, granules and inclusions
• Transport of nutrients and waste
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4.3 Prokaryotic Profiles

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Prokaryotic Profiles
• Structures that are essential to the functions
of all prokaryotic cells are a cell membrane,
cytoplasm, ribosomes, and one (or a few)
chromosomes

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Figure 4.1 Structure of a bacterial cell

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4.3 External Structures
• Appendages
– Two major groups of appendages:
• Motility – flagella and axial filaments (periplasmic
flagella)
• Attachment or channels – fimbriae and pili
• Glycocalyx – surface coating

8
Flagella
• 3 parts:
– Filament – long, thin, helical structure composed of protein
Flagellin
– Hook – curved sheath
– Basal body – stack of rings firmly anchored in cell wall
• Rotates 360o
• Number and arrangement of flagella varies:
– Monotrichous, lophotrichous, amphitrichous, peritrichous
• Functions in motility of cell through environment

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Figure 4.2 Flagella

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Flagellar Arrangements
1. Monotrichous – single flagellum at one end
2. Lophotrichous – small bunches emerging
from the same site
3. Amphitrichous – flagella at both ends of cell
4. Peritrichous – flagella dispersed over surface
of cell; slowest

11
Figure 4.3 Electron micrographs of
flagellar arrangements

12
Flagellar Responses
Guide bacteria in a direction in response to external
stimulus:
Chemical stimuli – chemotaxis; positive and negative
Light stimuli – phototaxis
Signal sets flagella into rotary motion clockwise or
counterclockwise:
Counterclockwise – results in smooth linear direction –
run
Clockwise – tumbles

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Figure 4.4 The operation of flagella

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Figure 4.5 Chemotaxis in bacteria

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Periplasmic Flagella
• Internal flagella, enclosed in the space
between the outer sheath and the cell wall
peptidoglycan
• Produce cellular motility by contracting and
imparting twisting or flexing motion

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Figure 4.6 Periplasmic flagella

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Fimbriae
• Fine, proteinaceous, hairlike bristles
emerging from the cell surface
• Function in adhesion to other cells and
surfaces

18
Pili
• Rigid tubular structure made of pilin protein
• Found only in gram-negative cells
• Function to join bacterial cells for partial DNA
transfer called conjugation

19
Glycocalyx
• Coating of molecules external to the cell wall,
made of sugars and/or proteins
• Two types:
1. Slime layer - loosely organized and attached
2. Capsule - highly organized, tightly attached
• Functions:
– Protect cells from dehydration and nutrient loss
– Inhibit killing by white blood cells by phagocytosis,
contributing to pathogenicity
– Attachment - formation of biofilms

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21
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Figure 4.11 Biofilm on a catheter

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4.4 The Cell Envelope
• External covering outside the cytoplasm
• Composed of two basic layers:
– Cell wall and cell membrane
• Maintains cell integrity
• Two different groups of bacteria demonstrated
by Gram stain:
– Gram-positive bacteria: thick cell wall composed
primarily of peptidoglycan and cell membrane
– Gram-negative bacteria: outer cell membrane,
thin peptidoglycan layer, and cell membrane
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Figure 4.12

Insert figure 4.12


Comparative cell envelopes

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Structure of Cell Walls
• Determines cell shape, prevents lysis
(bursting) or collapsing due to changing
osmotic pressures
• Peptidoglycan is primary component:
– Unique macromolecule composed of a
repeating framework of long glycan chains
cross-linked by short peptide fragments

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Figure 4.13 Peptidoglycan

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Gram-Positive Cell Wall
• Thick, homogeneous sheath of peptidoglycan
– 20-80 nm thick
– Includes teichoic acid and lipoteichoic acid:
function in cell wall maintenance and enlargement
during cell division; move cations across the cell
envelope; stimulate a specific immune response
– Some cells have a periplasmic space, between the
cell membrane and cell wall

