首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
High-resolution electron microscopy of polarly flagellated bacteria revealed that their flagella originate at a circular, differentiated portion of the cytoplasmic membrane approximately 25 nm in diameter. The flagella also have discs attaching them to the cell wall. These attachment discs are extremely resistant to lytic damage and are firmly bound to the flagella. The cytoplasm beneath the flagellum contains a granulated basal body about 60 nm in diameter, and a specialized polar membrane. The existence of membrane-bound basal bodies is shown to be an artifact arising from adherence of cell wall and cytoplasmic membrane fragments to flagella in lysed preparations. Based on structures observed, a mechanism to explain bacterial flagellar movement is proposed. Flagella are considered to be anchored to the cell wall and activated by displacement of underlying cytoplasmic membrane to which they are also firmly attached. An explanation for the membrane displacement is given.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The mature spore possesses a thick spore coat and a particle-bearing spore membrane. The highly laminated polaroplast membranes are located at the anterior pole of the spore. Close to its base, the polar filament is surrounded by the polaroplast membrane. The polar filament runs spirally towards the posterior pole of the spore. A large portion of the polar filament is arranged in two layers. A similar arrangement was also observed in immature spores and in the sporoblast stage, although it was not so orderly arranged in the latter. The developing polaroplast membrane was observed in the immature spore, but not in the sporoblast. The sporoblast wall is much thinner than the spore coat, but has the same texture. Endoplasmic reticulum is the most prominent cytoplasmic organelle in the developing stages of Nosema apis. Porous nuclear envelopes are also observed in developing stages. The role of the endoplasmic reticulum in the formation of the polar filament, polaroplast and spore coat, and the function of the spore membrane, are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The morphological features of the cell wall, plasma membrane, protoplasmic constituents, and flagella of Acetobacter suboxydans (ATCC 621) were studied by thin sectioning and negative staining. Thin sections of the cell wall demonstrate an outer membrane and an inner, more homogeneous layer. These observations are consistent with those of isolated, gram-negative cell-wall ghosts and the chemical analyses of gram-negative cell walls. Certain functional attributes of the cell-wall inner layer and the structural comparisons of gram-negative and gram-positive cell walls are considered. The plasma membrane is similar in appearance to the membrane of the cell wall and is occasionally found to be folded into the cytoplasm. Certain features of the protoplasm are described and discussed, including the diffuse states of the chromatinic material that appear to be correlated with the length of the cell and a polar differentiation in the area of expected flagellar attachment. Although the flagella appear hollow in thin sections, negative staining of isolated flagella does not substantiate this finding. Severe physical treatment occasionally produces a localized penetration into the central region of the flagellum, the diameter of which is much smaller then that expected from sections. A possible explanation of this apparent discrepancy is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Basal Organelles of Bacterial Flagella   总被引:19,自引:16,他引:3  
Liberated by enzymatic lysis of the cells, the flagella of Rhodospirillum rubrum, R. molischianum, and R. fulvum all have a similar structure. The hook at the base of the flagellum is connected by a short, narrow collar to a paired disc in the basal organelle. This paired disc is in turn connected to a second paired disc. The disposition of flagella to which fragments of the cell membrane still adhere suggests that the narrow collar at the base of the hook traverses both the wall and the membrane, and that the upper pair of discs in the basal organelle lies just beneath the surface of the membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Katablepharis ovalis Skuja, isolated from an impoundment in Colorado, has a cell covering composed of two layers over the cell body and flagella. The outer component of the cell covering contains 25-nm-diameter hexagonal scales arranged in rows. The inner component of the cell covering is composed of a layer of interwoven microfibrils. The inner component of the cell covering is joined to the plasma membrane by one or more attachment strips that always occur outside, and along, one of the microtubular groups of the outer array. The attachment strips resemble hemidesmosomes and are composed of rows of electron-dense material, 12 nm apart, that protrude through the plasma membrane into the extracellular space, to attach to the inner wall. The two flagella are inserted subapically into a raised area of the cell. The flagella do not have any fibrillar or tubular hairs and are covered only by the two-layered cell covering. The cell has an inner and outer array of microtubules, both of which are spindle-shaped, arising at the anterior end of the cell and continuing into the posterior end of the cell. A single large Golgi apparatus occurs in the anterior cytoplasm. The nucleus is in the center of the cell. Two rows of large ejectisomes occur posterior to the area of flagellar attachment. Smaller ejectisomes occur under the plasma membrane in the posterior and medial areas of the cell. Each ejectisome is composed of a single body containing a spirally wound, tapered ribbon. On discharge, the ejectisome ribbon rolls inward, creating a tubular structure. The possible relationship between Katablepharis, the green algae, and the cryptophytes is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
From salt flats on the Galapagos Islands, two strains of a red photosynthetic bacterium were isolated and identified as Ectothiorhodospira mobilis, an organism first described by Pelsh in 1937. The cells are curved in a short spiral, 0.7 to 1.0 mu wide and 2.0 to 4.8 mu long. They are motile by a polar tuft of flagella. Cells contain several large stacks of lamellar membranes, carrying the pigments bacteriochlorophyll a and carotenoids of the spirillo xanthin series. Cell division occurs by binary fission, not budding. The organism is strictly anaerobic and obligately photosynthetic. Its ability to grow well with sulfide, sulfur, thiosulfate, or sulfite as photosynthetic H donors puts it taxonomically in the Thiorhodaceae. During growth with sulfide, elementary sulfur is deposited outside the cells in the medium and disappears during further growth. A limited number of organic carbon compounds can be utilized as hydrogen donors in place of inorganic sulfur compounds. Under these conditions, sulfate can serve as the sulfur source. The enzymes catalase and hydrogenase are present. The newly isolated strains require vitamin B(12). They also require a salinity of 2 to 3% NaCl, but they are not extreme halophiles. The organism is not identical with any of the species listed in Bergey's Manual.  相似文献   

