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 Bacteria
Cell Structure
They are as unrelated to human beings as living things can be, but bacteria
are essential to human life and life on planet Earth. Although they are
notorious for their role in causing human diseases, from tooth decay to the
Black Plague, there are beneficial species that are essential to good health.
For example, one species that lives symbiotically in the large intestine
manufactures vitamin K, an essential blood clotting factor. Other species are
beneficial indirectly. Bacteria give yogurt its tangy flavor and sourdough bread
its sour taste. They make it possible for ruminant animals (cows, sheep, goats)
to digest plant cellulose and for some plants, (soybean, peas, alfalfa) to
convert nitrogen to a more usable form.
Bacteria are prokaryotes, lacking well-defined nuclei and membrane-bound
organelles, and with chromosomes composed of a single closed DNA circle. They
come in many shapes and sizes, from minute spheres, cylinders and spiral
threads, to flagellated rods, and filamentous chains. They are found practically
everywhere on Earth and live in some of the most unusual and seemingly
inhospitable places.
Evidence shows that bacteria were in existence as long as 3.5 billion years
ago, making them one of the oldest living organisms on the Earth. Even older
than the bacteria are the archeans (also called archaebacteria) tiny prokaryotic
organisms that live only in extreme environments: boiling water, super-salty
pools, sulfur-spewing volcanic vents, acidic water, and deep in the Antarctic
ice. Many scientists now believe that the archaea and bacteria developed
separately from a common ancestor nearly four billion years ago. Millions of
years later, the ancestors of today's eukaryotes split off from the archaea.
Despite the superficial resemblance to bacteria, biochemically and genetically,
the archea are as different from bacteria as bacteria are from humans.
In the late 1600s, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek became the first to study bacteria
under the microscope. During the 19th century, the French scientist Louis
Pasteur and the German physician Robert Koch demonstrated the role of bacteria
as pathogens (causing disease). The 20th century saw numerous advances in
bacteriology, indicating their diversity, ancient lineage, and general
importance. Most notably, a number of scientists around the world made
contributions to the field of microbial ecology, showing that bacteria were
essential to food webs and for the overall health of the Earth's ecosystems. The
discovery that some bacteria produced compounds lethal to other bacteria led to
the development of antibiotics, which revolutionized the field of medicine.
There are two different ways of grouping bacteria. They can be divided into
three types based on their response to gaseous oxygen. Aerobic bacteria require
oxygen for their health and existence and will die without it. Anerobic bacteria
can't tolerate gaseous oxygen at all and die when exposed to it. Facultative
aneraobes prefer oxygen, but can live without it.
The second way of grouping them is by how they obtain their energy. Bacteria
that have to consume and break down complex organic compounds are heterotrophs.
This includes species that are found in decaying material as well as those that
utilize fermentation or respiration. Bacteria that create their own energy,
fueled by light or through chemical reactions, are autotrophs.
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Capsule - Some species of bacteria have a third protective
covering, a capsule made up of polysaccharides (complex carbohydrates).
Capsules play a number of roles, but the most important are to keep the
bacterium from drying out and to protect it from phagocytosis (engulfing) by
larger microorganisms. The capsule is a major virulence factor in the major
disease-causing bacteria, such as Escherichia coli and Streptococcus
pneumoniae. Nonencapsulated mutants of these organisms are
avirulent, i.e. they don't cause disease.
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Cell Envelope - The cell envelope is made up of two to three
layers: the interior cytoplasmic membrane, the cell wall, and -- in some
species of bacteria -- an outer capsule.
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Cell Wall - Each bacterium is enclosed by a rigid cell wall
composed of peptidoglycan, a protein-sugar (polysaccharide) molecule. The
wall gives the cell its shape and surrounds the cytoplasmic membrane,
protecting it from the environment. It also helps to anchor appendages like
the pili and flagella, which originate in the cytoplasm membrane and
protrude through the wall to the outside. The strength of the wall is
responsible for keeping the cell from bursting when there are large
differences in osmotic pressure between the cytoplasm and the environment.
Cell wall composition varies widely amongst bacteria and is one of the
most important factors in bacterial species analysis and differentiation.