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Figure 4.12

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Gram-Negative Cell Wall
• Composed of an outer membrane and a thin
peptidoglycan layer
• Outer membrane is similar to cell membrane bilayer
structure
– Outermost layer contains lipopolysaccharides and
lipoproteins (LPS)
• Lipid portion (endotoxin) may become toxic when released
during infections
• May function as receptors and blocking immune response
• Contain porin proteins in upper layer – regulate molecules
entering and leaving cell
– Bottom layer is a thin sheet of peptidoglycan
• Periplasmic space above and below peptidoglycan
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Table 4.1 Comparison of Gram-Positive and Gram-Negative

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The Gram Stain
• Differential stain that distinguishes cells with a gram-
positive cell wall from those with a gram-negative cell
wall
– Gram-positive - retain crystal violet and stain purple
– Gram-negative - lose crystal violet and stain red from
safranin counterstain
• Important basis of bacterial classification and
identification
• Practical aid in diagnosing infection and guiding drug
treatment

33
34
Nontypical Cell Walls
• Some bacterial groups lack typical cell wall
structure, i.e., Mycobacterium and Nocardia
– Gram-positive cell wall structure with lipid
mycolic acid (cord factor)
• Pathogenicity and high degree of resistance to certain
chemicals and dyes
• Basis for acid-fast stain used for diagnosis of infections
caused by these microorganisms
• Some have no cell wall, i.e., Mycoplasma
– Cell wall is stabilized by sterols
– Pleomorphic
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Figure 4.15 Extreme variation in shape of
Mycoplasma pneumoniae

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Cell Membrane Structure
• Phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins –
fluid mosaic model
• Functions in:
– Providing site for energy reactions, nutrient processing, and
synthesis
– Passage of nutrients into the cell and the discharge of wastes
• Cell membrane is selectively permeable

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Figure 4.16 Cell membrane structure

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4.5 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

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Bacterial Internal Structures
• Chromosome
– Single, circular, double-stranded DNA
molecule that contains all the genetic
information required by a cell
– Aggregated in a dense area called the nucleoid
• DNA is tightly coiled

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Figure 4.17 Chromosome structure

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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

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Bacterial Internal Structures
• Ribosomes
– Made of 60% ribosomal RNA and 40% protein
– Consist of two subunits: large and small
– Prokaryotic differ from eukaryotic ribosomes in
size and number of proteins
– Site of protein synthesis
– Present in all cells

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Figure 4.18 Prokaryotic ribosome

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Bacterial Internal Structures
• Inclusions and granules
– Intracellular storage bodies
– Vary in size, number, and content
– Bacterial cell can use them when environmental
sources are depleted
– Examples: glycogen, poly b-hydroxybutyrate, gas
vesicles for floating, sulfur and phosphate
granules (metachromatic granules), particles of
iron oxide

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Figure 4.19 Bacterial inclusion bodies

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Bacterial Internal Structures
• Cytoskeleton
– Many bacteria possess an internal network of
protein polymers that is closely associated with
the cell wall

47
Bacterial Internal Structures
• Endospores
– Inert, resting, cells produced by some G+ genera:
Clostridium, Bacillus, and Sporosarcina
• Have a 2-phase life cycle:
– Vegetative cell – metabolically active and growing
– Endospore – when exposed to adverse environmental conditions;
capable of high resistance and very long-term survival
– Sporulation - formation of endospores
• Hardiest of all life forms
• Withstands extremes in heat, drying, freezing, radiation, and
chemicals
• Not a means of reproduction
– Germination - return to vegetative growth
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Figure 4.22 Sporulation cycle

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Endospores
• Resistance linked to high levels of calcium and
dipicolinic acid
• Dehydrated, metabolically inactive
• Thick coat
• Longevity verges on immortality, 250 million
years
• Resistant to ordinary cleaning methods and boiling
• Pressurized steam at 120oC for 20-30 minutes will
destroy

50
4.6 Bacterial Shapes,
Arrangements, and Sizes
• Vary in shape, size, and arrangement but
typically described by one of three basic
shapes:
– Coccus – spherical
– Bacillus – rod
• Coccobacillus – very short and plump
• Vibrio – gently curved
– Spirillum – helical, comma, twisted rod,
• Spirochete – spring-like

