prokayotic vs eukaryotic cells functional anatomy
TRANSCRIPT
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Prokayotic vs Eukaryotic Cells
Functional Anatomy
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Typical Bacterial Cell
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Typical Eukaryotic Cells
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Prokaryote vs Eukaryote Overview
Prokaryote or “before nucleus”– no membrane-bound
nucleus– no other membrane-
bound organelles– DNA not associated with
histones– cell walls almost always
contain peptidoglycan– 70s ribosomes– Largest about size of
smallest eukaryote
Eukaryote or “true nucleus”– membrane bound
nucleus– many other membrane-
bound organelles– DNA associated with
histones– cell walls never contain
peptidoglycan– 80s ribosomes– Smallest about size of
largest prokaryote
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Prokaryotic Cells
Size– Smallest of living cells
»0.2 to 2.0 μm in diameter»2 to 8 μm in length
– Most eukaryotes bigger– Viruses much smaller
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Common Bacterial Shapes Cocci - spherical Bacilli – rods
Spirillum - spiral
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Other, Less Common Shapes
Vibrio – comma
Coccobacillus -
Square
Star
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Common Cell arrangements
Cocci Bacilli
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Prokaryotic Anatomy from the Outside In
Glycocalyx Appendages Cell Wall Bacterial Cell Membranes Inside the Cell
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Glycocalyx Sticky substances that surround cells
– Firmly attached = capsule– Loosely attached = slime layer
Composition varies with species– Polysaccharides– Polypeptides– Both
Function– Protect cell from phagocytosis and dehydration– Aid in attachment to various surfaces– May inhibit movement of nutrients from cell
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Appendages
Flagella– Tail-like structures extending out
from glycocalyx– Functions in movement of the
bacterial cell– Complex structure
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Structure of Flagella Filament
– Long tail-like region– Constant diameter– Made of protein
Hook– Filament
attachment Basal body
– Small central rod inserted into a series of rings
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Cell Wall
Rigid Composed mostly of peptidoglycan
– Found only in bacterial cell walls– Amount differs in gram+ and gram-
cells Protects cell in environments with
osmotic pressures
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Peptidoglycan Glycan portion
– NAG» N-acetylglucosamine
– NAM» N-acetylmuramic
acid
– Linked in rows of 10-65 sugars
Peptide portion– Adjacent rows are
linked by polypeptides
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Gram+ Cell Wall
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Gram – Cell Wall
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Atypical Cell Walls Mycoplasmas
– Lack cell wall– Smallest known bacteria
Archeobacteria– Cell walls contain pseudomurein rather than
peptidoglycan– Lacks D-amino acids found in bacteria
L-forms– Tiny mutant bacteria with defective cell walls– Just enough material to prevent lysis in dilute
environments
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Inside the Cell Wall Cell Membrane Cytoplasm
– 4/5 water and 1/5 dissolved substances– Most chemical reactions occur here
Ribosomes– Abundant in cytoplasm– 70s
Nuclear region– Central 10% of cell volume– DNA in single circular chromosome
Inclusions– small bodies within cytoplasm– Many different types