The morphology of the bacterial cell constitutes
the size, shape, structure and arrangement. The unit of bacterial measurement
is the micrometer. The bacteria most frequently studied in the laboratory
measure approximately 0.5 to 1.0 by 2.0 to 5.0 um.
Morphologic types according to
shape and arrangement
1. Spherical or
ellipsoidal: The Cocci
Round cells
which multiply by binary fission and their arrangement depends on the plane of
division
Diplococci –
occur in pairs of cells
Streptococci –
cells arranged in bead or chains
Staphylococci
– irregular clusters resembling bunches of grapes
Sarcinae –
cuboidal arrangement of usually 8 or more cells along three dimensions.
2. Cylindrical:
The Bacilli
They do not have the variety of
patterns exhibited by the cocci. Occasionally, they maybe:
Diplobacilli – occurs in pairs
Streptobacilli – occur in chains
Most bacilli, however, occur as
single, unattached cells. Some are only slightly longer than they are wide;
others are several times as long as they are wide.
3. Spiral–shaped:
The Spirilla
These occur
predominantly as unattached individual cells. Bacteria exhibit differences in:
a. Length
b. Number
of amplitude of spirals
c. Rigidity
of cell walls
Short,
incomplete spirals are known as comma bacteria or vibrios
Most of the
bacteria seen in the laboratory exhibit these three main morphologic types.
Other common types seen are:
a. Filamentous
– like the tubercle bacilli
b. Mycelial
forms – such as the fungus like bacteria
c. Fusiform
with a stalk protruding from one pole
Approximate composition of the
bacterial cell:
1. Water
70%
2. Dry
weight 30%
Protein
70%
RNA 12%
DNA 3%
Lipids 6%
Polysaccharides
5%
Phospholipids 4%
EXTERNAL
STRUCTURES OF THE CELL
1. Flagella
–
are thin hair–like appendages protruding through the cell wall. It consist of
three parts:
a. Basal
or granular body attached to the cytoplasmic membrane
b. Hook
– like axial structure attached to the basal body
c. Long
thin untampered filament
According to
location and number of flagella, bacteria are classified as:
a. Monotrichous
– with one polar flagellum
b. Lopotrichous
– with two or more polar flagella
c. Ampitrichous
– with tufts of flagella at both poles
d. Peritrichous
– eight or more flagella distributed over the surface
Atrichous –
the term give to those bacteria which do not possess flagella
Chemical
composition: Protein (flagellin)
Functions
a. Motility – move at
high speed
b. Antigenicity – the protein
composition serves as the antigen and therefore elicit antibody specific for
flagella. This is the basis of the Immobilization Test for Syphilis wherein the
flagella are agglutinated or rendered immobile by antiserum (antibody) specific
for Treponema pallidium.
Methods for
detection of flagella
a. Motility test
1. Directly
observed by microscopic examination
a. Wet
mount
b. Hanging
drop
True motility – if the
bacteria seem to be going in a definite direction.
Brownian
movement
– if the bacteria are bouncing back and forth rapidly due to the bombardment
from molecules of water.
2. Indirectly
observed thru growth of bacteria in a semisolid medium
b. Non–motile
– growth of bacteria is confined along the inoculation line
Flagella are
very difficult to demonstrate microscopically because of their very small size
and their fragile state. Ordinary staining methods do not demonstrate them. A
mordant must be used, which is a special reagent that deposit on the flagellum,
making it appear thicker.
b. Direct
visualization of flagella
1. In
unstained preparations – using Brightfield microscopy and mordanting
2. In
stained preparations – using Phase contrast, Darkfield or Electron microscopy
c. Indirect
evidence of Serologic Testing
“H” antigen is
the flagellar antigen used
Not
all motile bacteria possess flagella
Not
all bacteria have flagella. They are present in many species of bacilli, rare
in
cocci
2. Pili
They are
shorter and finer than the flagella. They are seen both in motile and non–motile
bacteria, therefore they are not concerned with motility.
Chemical
composition: Protein
Types of pili
a. Ordinary pili
(colonization antigen) – plays a role in the adherence of symbiotic
bacteria to host cells.
b. Sex pili – responsible
for the attachment of the donor cell and recipient cell in conjugation.
Function
a. The
F pilus (sex or fertility pilus) serves as a port of entry of genetic material
during bacterial conjugation.
b. Attachment
site for bacterial viruses
c. Facilitates
adherence to mammalian surfaces
d. Antigenicity
3. Capsule or
slime layer or glycocalyx
When bacteria
synthesized a large amount of polymer, it forms a condensed, well defined layer
surrounding the cell, it is called a capsule. When it forms a
loose meshwork of fibrils extending outward from the cell, it is called glycocalyx.