For example, a relatively thick, meshlike structure that makes it possible
to distinguish two basic types of bacteria. A technique devised by Danish
physician Hans Christian Gram in 1884, uses a staining and washing technique
to differentiate between the two forms. When exposed to a gram stain,
gram-positive bacteria retain the purple color of the stain because the
structure of their cell walls traps the dye. In gram-negative bacteria, the
cell wall is thin and releases the dye readily when washed with an alcohol
or acetone solution.
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Cytoplasm - The cytoplasm, or protoplasm, of bacterial cells is
where the functions for cell growth, metabolism, and replication are carried
out. It is a gel-like matrix composed of water, enzymes, nutrients, wastes,
and gases and contains cell structures such as ribosomes, a chromosome, and
plasmids. The cell envelope encases the cytoplasm and all its components.
Unlike the eukaryotic (true) cells, bacteria do not have a membrane enclosed
nucleus. The chromosome, a single, continuous strand of DNA, is localized,
but not contained, in a region of the cell called the nucleoid. All the
other cellular components are scattered throughout the cytoplasm.
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Cytoplasmic Membrane - A layer of phospholipids and proteins,
called the cytoplasmic membrane, encloses the interior of the bacterium,
regulating the flow of materials in and out of the cell. This is a
structural trait bacteria share with all other living cells; a barrier that
allows them to selectively interact with their environment. Membranes are
highly organized and asymmetric having two sides, each side with a different
surface and different functions. Membranes are also dynamic, constantly
adapting to different conditions.
One of those components, plasmids, are small, extrachromosomal genetic
structures carried by many strains of bacteria. Like the chromosome,
plasmids are made of a circular piece of DNA. Unlike the chromosome, they
are not involved in reproduction. Only the chromosome has the genetic
instructions for initiating and carrying out cell division, or binary
fission, the primary means of reproduction in bacteria. Plasmids replicate
independently of the chromosome and, while not essential for survival,
appear to give bacteria a selective advantage.
Plasmids are passed on to other bacteria through two means. For most
plasmid types, copies in the cytoplasm are passed on to daughter cells
during binary fission. Other types of plasmids, however, form a tubelike
structure at the surface called a pilus that passes copies of the plasmid to
other bacteria during conjugation, a process by which bacteria exchange
genetic information. Plasmids have been shown to be instrumental in the
transmission of special properties, such as antibiotic drug resistance,
resistance to heavy metals, and virulence factors necessary for infection of
animal or plant hosts. The ability to insert specific genes into plasmids
have made them extremely useful tools in the fields of molecular biology and
genetics, specifically in the area of genetic engineering.
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Flagella - Flagella (singular, flagellum) are hairlike structures
that provide a means of locomotion for those bacteria that have them. They
can be found at either or both ends of a bacterium or all over its surface.
The flagella beat in a propeller-like motion to help the bacterium move
toward nutrients; away from toxic chemicals; or, in the case of the
photosynthetic cyanobacteria; toward the light.
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Nucleoid - The nucleoid is a region of cytoplasm where the
chromosomal DNA is located. It is not a membrane bound nucleus, but simply
an area of the cytoplasm where the strands of DNA are found. Most bacteria
have a single, circular chromosome that is responsible for replication,
although a few species do have two or more. Smaller circular auxiliary DNA
strands, called plasmids, are also found in the cytoplasm.
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Pili - Many species of bacteria have pili (singular, pilus), small
hairlike projections emerging from the outside cell surface. These
outgrowths assist the bacteria in attaching to other cells and surfaces,
such as teeth, intestines, and rocks. Without pili, many disease-causing
bacteria lose their ability to infect because they're unable to attach to
host tissue. Specialized pili are used for conjugation, during which two
bacteria exchange fragments of plasmid DNA.
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Ribosomes - Ribosomes are microscopic "factories" found
in all cells, including bacteria. They translate the genetic code from the
molecular language of nucleic acid to that of amino acids -- the building
blocks of proteins. Proteins are the molecules that perform all the
functions of cells and living organisms. Bacterial ribosomes are similar to
those of eukaryotes, but are smaller and have a slightly different
composition and molecular structure. Bacterial ribosomes are never bound to
other organelles as they sometimes are (bound to the endoplasmic reticulum)
in eukaryotes, but are free-standing structures distributed throughout the
cytoplasm. There are sufficient differences between bacterial ribosomes and
eukaryotic ribosomes that some antibiotics will inhibit the functioning of
bacterial ribosomes, but not a eukaryote's, thus killing bacteria but not
the eukaryotic organisms they are infecting.
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