Structure and chemical composition of bacterial cell Wall

Structure and chemical composition of cell wall, cytoplasm membrane, protoplasts, spheroplasts the cytoplasm, nuclear material. The bacterial cell wall is a rigid structure surrounding the cytoplasmic membrane that gives the cell its shape, mechanical strength, and protection against osmotic pressure.
It is the primary feature distinguishing Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.

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B. Functions

  • Maintains cell shape and rigidity
  • Prevents osmotic lysis
  • Anchors appendages like flagella
  • Provides antigenic properties (e.g., O antigen)
  • Acts as a site of action for many antibiotics (e.g., penicillin targets peptidoglycan)

C. Structure and Chemical Composition

The major chemical component of the bacterial cell wall is peptidoglycan (murein) — a unique polymer found only in bacteria.

Peptidoglycan Composition:

  • Polysaccharide backbone: Alternating units of
    • N-acetylglucosamine (NAG)
    • N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM)
  • Each NAM has a short tetrapeptide side chain (L-alanine, D-glutamic acid, meso-diaminopimelic acid, D-alanine).
  • Peptide chains are cross-linked by peptide bridges, forming a strong, mesh-like network.

D. Gram-positive vs. Gram-negative Cell Walls

FeatureGram-positive BacteriaGram-negative Bacteria
Peptidoglycan thicknessThick (20–80 nm, multi-layered)Thin (2–7 nm, single layer)
Teichoic acidsPresent (wall and lipoteichoic acids)Absent
Outer membraneAbsentPresent (phospholipids, lipopolysaccharide, proteins)
Periplasmic spaceSmall or absentLarge and well-defined
LipoproteinsFewPresent (connect outer membrane to peptidoglycan)
Staining reactionRetains crystal violet → PurpleLoses crystal violet → Pink/red (safranin)
ExampleStaphylococcus aureusEscherichia coli

E. Special Types of Cell Walls

  • Acid-fast bacteria (e.g., Mycobacterium tuberculosis):
    Cell wall contains mycolic acids, waxes, and arabinogalactan, making it waxy and resistant to stains and chemicals.
  • Mycoplasma:
    No cell wall → cell membrane strengthened by sterols (cholesterol-like molecules).

2. Cytoplasmic (Plasma) Membrane

A. Structure

The cytoplasmic membrane is a thin (7–8 nm), semi-permeable layer located beneath the cell wall.
It follows the Fluid Mosaic Model — composed of:

  • Phospholipid bilayer (40%)
  • Proteins (60%) — integral and peripheral

Phospholipids:
Contain hydrophilic (polar) heads and hydrophobic (non-polar) tails, forming a bilayer.
Proteins:
Act as enzymes, transport channels, and receptors.

B. Chemical Composition

  • Lipids: Phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, cardiolipin
  • Proteins: Enzymatic and structural proteins
  • Carbohydrates: Very small amounts (in glycoproteins or glycolipids)

C. Functions

  • Selective permeability – regulates entry/exit of substances
  • Respiration and energy production – contains enzymes for the electron transport chain (no mitochondria in bacteria)
  • Biosynthesis of lipids and peptidoglycan
  • Transport of nutrients and ions (via active/passive mechanisms)
  • Anchoring site for DNA and flagella
  • Secretion of enzymes and toxins

3. Protoplasts and Spheroplasts

These are wall-deficient bacterial forms, produced by lysozyme action or antibiotic treatment.

A. Protoplast

  • Derived from Gram-positive bacteria after complete removal of cell wall.
  • Surrounded only by the cytoplasmic membrane.
  • Spherical, osmotically fragile, can survive only in isotonic solutions.

Formation:

Cell wall destroyed by lysozyme, which hydrolyzes the β-1,4 linkages between NAG and NAM in peptidoglycan.

Example:
Bacillus subtilis → forms protoplasts after lysozyme treatment.

B. Spheroplast

  • Derived from Gram-negative bacteria after partial removal of the cell wall.
  • Retains outer membrane remnants in addition to cytoplasmic membrane.
  • Less fragile than protoplasts.

Example:
E. coli or Salmonella typhi → form spheroplasts upon penicillin or lysozyme exposure.

C. Importance

  • Useful in cell wall biosynthesis studies.
  • Serve as host systems for DNA uptake (transfection).
  • Basis for L-forms (bacteria that can grow without cell walls under certain conditions).

4. Cytoplasm

A. Structure

The cytoplasm is a viscous, semi-transparent, gel-like matrix enclosed by the plasma membrane.
It lacks membrane-bound organelles but contains macromolecules, inclusions, and ribosomes.

B. Chemical Composition

  • Water: 80–90%
  • Proteins: Enzymes, structural proteins
  • Carbohydrates: Energy source
  • Lipids: Membrane synthesis
  • Inorganic ions: K⁺, Mg²⁺, phosphate, sulfate
  • Nucleic acids and ribosomes

C. Components of Cytoplasm

  1. Ribosomes (70S):
    1. Site of protein synthesis
    1. Made of rRNA (23S, 16S, 5S) and proteins
    1. Target for antibiotics like tetracycline and erythromycin
  2. Inclusion bodies:
    1. Reserve materials such as glycogen, sulfur, polyphosphate, or poly-β-hydroxybutyrate
    1. Example: Corynebacterium diphtheriae → metachromatic granules (volutin)
  3. Gas vacuoles:
    1. In aquatic bacteria and cyanobacteria; control buoyancy.
  4. Magnetosomes:
    1. Contain magnetite (Fe₃O₄) — orient bacteria along magnetic fields.

D. Functions of Cytoplasm

  • Site for metabolic reactions (glycolysis, biosynthesis)
  • Houses genetic material and ribosomes
  • Maintains internal environment and turgor pressure

5. Nuclear Material (Nucleoid)

A. Structure

  • The bacterial nucleus is not enclosed by a nuclear membrane; hence, called the nucleoid.
  • Contains the bacterial chromosome, a single, circular, double-stranded DNA molecule.

Size:

  • ~1 mm long when uncoiled, with 4 × 10⁶ base pairs in E. coli.
  • Supercoiled and attached to the plasma membrane at one point (the origin of replication).

B. Chemical Composition

  • DNA: Double-stranded helix, containing genes for cell structure and function.
  • RNA: mRNA, rRNA, tRNA synthesized from DNA templates.
  • Proteins: Enzymes for replication, transcription, and DNA packaging.

C. Plasmids (Extra-chromosomal DNA)

  • Small, circular DNA molecules independent of chromosomal DNA.
  • Carry non-essential genes (e.g., antibiotic resistance, virulence factors).
  • Capable of replicating autonomously.
  • Transferred during bacterial conjugation via sex pili.

D. Functions of Nucleoid and Plasmids

  • Storage of genetic information
  • Replication and gene expression
  • Adaptation and evolution via horizontal gene transfer

6. Table

ComponentMain CompositionFunction
Cell wallPeptidoglycan, teichoic acidsShape, rigidity, protection
Cytoplasmic membranePhospholipids, proteinsSelective barrier, respiration
ProtoplastCell membrane onlyModel for cell wall studies
SpheroplastPartial wall + membraneSemi-protected osmotically
CytoplasmWater, enzymes, ribosomesMetabolic activities
NucleoidCircular DNAGenetic control
PlasmidsSmall circular DNAAntibiotic resistance, conjugation

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