In some cases, masess of polymer are formed which appear to be totally detached
from the cells but in which the cells may be entrapped is referred to as slime
layer.
This structure
gives a mucoid or viscous colony.
Chemical
composition
a. Polysaccharide
(e.g. Streptococcus pneumoniae)
b. Polypeptide
(e.g. Bacillus anthracis)
c. Nucleic
acid admixed with polysaccharide (e.g. Mycobacterium tuberculosis)
Function
a. Antiphagocytic
and antibacteriophage
b. Antigenicity
Significance
of the capsule for bacteria
a. Provides
a protective covering to the cell
b. Serves
as a reservoir of food
c. Site
for disposal of wastes substances
d. For
pathogenic bacteria, capsule increases infectivity, so loss of the capsule
renders the bacteria avirulent
Significance
of the capsule for man
a. Associated
with virulence, bacteria makes the infection more difficult to combat because
of its antiphagocytic property
b. Responsible
for the slime encountered in industrial process, making it an ecological
nuisance
c. Capsular
material can be extracted and used in the preparation of dextran, cellulose and
levans from sucrose
d. Some
organisms like Streptococcus mutans owes its capacity to adhere to tightly to
tooth enamel to glycocalyx
The size of
the capsule depends relatively on the method used to demonstrate it. In wet
preparation, this structure appears thick and in dry preparations, it tends to
shrink.
Detection
of capsule:
a. Stained
preparations – special dyes or reagents are used.
b. Relief
or Indirect or Negative staining – India ink is the most commonly used.
4. Cell wall
In between the
capsule, if present, and the cytoplasmic membrane lies the cell wall. It is
rigid and elastic, retains its original shape even after being subjected to
osmotic pressure changes or freezing followed by thawing.
Chemical
composition:
Peptidoglycan and diaminopimelic acid
Peptidoglycan
or murein or mucopeptide is a complex polymeric substances found in all
bacterial cell walls. It provides strength and rigidity of the cell wall.
In addition to
the peptidoglycan,
The Gram positive cell wall
contains
a. Teichoic
acid – may be ribitol or glycerol type, confers antigenic property, binds and
maintains supply of magnesium
b. Polysaccharide
and peptides – responsible for endotoxic shock.
The Gram negative cell wall
contains
a. Lipoprotein
b. Protein
– phospholipid bilayer
c. Lipopolysaccharide
– confers toxicity of gram negative bacteria in the so called endotoxin which
is released when bacterial cell lyse.
Functions
a. Protects
the cell from mechanical damage and from osmotic rupture in dilute media.
b. Essential
for bacterial growth and cell division
c. Responsible
for the shape of the cell
d. Major
distinction between gram (+) and gram (–) bacteria
e. Antigenic
specificities
f. Acts as a primer during cell
division for its own biosynthesis
RELATIVE
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN
CHARACTERISTICS GRAM (+) GRAM (–)
Cell wall composition low in lipids high in
lipids
Susceptibility to penicillin more susceptible less susceptible
Inhibition by basic dyes marked inhibition less inhibition
Nutritional requirement relatively complex relatively simple
Resistance to physical more resistant less resistant
disruption
Hydrolytic action susceptible resistant
Protoplast, spheroplast and L–forms
Removal of the entire cell wall by
both physical and chemical criteria will form Protoplast. A protoplast assumes
a spherical shape has the following additional characteristics:
a. Non–motile
b. Does
not divide
c. Does
nor form new cell wall
d. Usually
not susceptible to infection by bacteriophage
A protoplast
may be produced by
a. Removal
of the cell wall by treating the cells with an enzyme (lysozyme) which has
selectively dissolves the cell wall material
b. Growing
the organism in an environment which prevents the synthesis of cell wall
substances but does not interfere with growth and reproduction.
Protoplasts
are usually derived from Gram (+) bacteria.
Treatment of the Gram (–) bacterial
cell wall under the same conditions as above may remove peptidoglycan but a
major portion of the cell wall material or constituents will remain. These are
called spheroplast.
