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Prokaryotic macromolecules:

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Title: Prokaryotic macromolecules:


1
  • Prokaryotic macromolecules
  • Prokaryotic structural components consist of
    macromolecules such as
  • DNA
  • RNA
  • Proteins
  • Phospholipids
  • Polysaccharides
  • These macromolecules are made up of individual
    subunits
  • (ex. Proteins composed of amino
    acids)
  • The sequence of these subunits in the structure
    is called the primary structure
  • The primary structure of the macromolecule
    determines its function and
  • properties (ex. Sequence of sugars in
    bacterial lipopolysaccharides determines
  • unique cell wall properties for pathogens)

2
Table 1. Macromolecules that make up cell
material
3
Table 2. Summary of characteristics
of typical bacterial cell structures
4
  • Closer look at flagella
  • Made up of proteins
  • -Each ring, the hook and filament are all
    separate proteins
  • - Rings embedded in cell envelope
    (Gram-ve or ve shown
  • here?)
  • Not visible under light microscope
  • Powered by the proton motive force
  • -Signal detected by cell membrane
    receptor
  • -Chemical cascade initiated
  • -Protons generated (H)
  • -M ring powered by protons now rotates
  • -Rotary motion transferred to the
    filament which rotates

The ultrastructure of a bacterial flagellum
5
Closer look at fimbriae
  • Composed of proteins
  • Involved in specific adherence (attachment) of
    prokaryotes to surfaces in
  • nature
  • Major determinants of bacterial virulence allow
    pathogens to attach to
  • (colonize) tissues and/or to resist attack by
    phagocytic white blood cells.
  • Examples
  • 1. Pathogenic Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • adheres specifically to the human
    cervical or urethral epithelium by
  • means of its fimbriae
  • 2. Enterotoxigenic strains of E. coli
    adhere to the mucosal epithelium of
  • the intestine by means of specific
    fimbriae
  • 3. M-protein and associated fimbriae of
    Streptococcus pyogenes
  • involved in adherence and to
    resistance
  • to engulfment by phagocytes.

6
  • Closer look at cell envelopes ( Capsules, cell
    walls, cell membranes)
  • Draw profiles of Gram positive and Gram negative
    bacteria
  • Glycocalyx
  • (Slime layer, capsule)
  • - Polysaccharide (sugars ex. Dextrans)
  • - Protects cell from desiccation
  • - Carbohydrate reserve ( capsules
    over-produced in nutrient-rich
  • growth environments and reserved for
    subsequent metabolism)
  • - Virulence determinant (protects cell
    from engulfment by phagocytes)
  • - Involved in biofilm formation (Ex.
    Dental plaque)
  • Dental plaque revealed by a harmless
  • red dye.
  • Dextran capsule binds bacteria to tooth
  • pellicle (300-500 cells thick).
  • Primarily composed Streptococcus
  • mutans.

7
Colonies of Bacillus anthracis. The slimy or
mucoid appearance of a bacterial colony is
usually evidence of capsule production. In the
case of B. anthracis, the capsule is composed of
poly-D-glutamate. The capsule is an essential
determinant of virulence to the bacterium. In the
early stages of colonization and infection the
capsule protects the bacteria from assaults by
the immune and phagocytic systems.
Other examples of the capsule as a virulence
determinant 1. Primary determinant of
virulence of the pathogen Streptococcus
pneumoniae is its polysaccharide capsule,
which prevents ingestion of pneumococci by
alveolar macrophages. 2. Bacillus anthracis
survives phagocytic engulfment because the
lysosomal enzymes of the phagocyte cannot
initiate an attack on the poly-D-glutamate
capsule of the bacterium
8
Closer look at the Cell Wall The cell walls of
bacteria deserve special attention for several
reasons 1. They are an essential structure for
viability, as described above. 2. They are
composed of unique components (peptidoglycan)found
nowhere else in nature. 3. They are one of the
most important sites for attack by antibiotics.
4. They provide ligands for adherence and
receptor sites for drugs or viruses. 5. They
cause symptoms of disease in animals. 6. They
provide for immunological distinction and
immunological variation among strains of bacteria.
9
  • Peptidoglycan,
  • Polymer of disaccharides (alternating residues)
    N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and N-acetylmuramic
    acid (NAM)
  • Cross-linked by short chains of amino acids
    (peptide)
  • Lysozyme attacks the (glycocidic)
  • bond between NAG and NAM.
  • Beta-lactam antibiotics (Penicillin,
  • Cephalosporins) block an enzyme
  • (transpeptidase) required for cell
  • wall synthesis.

10
Structure of the Gram-positive bacterial cell
wall. The wall is relatively thick and consists
of many layers of peptidoglycan interspersed with
teichoic acids that run perpendicular to the
peptidoglycan sheets.
  • Structure of the Gram-negative cell wall. The
    wall is relatively thin and contains much less
    peptidoglycan than the Gram-positive wall. Also,
    teichoic acids are absent. However, the Gram
    negative cell wall consists of an outer membrane
    that is outside of the peptidoglycan layer. The
    outer membrane is attached to the peptidoglycan
    sheet by a unique group of lipoprotein molecules
    (LPS or endotoxin).
  • Toxic component of LPS is Lipid A

11
  • The cytoplasmic membrane
  • Selective permeability barrier that regulates
    the passage of
  • substances into and out of the cell.
  • Allows passage of water and uncharged
    molecules(up to mwt.
  • of about 100 daltons, but does not allow
    passage of larger
  • molecules or any charged substances except by
    means special
  • membrane transport processes and transport
    system
  • Composed of 40 percent phospholipid and 60
    percent protein
  • Phospholipids (amphoteric)
  • -polar hydrophilic glycerol "head
  • -two nonpolar hydrophobic fatty acid
    tails
  • Form a bilayer in aqueous environments.
  • Dispersed within the bilayer are various
    structural and
  • enzymatic proteins which carry out most
    membrane functions

Fluid mosaic model of a bacterial membrane
12
  • Functions of the prokaryotic plasma membrane
  • Osmotic or permeability barrier
  • Location of transport systems for specific
    solutes (nutrients and ions)
  • Energy generating functions, involving
    respiratory and photosynthetic
  • electron transport systems, establishment
    of proton motive force
  • Synthesis of membrane lipids (including
    lipopolysaccharide in Gram-negative cells)
  • 5. Synthesis of peptidoglycan
  • 6. Assembly and secretion of extracytoplasmic
    proteins
  • 8. Chemotaxis (both motility per se and sensing
    functions)
  • 9. Location of specialized enzyme system

13
Operation of bacterial transport systems.
Bacterial transport systems are operated by
transport proteins (sometimes called carriers,
porters or permeases) in the plasma membrane
14
  • The Cytoplasm
  • Aqueous solution of three groups of molecules
  • Proteins (enzymes), and RNA
  • 2. Small molecules that are energy sources,
  • 3. Inorganic ions and cofactors
  • Major structural Features
  • Bacterial chromosome
  • Plasmids
  • Ribosomes (70S)
  • Inclusions

When a bacterium such as E. coli is "gently
lysed" the chromosomal DNA  leaks out of the cell
as a continuous molecule that is many times
longer than the length of the cell
The bacterial chromosome or nucleoid is the
nonstaining region in the interior of the cell
cytoplasm. The granular structures distributed
throughout the cytoplasm are cell ribosomes
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