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Figure 4.23 Common bacterial shapes

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Table 4.2 Comparison of Spiral-Shaped Bacteria

53
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 (sarcina)
– Bacilli:
• Diplobacilli
• Chains
• Palisades 54
Figure 4.25 Arrangement of cocci

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Figure 4.26 The dimensions of bacteria

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4.7 Classification Systems
in the Prokaryotae
1. Microscopic morphology
2. Macroscopic morphology – colony appearance
3. Bacterial physiology
4. Serological analysis
5. Genetic and molecular analysis

57
Bacterial Taxonomy Based on
Bergey’s Manual
• Bergey’s Manual of Determinative Bacteriology –
five volume resource covering all known
prokaryotes
– Classification based on genetic information –
phylogenetic
– Two domains: Archaea and Bacteria
– Five major subgroups with 25 different phyla

58
Major Taxonomic Groups of Bacteria
• Domain Archaea – primitive, adapted to
extreme habitats and modes of nutrition
• Domain Bacteria:
– Phylum Proteobacteria – Gram-negative cell
walls
– Phylum Firmicutes – mainly gram-positive
with low G + C content
– Phylum Actinobacteria – Gram-positive with
high G + C content

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Figure 4.27 Universal phylogenetic tree

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Table 4.3 General Classification Scheme

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Diagnostic Scheme for Medical Use
• Uses phenotypic qualities in identification
– Restricted to bacterial disease agents
– Divides bacteria based on cell wall structure,
shape, arrangement, and physiological traits

62
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Species and Subspecies
• Species – a collection of bacterial cells which share an
overall similar pattern of traits in contrast to other
bacteria whose pattern differs significantly
• Strain or variety – a culture derived from a single
parent that differs in structure or metabolism from
other cultures of that species (biovars, morphovars)
• Type – a subspecies that can show differences in
antigenic makeup (serotype or serovar), susceptibility
to bacterial viruses (phage type) and in pathogenicity
(pathotype)

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Prokaryotes with Unusual Characteristics
• Free-living nonpathogenic bacteria
• Photosynthetic bacteria – use photosynthesis, can
synthesize required nutrients from inorganic
compounds
– Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae)
• Gram-negative cell walls
• Extensive thylakoids with photosynthetic chlorophyll pigments
and gas inclusions
– Green and purple sulfur bacteria
• Contain photosynthetic pigment bacteriochlorophyll
• Do not give off oxygen as a product of photosynthesis
– Gliding, fruiting bacteria
• Gram-negative
• Glide over moist surfaces
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Figure 4.28 Structure of cyanobacteria

66
Figure 4.29 Photosynthetic bacteria

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Unusual Forms of
Medically Significant Bacteria
• Obligate intracellular parasites
– Rickettsias
• Very tiny, gram-negative bacteria
• Most are pathogens that alternate between mammals and
blood-sucking arthropods
• Obligate intracellular pathogens
• Cannot survive or multiply outside of a host cell
• Cannot carry out metabolism on their own
• Rickettsia rickettisii – Rocky Mountain spotted fever
• Rickettsia typhi – endemic typhus

68
Unusual Forms of
Medically Significant Bacteria
– Chlamydias
• Tiny
• Obligate intracellular parasites
• Not transmitted by arthropods
• Chlamydia trachomatis – severe eye infection and
one of the most common sexually transmitted
diseases
• Chlamydia pneumoniae – lung infections

69
4.8 Archaea: The Other Prokaryotes
• Constitute third Domain Archaea
• Seem more closely related to Domain Eukarya than to
bacteria
• Contain unique genetic sequences in their rRNA
• Have unique membrane lipids and cell wall construction
• Live in the most extreme habitats in nature,
extremophiles
• Adapted to heat, salt, acid pH, pressure, and atmosphere
• Includes: methane producers, hyperthermophiles,
extreme halophiles, and sulfur reducers
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Archaea

71
Table 4.5 Comparison of Three Cellular Domains

72

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