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Chapter 3 Observing Microorganisms Through a Microscope - continued - Differential Stains: Acid-Fast Stain • Primary stain (carbolfuchsin) binds strongly only to bacteria that have a waxy material in their cell wall. • Used to identify genus Mycobacteria – M. tuberculosis causes TB – M. leprae causes leprosy or Hansen’s disease Differential Stains: Acid-Fast Stain Primary stain = Carbolfuchsin (stains cells red) Slide is heated gently to drive stain into cell wall Decolorizer = Acid alcohol Counterstain = Methylene blue (stains cells blue) Differential Stains: Acid-Fast Stain • Cells that retain a basic stain in the presence of acidalcohol are called acid-fast. = red cells • Non–acid-fast cells lose the basic stain when rinsed with acid-alcohol, and are usually counterstained (with a different color basic stain) to see them. = blue cells Figure 3.11 Special Stains • Used to color and isolate specific parts of microorganisms – e.g. capsules, endospores, and flagella • Flagella are used for movement. • Capsules contribute to the microorganism’s virulence (the degree to which a pathogen can cause disease). • Capsules are hard to stain because it is nonionic and soluble in water. negative stain Special Stains: • Endospores: a special resistant, dormant structure formed within a cell that protects a bacteria from adverse environmental conditions. (survival mechanism) – genera Bacillus and Clostridium – Cannot be stained by ordinary staining method • Use Schaeffer-fulton endospore stain – Malachite green (heat), water wash, & safranin – Endospores stain green (malachite green) Special Stains • Negative staining is useful for capsules. – Nigrosin + basic dye • Heat is required to drive a stain into endospores. • Flagella staining requires a mordant to make the flagella wide enough to see. Figure 3.12a-c Chapter 4 Functional Anatomy of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells Part 1 Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes • All living cells can be classified into two groups based on their ultrastructure. – Prokaryotes means prenucleus in Greek (bacteria, and archaea) – Eukaryotes means true nucleus in Greek (fungi, protozoa, algae, plants, and animals) • Distinguished by the structure of cell walls and membranes, and the lack of organelles The Prokaryotic Cell • Most prokaryotes are unicellular organisms • Majority of prokaryotes are included in the bacteria. • Bacteria are differentiated by morphology (shape), chemical composition (often detected by staining reactions), nutritional requirements, biochemical activities, and source of energy (sunlight or chemicals). Bacterial Cell Fig. 4.6 The Size, Shape, and Arrangement of Bacterial Cells • Most bacteria range from 0.2 - 2.0 m in diameter and from 2 - 8 m in length • Three basic shapes of bacterial cells – Coccus (spherical), pl. cocci – Bacillus (rod-shaped), pl. bacilli – Spiral Cocci Bacilli Spiral Spirillum Fig. 4.1 a Coccobacilli Fig. 4.2 a & d Spirochete Fig. 4.4 b & c • Unusual shapes – Star-shaped Stella – Square Haloarcula (halophilic archaea) • Most bacteria are monomorphic (maintain a single shape) • A few are pleomorphic (can have many shapes) Figure 4.5 Arrangements • Pairs: diplococci, diplobacilli • Clusters: staphylococci • Chains: streptococci, streptobacilli Fig. 4.1 a & d Fig. 4.2 b Structures External to the Cell Wall Capsule Cell wall Plasma membrane Capsule Cell Wall Plasma membrane Flagella Fimbriae Fig. 4.6 Glycocalyx • Glycocalyx: a gelatinous polymer surrounding a cell (outside cell wall) – Secreted by many prokaryotes – Viscous (sticky), composed of polysaccharide, polypeptide, or both – Can protect a cell against dehydration and its viscosity may inhibit the movement of nutrients out of the cell Glycocalyx • Capsule: organized and firmly attached to the cell wall – Contribute to bacterial virulence – Protect pathogen from phagocytosis – Allows bacteria to adhere to and colonize • Slime layer: unorganized and only loosely attached to the cell wall • Extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) allows bacteria to attach to various surfaces. Flagella • Long filamentous appendages that propel bacteria – Bacteria with flagella are motile (have the ability to move on their own) • Three basic parts of a flagellum – Filament (made of chains of flagellin) – Hook (made of a protein), where filament is attached – Basal body (made of pair of rings), anchors the flagellum to the cell wall and plasma membrane Flagella • Rotation of a flagellum is either clockwise or counterclockwise. – As the flagella rotate, form a bundle that pushes against the surrounding liquid and propels the bacterium. Figure 4.8 Flagella Arrangement Figure 4.7 Flagella • Motility allows a bacterium to move toward a favorable environment or away from a adverse one. – move toward or away from stimuli (taxis) – chemotaxis: movement in response to the presence of a chemical – phototaxis: movement in response to the presence of light Flagella • A bacterium exhibits “run/swim” or “tumble” movement – run/swim: move in one direction for a length of time – tumble: periodic, abrupt, random changes in direction (caused by a reversal of flagella rotation) – bacteria move toward attractant with many runs and few tumbles – bacteria move away from repellent with frequent tumbles Flagella Figure 4.9 Flagella • Flagella proteins are H antigens. – Useful for distinguishing among