7.
The basic cellular organization of Heliobacterium chlorum is described using the freeze-etching technique. Internal cell membranes have not been observed in most cells, leading to the conclusion that the photosynthetic apparatus of these organisms must be localized in the cell membrane of the bacterium. The two fracture faces of the cell membrane are markedly different. The cytoplasmic (PF) face is covered with densely packed particles averaging 8 nm in diameter, while the exoplasmic (EF) face contains far fewer particles, averaging approximately 10 nm in diameter. Although a few differentiated regions were noted within these fracture faces, the overall appearance of the cell membrane was remarkably uniform. The Heliobacterium chlorum cell wall is a strikingly regular structure, composed of repeating subunits arranged in a rectangular pattern at a spacing of 11 nm in either direction. We have isolated cell wall fragments by brief sonication in distilled water, and visualized the cell wall structure by negative staining as well as deep-etching.Abbreviations PF protoplasmic fracture face - EF exoplasmic fracture face  相似文献   

8.
Adhesion to both abiotic and biotic surfaces by the gram-negative prothescate bacterium Caulobacter crescentus is mediated by a polar organelle called the "holdfast," which enables the bacterium to form stable monolayer biofilms. The holdfast, a complex polysaccharide composed in part of N-acetylglucosamine, localizes to the tip of the stalk (a thin cylindrical extension of the cell wall and membranes). We report here the isolation of adhesion mutants with transposon insertions in an uncharacterized gene cluster involved in holdfast biogenesis (hfs) as well as in previously identified polar development genes (podJ and pleC), and the holdfast attachment genes (hfa). Clean deletions of three of the four genes in the hfs gene cluster (hfsDAB) resulted in a severe holdfast biogenesis phenotype. These mutants do not bind to surfaces or to a fluorescently labeled lectin, specific for N-acetylglucosamine. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that the hfsDAB mutants fail to synthesize a holdfast at the stalk tip. The predicted hfs gene products have significant sequence similarity to proteins necessary for exopolysaccharide export in gram-negative bacteria. HfsA has sequence similarity to GumC from Xanthomonas campestris, which is involved in exopolysaccharide export in the periplasm. HfsD has sequence similarity to Wza from Escherichia coli, an outer membrane protein involved in secretion of polysaccharide through the outer membrane. HfsB is a novel protein involved in holdfast biogenesis. These data suggest that the hfs genes play an important role in holdfast export.  相似文献   

9.
ELECTRON MICROSCOPE STUDIES ON BLUE-GREEN ALGAE   总被引:17,自引:6,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

10.
The microsporidian polar tube: a highly specialised invasion organelle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
All of the members of the Microsporidia possess a unique, highly specialised structure, the polar tube. This article reviews the available data on the organisation, structure and function of this invasion organelle. It was over 100 years ago that Thelohan accurately described the microsporidian polar tube and the triggering of its discharge. In the spore, the polar tube is connected at the anterior end, and then coils around the sporoplasm. Upon appropriate environmental stimulation the polar tube rapidly discharges out of the spore pierces a cell membrane and serves as a conduit for sporoplasm passage into the new host cell. The mechanism of germination of spores, however, remains to be definitively determined. In addition, further studies on the characterisation of the early events in the rupture of the anterior attachment complex, eversion of the polar tube as well as the mechanism of host cell attachment and penetration are needed in order to clarify the function and assembly of this structure. The application of immunological and molecular techniques has resulted in the identification of three polar tube proteins referred to as PTP1, PTP2 and PTP3. The interactions of these identified proteins in the formation and function of the polar tube remain to be determined. Data suggest that PTP1 is an O-mannosylated glycoprotein, a post-translational modification that may be important for its function. With the availability of the Encephalitozoon cuniculi genome it is now possible to apply proteomic techniques to the characterisation of the components of the microsporidian spore and invasion organelle.  相似文献   

