- Plasma membrane acts as a selective barrier allowing nutrients to enter the cell and wastes to leave the cell.
- Peptidoglycan is the MOST common compound in the cell walls of gram-positive bacteria.
- Gram-positive bacteria should be very vulnerable to inhibition by penicillin because penicillin is an antibiotic that inhibits enzymes from catalyzing the synthesis of peptidoglycan.
- Bacteria rarely thrive in high sugar content foods, even if the food containers are left open, because the bacteria undergo death by plasmolysis.
- Correct order of how a predatory bacterium such as Bdellovibrio bacteriophorus may drill into its prey’s cytoplasm.
- Capsule
- Membrane composed of lipopolysaccharides
- Peptidoglycan
- Membrane composed of phospholipids
- If a bacterium possesses antibiotic resistance and the potential to persist through very adverse conditions such as freezing temperatures, where should the DNA be located? The nucleoid region, endospore, and/or plasmids.
- A complex “motor” is embedded in the cell wall and plasma membrane of the typical prokaryotic flagellum.
- The prokaryotic chromosome is not contained within a nucleus, but, rather is found at the nucleoid region.
- The following statements are in relation to a gram-positive prokaryotic cell.
- The cell wall is composed almost entirely of peptidoglycan.
- Flagellum requires ATP to function, and permits some species to respond to taxes.
- A capsule is not present in all bacteria, this cell covering enables cells that possess it to resist the defenses of host organisms.
- The endospore is not present in all bacteria. This structure enables those that possess it to germinate after exposure to hard conditions.
- The sex pilus is a structure that permits conjugation.
- The cell wall is an important source of endotoxins in gram-negative species.
- Mutation is a primary source of variation I prokaryote populations.
- Prokaryotes divide by binary fission, without mitosis or meiosis.
- Bacteria can grow and genetically change quickly; this can be graphed. A period of time depicting a high rate of genetic change may have a steep slope on a line graph.
- To increase the number of bacteria, and thus genetic variation through possible beneficial mutations, binary fission must take place.
- Chemotroph: an organism that obtains its energy from chemicals.
- Heterotroph & Chemotroph: A prokaryote that obtains both energy and carbon as it decomposes dead organisms. Both can also obtain carbon and energy by ingesting prey.
- Parasitic chemoheterotrophs are responsible for many human diseases.
- Cyanobacteria are examples of photoautotrophs.
- Photoautotrophs use light energy to synthesize organic compounds from CO2.
- Chemoautotrophs obtain energy by oxidizing inorganic substances; energy that is used, in part, to fix CO2.
- Photoheterotrophs use light energy to generate ATP, but they do not release oxygen.
- Photoautotrophs are responsible for high levels of O2 in the atmosphere.
- How do animals gain access to fixed nitrogen if no nitrogen-fixing prokaryotes are known to live inside animals?
- They may ingest nitrogen fixers.
- They may ingest plants that harbor nitrogen fixers.
- They may ingest other animals that ingest nitrogen fixers or plants with nitrogen fixers.
- The genomes of archaeans may be unique; nonetheless, they do contain genes that originated within bacteria and have since adapted to unique environments.
- Both archaeans and bacteria have plasma membranes and both lack nuclear envelopes. They may or may not have the same cell wall or have identical rRNA sequences.
- Extreme halophiles should be expected to be most strongly resistant to plasmolysis in hypertonic environments.
- Sulfolobus acidocaldarius is a thermoacidophile that lacks peptidoglycan. What can we concur from this information?
- It is an archaean.
- The optimal pH of its enzymes will below pH7.
- It could inhabit hydrothermal springs.
- The primary ecological role of prokaryotes is to break down organic matter.
- The recycling of nutrients would be greatly reduced, at least initially, if all prokaryotes on Earth suddeny vanished.
- A bacterium lives on a leaf. The bacterium eats the leaf’s waxy coating but inhibits the growth of other microbes on that leaf. The bacterium can cause a fatal disease if it enters the inside of the leaf. When the plant dies, the bacterium and its offspring decompose the plant. What roles do the bacterium play?
- The bacterium is a mutualist, a parasite, and a nutrient recycler.
- Why can prokaryotes be considered more successful on Earth than humans?
- More numerous.
- More biomass.
- More diverse in metabolism.
- Can occupy more diverse habitats.
- Closing previously opened containers is not a good way to slow down or prevent bacterial growth in comparison to refrigeration, pickling, irradiation, or using lots of sugar.
- Overusing antibiotics can encourage the growth of more antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria.
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics can inhibit the growth of healthy intestinal bacteria and can thus cause a patient to become deficient in certain vitamins.
- Genetic variation in bacterial populations can result from transformation, mutations, conjugation, and transduction, but not from meiosis.
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