Name 5 differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
In what ways can bacteria divide?
In chains - diplococci
Two planes - tetrad
Three planes - cluster
What is the function of the bacterial cell wall?
To confer structure, rigidity, shape and protect from osmotic lysis
What is the structure of peptidoglycan?
Overlapping lattice of 2 sugars linked by amino acid (tetrapeptide containing D and L amino acids) bridges
N-acetyl glucosamine (NAG)
N-acetyl muramic acid (NAM)
What cell wall structure is targeted by penicillin?
Transpeptides
What is the difference in structure between gram +ve and gram -ve bacteria?
Gram +ve - Peptidoglycan followed by plasma membrane
Gram -ve - Outer membrane followed by peptidoglycan, followed by a periplasmic space before the plasma membrane
What are the 4 steps in gram staining? How do gram +ve and gram -ve cells differ?
How is DNA packed into bacterial cells?
Via supercoiling due to the action of DNA gyrase, removal of this is done by topoisimerase I
How do bacteria replicate?
What are spores?
Dormant survival structures that are resistant to high temperatures, disinfectants radiation and drying. Produced only by gram +ve and mainly by Bacillus and Clostridium
What are capsules and their functions?
- Protects bacterium from drying, phagocytic engulfment and flushing (adheres to surfaces)
What are pilli?
- Have adhesive tip (lectin) and the end of a shaft that binds to specific sugars on glycoprotein/glycolipid receptors
What are the 3 parts of flagella?
What 2 factors does virulence include?
2. Factors affecting damage
What factors affect the colonisation of the host cell?
Ability to adhere, invade, contact, resist phagocytosis, evade immune response and compete for nutrients
What 3 methods can the body use to prevent adherance?
What 3 mechanisms can a bacteria have to aid in adhesion?
Pilli - Protenaceous tip can change to avoid the immune response
Adhesions - proteins on surface enabling them to bind to host cell surface
Capsules - avoid flushing response
How do invasins work?
Allow pathogen to invade host cell by activating cytoskeleton machinery and allowing entry via phagocystosis. Once inside bacterium then has access to nutrients and is protected from body defenses
How can bacteria increase the chance of contacting cells?
By being mobile e.g using flagella to move through mucous
How can bacteria avoid the response of IgG antibodies?
What 4 ways can a bacteria avoid phagocytic destruction?
How can bacteria evade the immune response?
e. g resembling carbohydrates found in the human body or coating itself in a protecting layer of antibodies
How do bacteria compete for iron in the body?
Synthesize iron chelators called siderophores
How do A-B toxins damage a host?