11.
Acetobacterium woodii is a Gram-positive anaerobic nonsporeforming bacterium able to grow on H2 and CO2 as sole sources of energy. The product of fermentation is acetic acid. Fine structural analysis showed rod-shaped flagellated cells, and coccoid cells without flagella arranged predominantly in pairs and chains. The cell wall was found to be composed of three layers. The cell surface exhibited a periodic array of particles consisting of subunits. The cytoplasmic membrane showed particles either either in random distribution or in a hexagonal pattern. Intracytoplasmic membranes were rarely observed, whereas inclusion bodies of varying shapes, predominantly in an uncommon disc-shape, could frequently be observed. Their content was dissolved in ultrathin sections indicating hydrophobic nature.  相似文献   

12.
Campylobacter jejuni sheds its flagella and varying proportions of the poles of the cell late in the growth cycle, resulting in the production of very small flagellated structures 0.1 to 0.3 microM in diameter. Electron microscopy revealed that these structures were minicells possessing outer membrane, cytoplasmic membrane, flagellar basal complex, and polar membrane; nucleoplasms were not seen. The initial event in the formation of these minicells involved a constriction of the cytoplasmic membrane, segregating the polar regions of the cell. The peptidoglycan layer of the cell wall was not visible, but was presumed to lyse at the separation site of minicell formation, and to reform or remain intact along the main length of the cell because the rods did not spheroplast. Finally, rupture and resealing of the outer membrane component of the wall resulted in the release of fully enclosed minicells and nonflagellated rods.  相似文献   

13.
贝氏隐孢子虫在北京鸭体内发育的超微结构研究   总被引:11,自引:1,他引:10  
贝氏隐孢子虫各期虫体均位于宿主粘膜上皮细胞的带虫空泡中。在虫体与上皮细胞接触处,虫体表膜反复折迭形成营养器。子孢子或裂殖子与粘膜上皮细胞接触后,逐步过渡为球形的滋养体;滋养体经2—3次核分裂、产生含4或8个裂殖子的两代裂殖体,裂殖体以外出芽方式产生裂殖子;裂殖子无微孔,顶端表皮形成3—4个环嵴,裂殖子进一步发育成为配子体;大配子体含有两种类型的成囊体。小配子呈楔形,无鞭毛和顶体,有一个致密的长椭圆形细胞核,小配子表膜内侧有9根膜下微管;孢子化卵囊内含四个裸露的子孢子和一个大残体。本文是有关鸭体内隐孢子虫超微结构的首次报导。  相似文献   

14.
巨大螺旋藻光合放氧和超微结构的研究   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
选用常温下培养的巨大螺旋藻为材料,对其光合放氧与超微结构进行了观察和研究。结果表明:1)巨大螺旋藻具有较强的放氧能力;2)巨大螺旋藻细胞内存在有含量极丰富的类囊体,气泡,藻胆体及羧化体等特写结构与其光合放氧特性相适应;3)类囊体膜片层在细胞的部分区域已趋于重叠,且封闭成一独立系统存在,具类似真核生物叶绿体的结构;4)从进化角度来看,巨大螺旋藻类囊体膜存在的方式可以作为叶绿体系统演化的证据之一,即真  相似文献   

15.
Basal structure and attachment of flagella in cells of Proteus vulgaris   总被引:18,自引:14,他引:4  
Abram, Dinah (Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.), Henry Koffler, and A. E. Vatter. Basal structure and attachment of flagella in cells of Proteus vulgaris. J. Bacteriol. 90:1337-1354. 1965.-The attachment of flagella to cells of Proteus vulgaris was studied electron microscopically with negatively stained and shadow-cast preparations of ghosts from standard cultures and from special cultures that produced "long forms." The flagellum, the basal portion of which is hooked, arises within the cell from a nearly spherical structure, 110 to 140 A in diameter. This structure appears to be associated with the cytoplasmic membrane; it may be a part of the membrane or a separate entity that lies just beneath the membrane. Flagella associated with cell walls free from cytoplasmic membrane frequently have larger bodies, 200 to 700 A in diameter, associated with their base. These structures probably consist at least partly of fragments of the cytoplasmic membrane, a portion of which folds around a smaller structure. Flagella in various stages of development were observed in long forms of P. vulgaris cells grown at low temperature. The basal structure of these flagella was similar to that of the long or "mature" flagella. Strands connecting the basal structures were observed in ghosts of long forms; these strands appear to be derived from the cytoplasmic membrane. Flagella were found to be attached to fragments of cell wall and to cytoplasmic membrane in a similar manner as they are attached to ghosts. In isolates of flagella that have been separated from the cells mechanically, the organelles often terminate in hooks which almost always appear naked, but have a different fine structure than the flagellum proper.  相似文献   

