Prescott's Microbiology
Prescott's Microbiology
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781259281594
Author: Joanne Willey, Linda Sherwood Adjunt Professor Lecturer, Christopher J. Woolverton Professor
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 3, Problem 1CHI

Propose a model for the assembly of a flagellum in a typical Gram-positive cell envelope.

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Summary Introduction

A thin, long, whip-like appendage that attached to a bacterial cell is called as flagella. It is involved in the locomotion of bacteria. Flagella have several specialized roles. The reproduction rate is increased in some eukaryotic cells by flagella. The bacterial and eukaryotic flagella are also used to sense alteration in environments such as pH disturbances and temperature.

Explanation of Solution

In a gram-positive bacterium, an assembly of flagellum needs the basal body, which is inserted into the plasma membrane. The basal body and hook are relatively different from the filament and it is little wider when compared to the filament. The basal body is the most complex portion of flagellum. The hook proteins and flagellin subunits must also have a way for breaking the plasma membrane and the peptidoglycan layers that enclosed it.

First, the basal body is introduced into the plasma membrane. Then, the hook proteins can utilize the channel through the basal body and assemble outer surface of the plasma membrane. The subunits of flagellin are followed through the hook proteins and the basal body. The subunits of flagellin travelled through the tube of filament and added to the tip. They are spontaneously aggregated under the direction of protein, when the subunits reaches the tip, filament grows at the base. There also must be lytic enzymes, which degrade the peptidoglycan and allow the flagella to break through the layers.

In gram-negative bacterium, the biogenesis of flagella is complex by the addition lipid bilayer called outer membrane. The basal body of gram-negative bacteria flagella are anchored in the inner plasma membrane and passes through the entire. The basal body is used to transport the filament protein and hook outside of the cytoplasm.

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Chapter 3 Solutions

Prescott's Microbiology

Ch. 3.4 - MICRO INQUIRY How does the outer membrane of the...Ch. 3.4 - MICRO INQUIRY Are these transporter proteins...Ch. 3.4 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Describe in detail the...Ch. 3.4 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply List the major molecules...Ch. 3.4 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply When protoplasts and...Ch. 3.4 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 4. The cell walls of most...Ch. 3.4 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply What two mechanisms allow...Ch. 3.5 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply What is the difference...Ch. 3.5 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply S-layers and some capsules...Ch. 3.6 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Briefly describe the nature...Ch. 3.6 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply List the most common kinds...Ch. 3.6 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply do plasmids differ from...Ch. 3.6 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Explain the importance of...Ch. 3.7 - MICRO INQUIRY How does flagellum growth compare to...Ch. 3.7 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply What are the functions of...Ch. 3.7 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply What terms are used to...Ch. 3.7 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply What is self-assembly? Why...Ch. 3.8 - Would this flagellum be found in a typical...Ch. 3.8 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Describe the way many...Ch. 3.8 - Prob. 2RIACh. 3.8 - Prob. 3RIACh. 3.8 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Suggest why chemotaxis is...Ch. 3.9 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Describe the structure of...Ch. 3.9 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply Briefly describe endospore...Ch. 3.9 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply What features of the...Ch. 3 - Propose a model for the assembly of a flagellum in...Ch. 3 - The peptidoglycan of bacteria has been compared...Ch. 3 - Why might a microbe have more than one uptake...Ch. 3 - Design an experiment that illustrates the cell...Ch. 3 - What would you expect to observe if you were able...Ch. 3 - Develop a hypothesis to explain why gas vacuoles...Ch. 3 - In 2009 it was reported that a member of the genus...Ch. 3 - LPS is synthesized in the cytoplasm and then...
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