Several species of bacteria have been
observed which undergo a transition from their normal morphological forms to very
small bodies the so called L–forms. They may rise spontaneously during some
state in the culture of the bacterial form, as its formation may be induced by:
a. Penicillin
and other antibiotics
b. Antibodies
specific for the bacterial form
c. Enzymes
such as lysozyme
L–forms have little if any rigid cell
wall layer, however, it is able to survive, grow and propagate. They grow best
on semisolid media, producing very small colonies. Their cultural appearance
closely resembles the Mycoplasma. They are capable of reverting to normal form
because of its residual peptidoglycan when removed from the inducing medium.
Significance
of the L–forms:
a. They
can produce chronic infection, the organisms persists and become sequestered in
a protective medium
b. They
are relatively resistant to antibiotic therapy
c. They
can produce a relapse or a recent overt/acute infection
INTERNAL
STRUCTURES OF THE CELL
1. Cytoplasmic
membrane / protoplasmic membrane
This structure
is a thin covering lying immediately beneath the cell wall.
Chemical
composition:
complex lipoprotein
This structure
is destroyed by certain agents like detergents, polymyxin and other
antibiotics. Damage to this membrane by physical and chemical agents may result
in the death of the cell.
Functions:
a. Essential
for viability
b. Selective
permeability – controls the passage of nutrients and waste products into and
out of the cell.
c. It
contains the enzymes that synthesize complex liquids as well as the components
of the cell wall, enzymes involved in electron transport and oxidative
phosphorylation.
2. Mesosomes
It is an
extremely important structure associated with several vital processes of the
cell since it is an extension of the cytoplasmic membrane.
Function:
a. They
are involved in septum formation during the process of bacterial cell division
b. They
are associated with bacterial nuclear material and its replication and certain
enzymatic process like electron transport.
3. Ribosomes
These are RNA–protein
particles. It contains the enzymes, which function in protein synthesis.
4. Nuclear
material
Bacterial
cells do not contain the nucleus characteristic of the cells of the higher
plants and animals. They do, however, contain “bodies” within the cytoplasm
that are regarded as nuclear structure, and the DNA of the bacterial cell is
confined to this area. The DNA carries within its molecules the messages that
control the activities of the cell. It can be demonstrated by the use of
Feulgen stain and electron microscope.
5. Cytoplasmic
inclusions
These are
concentrated deposits of certain substances. They are also known as volutin
granules or metachromatic granules. They are not equally prominent in all
bacterial cells and their appearance is influenced by the age of the cells and
the environment where they have grown. Granules serve the cells as a source of
stored foods.
Chemical
composition
a. Metaphosphate
and polyphosphate
b. Polysaccharide
granules
c. Sulfur
as globules in the cell.
Detection:
a. Identified
by using stains which, because of a high degree of affinity for the chemical
material of the granules make them stand out against the cytoplasm.
b. Treating
the granulated cell with chemical solutions known to dissolve the material of
the granules.
6. Endospores
These are
thick–walled oval body produced by some bacteria. These oval bodies are
commonly called spores. They are resistant to physical and chemical agents due
to dipocolinic acid–calcium complex and in part to their dehydrated state.
As long as
environment conditions are adverse to the growth of the bacterium, the
endospore will remain a spore. However, if conditions become favorable for
growth, it germinates and become vegetative cell. The spores represent a
dormant (resting) phase of the bacterial cell.
The following
bacteria are capable of producing endospores:
a. Bacillus
b. Clostridium
c. Desulfotomaculum
d. Sporolactobacillus
e. Sporosarcinae
Location of
the spores within the cell:
a. Central
b. Terminal
c. Subterminal
Detection
1. In
unstained cell suspension, spores are observed as intracellular refractile
bodies.
2. In
stained preparations by conventional method, spores appear as colorless area in
stained cell. The spores are commonly stained with malachite green.
MAJOR CHARACTERISTICS
OF MICROORGANISM
The characteristic of the
microorganism have to be determined in detail before one can identify and
classify the microbes. Among the major characteristics which are observed and
determined include the following:
1. Morphological
characteristics – the size of the cells, the shape and their arrangement,
differentiation and identification
2. Cultural
characteristics – the nutrients required for growth and the environmental
conditions that will favor their growth
3. Metabolic
(biochemical) characteristics – the manner in which the microorganisms carries
out the chemical processes of life
4. Chemical
composition characteristics – the identification of the major characteristics
chemical constituent of the cell.
5. Antigenic
characteristic – the detection of the cell chemical components that provide
evidence for similarities between species
6. Genetic
characteristics – the analysis of the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and the
determination of the reaction between DNA materials extracted from different
species.
No comments:
Post a Comment