Ultrastructure of Bacterial Cell - Permanent and Non-Permanent Elements of Bacterial Cell
Ultrastructure of Bacterial Cell - Permanent and Non-Permanent Elements of Bacterial Cell
Ultrastructure of Bacterial Cell - Permanent and Non-Permanent Elements of Bacterial Cell
1) fimbriae
2) flagella
3) capsule
4) spore
5) intracytoplasmic inclusions
6) Plasmides
Bacterial Appendages:
• Pili (pl), pilus (s)
– only found in gram negative bacteria
– tubulare, hairlike structures of protein larger
and more rare than fimbriae.
• 2 types of pili
- atacnement pilus - allow bacteria to attach to
other cells
- sex pilus,
pilus - transfer from one bacterial cell to
another- conjugation.
Fimbriae
• fimbriae (pl) fimbria (s)
– Adhesion to cells and surfaces
– Responsible for biofilms.
– Pathogenesis of gonococcus and E.coli
Escherichia coli.
At the end of each fimbria are special proteins called
adhesins.
The specific type of adhesin varies by type of bacteria, but
regardless of the type, adhesin molecules allow bacteria
with fimbriae to adhere to host cells by docking, like a
lock and key, with receptor proteins on the surface of
host epithelial cells.
This ability of fimbriae to stick to epithilial cells leads to
many diseases transmitted via mucous membranes,
including gonorrhoeae, bacterial meningitis and
infections of internal medical devices and indwelling
catheters.
Flagella
– long appendages which rotate by means of a "motor" located just under the cytoplasmic membrane.
– bacteria may have one, a few, or many flagella in different positions on the cell.
•Advantages
- chemotaxis –
positive and negative.
- motility
•All spirilla, half of bacilli,
•rare cocci.
Flagella
Three morphological regions
• Helical filament
– long outermost region; composes up to 90% of its length
– contains the globular (roughly spherical) protein flagellin
arranged in several chains and form a helix around a hollow core
• Basal body
– terminal portion of the flagellum
– fix the flagellum to the cell wall and plasma membrane
– composed of a central rod inserted into a series of rings
Gram negative - 2 pairs of rings
• Outer pair - fixed to the outer membrane and peptidoglycan layer
• Inner pair - fixed to the plasma membrane (SM ring)
Gram positive - only inner pair is present
Motility
• Types of bacterial motility
– run or swim - when a bacterium moves in one direction
for a length of time
– tumbles - periodic, abrupt random changes in direction
– swarming - rapid wavelike growth across a solid culture
medium
Antigenicity
– flagellar or H antigen - useful in the serological
identification of serotypes of Salmonella organisms
Arrangements
• Flagella vary in number and arrangement.
• Polar arrangment
– Monotrichious - 1 flagellum at one end
• Fastest; Pseudomonas -example
– Lophotrichious - tuft at one end
– Amphitrichious- bipolar
– Peritrichious - multiple flagella; randomly
dispersed around the bacterial cell
• E. coli - example
Axial filaments
• indirect
– Stab inoculation of the semisolid media
• nonmotile - growth is limited at the point of inoculation
• motile - growth is diffuse or moves away from the line of inoculation;
turbidity of the medium
Detection of Motility
Indirect
• DIRECT METHOD (to deter. Flagella)
• Purpose: To determine the
presence/absence and location of flagella
on various microorganisms
• Principle: Because bacterial flagella are
very thin and fragile a special stain
(flagella stain) is prepared that contains a
mordant. This mordant allows piling of the
stain on the flagella, increasing the
thickness until they become visible.
Various arrangements of flagella are seen
on different cells.
2. Bacterial Surface Structure
- cell envelope
A. Glycocalyx - some extracellular material
secreted by many bacterial cells in the form of:
– capsule - attached tightly to the bacterium and
has definite boundaries.
– slime layer - loosely associated with the bacterium
and can be easily washed off
Compositions:
- layer of polysaccharide
- proteins - sometimes
Capsule
Functions Medical Importance