Microbiology
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Boundless Microbiology
Cell Structure of Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryotes
Cell Walls of Prokaryotes
Microbiology Textbooks Boundless Microbiology Cell Structure of Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryotes Cell Walls of Prokaryotes
Microbiology Textbooks Boundless Microbiology Cell Structure of Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryotes
Microbiology Textbooks Boundless Microbiology
Microbiology Textbooks
Microbiology
Concept Version 6
Created by Boundless

The Cell Wall of Bacteria

Bacteria are protected by a rigid cell wall composed of peptidoglycans.

Learning Objective

  • Recall the characteristics of a bacterial cell wall


Key Points

    • A cell wall is a layer located outside the cell membrane found in plants, fungi, bacteria, algae, and archaea.
    • A peptidoglycan cell wall composed of disaccharides and amino acids gives bacteria structural support.
    • The bacterial cell wall is often a target for antibiotic treatment.

Term

  • binary fission

    The process whereby a cell divides asexually to produce two daughter cells.


Full Text

Bacterial cells lack a membrane bound nucleus. Their genetic material is naked within the cytoplasm. Ribosomes are their only type of organelle. The term "nucleoid" refers to the region of the cytoplasm where chromosomal DNA is located, usually a singular, circular chromosome. Bacteria are usually single-celled, except when they exist in colonies. These ancestral cells reproduce by means of binary fission, duplicating their genetic material and then essentially splitting to form two daughter cells identical to the parent. A wall located outside the cell membrane provides the cell support, and protection against mechanical stress or damage from osmotic rupture and lysis . The major component of the bacterial cell wall is peptidoglycan or murein. This rigid structure of peptidoglycan, specific only to prokaryotes, gives the cell shape and surrounds the cytoplasmic membrane. Peptidoglycan is a huge polymer of disaccharides (glycan) cross-linked by short chains of identical amino acids (peptides) monomers. The backbone of the peptidoglycan molecule is composed of two derivatives of glucose: N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and N-acetlymuramic acid (NAM) with a pentapeptide coming off NAM and varying slightly among bacteria. The NAG and NAM strands are synthesized in the cytosol of the bacteria. They are connected by inter-peptide bridges. They are transported across the cytoplasmic membrane by a carrier molecule called bactoprenol. From the peptidoglycan inwards all bacterial cells are very similar. Going further out, the bacterial world divides into two major classes: Gram positive (Gram +) and Gram negative (Gram -). The cell wall provides important ligands for adherence and receptor sites for viruses or antibiotics.

Bacterial Cell Wall

The anatomy of bacterial cell structure.

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