Microbiology

Bacteria Structure

Prokaryotic cells — simple but ubiquitous; key components plasma membrane, ribosomes, DNA

Bacteria are single-celled prokaryotes — no nucleus, no membrane-bound organelles. Smaller than eukaryotic cells (~1-10 µm). Key components: plasma membrane (selective barrier), cell wall (peptidoglycan; rigid; protects against osmotic pressure), nucleoid (where DNA is concentrated; not membrane-enclosed), ribosomes (70S; smaller than 80S eukaryotic), cytoplasm. Often: capsule (outer protective layer), flagella (for movement), pili (attachment, conjugation), plasmids (extra DNA). Despite simplicity: ~10^30 bacteria on Earth; foundation of ecosystems; cause many diseases.

  • Size~1-10 µm (smaller than eukaryotic cells)
  • Cell wallPeptidoglycan (polymer of sugars + amino acids)
  • Gram positiveThick peptidoglycan; stains purple
  • Gram negativeThin peptidoglycan + outer membrane; stains pink
  • Ribosome70S (different from 80S eukaryotic)
  • Population~10³⁰ bacterial cells on Earth

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Why bacteria matter

  • Disease. Many human pathogens.
  • Microbiome. Gut bacteria essential for health.
  • Antibiotics. Treatment exploits bacterial structure.
  • Food. Yogurt, cheese, fermentation.
  • Environment. Decomposition, nitrogen cycle.
  • Biotechnology. Recombinant proteins, drugs.
  • Evolution. Antibiotic resistance fast evolution.

Common misconceptions

  • Bacteria are simple. Surprisingly sophisticated.
  • All bacteria pathogenic. Most are beneficial.
  • Bacteria same as viruses. Very different — bacteria are cells.
  • Bacteria don't have DNA. They do — just no nucleus.
  • Bacteria don't have membranes. Have plasma membrane; some have outer membrane.
  • Cell wall same in all. Differs by Gram type.

Frequently asked questions

How are bacteria different from eukaryotes?

(1) No nucleus — DNA in nucleoid (concentrated region but not enclosed). (2) No membrane-bound organelles — no mitochondria, ER, Golgi. (3) Smaller — ~1-10 µm vs 10-100 µm. (4) Different ribosomes — 70S vs 80S. (5) Cell wall: peptidoglycan vs cellulose (plants) or chitin (fungi). (6) Asexual reproduction — binary fission (vs mitosis + meiosis). (7) Rapid evolution.

What's the cell wall?

Peptidoglycan polymer. Repeating units of N-acetylglucosamine + N-acetylmuramic acid; cross-linked by amino acid bridges. Provides: rigidity (against osmotic pressure), shape, protection. Different thicknesses define gram staining: gram + thick wall (40 layers), purple stain; gram - thin wall + outer membrane, pink. Penicillin: targets peptidoglycan synthesis — kills bacteria but not human cells (no peptidoglycan).

What's gram staining?

Differential staining technique developed 1884 (Hans Christian Gram). Crystal violet (purple) → iodine → alcohol wash → safranin (pink). Gram + retain purple (thick peptidoglycan blocks alcohol wash). Gram - lose purple but pick up pink (thin peptidoglycan; outer membrane removed). Different bacteria: different antibiotics work. Used for: rapid bacterial classification.

What's the bacterial flagellum?

Long whip-like appendage for motility. Composed of flagellin protein. Rotates (powered by H⁺ flow through motor at base) — propels bacterium. Number/arrangement varies: monotrichous (one), peritrichous (many around cell), polar tufts. Rotation reverses for tumbling/turning. Allows: chemotaxis (movement toward attractants, away from repellents).

What are pili?

Hair-like appendages, shorter than flagella. Functions: (1) Attachment — to host cells, surfaces, biofilms. (2) Conjugation — sex pilus connects to other bacterium for DNA exchange (transfer plasmid). (3) Type IV pili: twitching motility on surfaces. Pathogenic: E. coli adheres to gut wall via pili; gonococcus to urethra. Important target for antibiotics, vaccines.

What are plasmids?

Small circular DNA molecules, separate from main chromosome. Carry: antibiotic resistance genes, virulence factors, metabolic genes. Replicate independently of chromosome. Can transfer between bacteria (conjugation, transformation, transduction). Important in: bacterial evolution (rapid spread of resistance), genetic engineering (vectors), biotechnology.

How do bacteria reproduce?

Binary fission. Single bacterium grows; DNA replicated; cell divides into two. Fast: E. coli can divide every 20 min in optimal conditions. Theoretical: 1 cell → 10⁹ in 9 hours. Plus: horizontal gene transfer (transformation, transduction, conjugation) — share DNA between bacteria; rapid evolution. Antibiotic resistance spreads quickly.