serovars (variations within a species) of gram-negative bacteria e.g., E. coli O157:H7 (causes bloody diarrhea) Axial Filaments (Endoflagella) • Bundles of fibrils that arise at the ends of the cell beneath an outer sheath and spiral around the cell • Used by spirochetes for motility – e.g. Treponema pallidum (cause syphilis) Borrelia burgdorferi (cause Lyme disease) • Anchored at one end of the spirochete – have a structure similar to that of flagella Axial Filaments (Endoflagella) • Rotation of the filaments produces a movement of the outer sheath that propels the spirochetes in a spiral motion. Figure 4.10a Fimbriae and Pili • Found in many gram-negative bacteria – hairlike appendages that are shorter, straighter, and thinner than flagella – consist of a protein called pilin arranged helically around a central core • Finbriae are used to attach and colonize e.g. Neisserai gonorrhoeae (causes gonorrhea) – can be polar or evenly distributed over the entire surface of the cell – number from a few to several hundred per cell Fimbriae and Pili • Pili (sex pili) are used to transfer DNA from one cell to another – usually longer than fimbriae – number only one or two per cell Figure 4.11 The Cell Wall • Almost all prokaryotes have cell walls – A complex, semirigid structure • Protect bacterial cells from osmotic lysis – Lysis: destruction caused by rupture of the plasma membrane and the loss of cytoplasm • Maintains bacterial cell shape and serves as a point of anchorage for flagella • Enable some species of bacteria to cause disease and is the site of action of some antibiotics (e.g. Penicillin) The Cell Wall: Composition and Characteristics • Bacterial cell wall is composed of peptidoglycan (murein) – a macromolecular network consisting of a repeating disaccharide attached by polypeptides to form a lattice that surrounds and protects the entire cell • Penicillin interferes with the cell wall (peptidoglycan) synthesis – Cell lysis due to weakened cell wall Peptidoglycan – Polymer of disaccharide N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) & N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM) – Linked by polypeptides Figure 4.13a Gram-positive cell walls • Thick peptidoglycan – Provides rigidity • Teichoic acids • In acid-fast cells, contains mycolic acid (waxy lipid) Gram-negative cell walls • Thin peptidoglycan – Susceptible to mechanical breakage • No teichoic acids • Outer membrane Figure 4.13b, c Gram-positive cell walls • Teichoic acids: – Consists primarily of an alcohol and phosphate – Two classes of Teichoic acids: • Lipoteichoic acid spans the peptidoglycan layer and is links to plasma membrane • Wall teichoic acid links to peptidoglycan layer Figure 4.13b Gram-positive cell walls – Teichoic acid (negatively charged) may regulate movement of cations in and out of the cell – May assume a role in cell growth, preventing extensive wall breakdown and possible cell lysis – provide antigenic specificity • Polysaccharides on cell wall of Grampositive streptococci provide antigenic variation Gram-negative cell walls • Peptidoglycan is bonded to lipoproteins in the outer membrane and is in the periplasm. • Periplasm is a fluid-filled space between the outer membrane and the plasma membrane. – high concentration of degradative enzymes and transport proteins in periplasm Gram-Negative Outer Membrane • Consists of Lipopolysaccharides (LPS), lipoproteins, & phospholipids. Figure 4.13c Gram-Negative Outer Membrane • Has strong negative charge • Protection from phagocytes, complement, antibiotics, lysozyme, detergents, heavy metals, bile salts, and certain dyes • Porins (proteins) form channels through membrane for small molecules to pass through • LPS component – O polysaccharide = antigen, e.g., E. coli O157:H7. – Lipid A = endotoxin Gram Stain Mechanism • Based on differences in cell wall structures • Crystal violet-iodine crystals form in cell • Gram-positive – Alcohol dehydrates peptidoglycan – CV-I crystals do not leave • Gram-negative – Alcohol dissolves outer membrane and leaves small holes in peptidoglycan – CV-I washes out Gram Stain Mechanism • Reasons for Gram-positive bacteria to give gram-negative response – Cells are dead – When bacteria culture is older than 24 hours • Bacillus, Clostridium, and Mycobacterium becomes gram variable Atypical Cell Walls • Mycoplasmas – smallest known free-living bacteria; pass through most bacterial filters – Lack cell walls – Sterols in plasma membrane (unique among bacteria) • Archaea – Lack cell walls, or – Walls composed of polysaccharides & proteins (no peptidoglycan), containing peptidoglycan-like pseudomurein (lack NAM and D amino acids) Damage to Cell Walls • Cell wall synthesis is the target for some antimicrobial drugs because bacterial cell wall is made of chemicals unlike those in eukaryotic cells. • Lysozyme digests disaccharide in peptidoglycan, making gram-positive bacteria susceptible to lysis. • Penicillin inhibits peptide bridges in peptidoglycan (effective for gram-positive) Damage to Cell Walls • Protoplast: a gram-positive or plant cell treated (e.g. lysozyme) to remove the cell wall. • Spheroplast: a gram-negative bacterium treated (e.g. lysozyme) to damage the cell wall. • L forms are wall-less cells that swell into irregular shapes. e.g. some members of Proteus • Protoplasts and spheroplasts are susceptible to osmotic lysis. – Osmotic lysis: rupture of the plasma membrane resulting from movement of water into the cell