MICR 221 Lecture : MICR 221 - Bacteria Cell Walls.docx

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Protection against osmotic lysis and from toxic substances. Knowledge about assembly important in design of new antibacterial agents. Exception: mycoplasmas (bacteria) have no cell wall: archaea (halophiles, thermoacidophiles, methanogens, diversity of walls, no peptidoglycan! Difference in gram staining is due to difference in physical nature of cell walls if cell wall is removed from gram positive it stains gram negative: bacteria with no cell wall (mycoplasms) stand gram negative. Bacteria are stained with crystal violet then treated with iodine to promote dye retention. When gram negative bacteria are exposed to lysozome or penicillin, the pg layer is lost but the outer membrane remains cell in this state is called spheroplast. When gram negative are exposed to a lysozome or penicillin the cell wall is completely lost cell in this state is called a protoplast. Acts as barrier to keep periplasmic proteins from diffusing away.

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