16.
Cyanobacteria, the progenitors of plant and algal chloroplasts, enabled aerobic life on earth by introducing oxygenic photosynthesis. In most cyanobacteria, the photosynthetic membranes are arranged in multiple, seemingly disconnected, concentric shells. In such an arrangement, it is unclear how intracellular trafficking proceeds and how different layers of the photosynthetic membranes communicate with each other to maintain photosynthetic homeostasis. Using electron microscope tomography, we show that the photosynthetic membranes of two distantly related cyanobacterial species contain multiple perforations. These perforations, which are filled with particles of different sizes including ribosomes, glycogen granules and lipid bodies, allow for traffic throughout the cell. In addition, different layers of the photosynthetic membranes are joined together by internal bridges formed by branching and fusion of the membranes. The result is a highly connected network, similar to that of higher-plant chloroplasts, allowing water-soluble and lipid-soluble molecules to diffuse through the entire membrane network. Notably, we observed intracellular membrane-bounded vesicles, which were frequently fused to the photosynthetic membranes and may play a role in transport to these membranes.  相似文献   

17.
Thylakoids are photosynthetically active membranes found in Cyanobacteria and chloroplasts. It is likely that they originated in photosynthetic bacteria, probably in close connection to the occurrence of photosystem II and oxygenic photosynthesis. In higher plants, chloroplasts develop from undifferentiated proplastids. These contain very few internal membranes and the whole thylakoid membrane system is built when chloroplast differentiation takes place. During cell and organelle division a constant synthesis of new thylakoid membrane material is required. Also, rapid adaptation to changes in light conditions and long term adaptation to a number of environmental factors are accomplished by changes in the lipid and protein content of the thylakoids. Thus regulation of synthesis and assembly of all these elements is required to ensure optimal function of these membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Observations on the fine structure of a methane-oxidizing bacterium   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Structural details of membranes, intracellular organelles, and the cell wall of a methane-utilizing bacterium identified as aMethylomonas sp. were studied by electron microscopy. The cell wall structure is similar to that found in other gram-negative bacteria. The cytoplasmic membrane shows invaginations, presumably forming the internal membrane bundles. Two types of polar organelles were encountered. In older cells myelin-like structures were observed. Under certain cultural conditions bleb-formation and possibly accumulation of reserve materials occurred. We wish to thank Mrs. M. H. Bakker-van der Velden, Mrs. W. H. Batenburgvan der Vegte and Miss J. C. de Bruyn for making the electron microscopical preparations and photographs. Thanks are due to Mr R. S. M. Revell of the Philips E. M. Application Laboratory, Eindhoven, for the photographs with the goniometer attachment.  相似文献   

19.
The attachment of Vibrio alginolyticus to glass surfaces was investigated with special reference to the swimming speed due to the polar flagellum. This bacterium has two types of flagella, i.e., one polar flagellum and numerous lateral flagella. The mutant YM4, which possesses only the polar flagellum, showed much faster attachment than the mutant YM18, which does not possess flagella, indicating that the polar flagellum plays an important role. The attachment of YM4 was dependent on Na+ concentration and was specifically inhibited by amiloride, an inhibitor of polar flagellum rotation. These results are quite similar to those for swimming speed obtained under the same conditions. Observations with other mutants showed that chemotaxis is not critical and that the flagellum does not act as an appendage for attachment. From these results, it is concluded that the attachment of V. alginolyticus to glass surfaces is dependent on swimming speed.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Three types of cells comprise each Fabespora vermicola sporoblast: valvogenic (VAV), capsulogenic (CAP), and germinative (GEM). Walls, polar caps, and sutures are the main assemblages produced by the VAV cells. The unique polar cap organelle extends over the aperture region of the polar capsule component of the CAP cell. The VAV cell also assembles a wall located on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane facing the sporoblast exterior. Bundles of 7 nm microfilaments develop within the extracellular space between the VAV and interior cells of the sporoblast. These microfilaments assemble late in sporogenesis when the spore acquires the capacity for locomotion. Polar filament construction takes place exclusively within the polar capsule primordium (PCP) by apparent self-assembly prior to the PCP being enveloped by membranes. The CAP and GEM cells accumulate considerable glycogen during sporogenesis. The first identifiable GEM cell is single, but has two unpaired nuclei. These GEM cell nuclei later form a paired structure which is sustained into the spore stage.We acknowledge Ann Scarborough and Roswitha Buxton for their expert technical assistance. The study was conducted in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, National Marine Fisheries Service, under PL 88-309, Project No. 2-325-R  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号