MIMM 211 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Gram-Negative Bacteria, The Membranes, Cytoskeleton

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**student question about how the iron gets into bacterial cells. These bacteria have specific transporters on their surface. Iron is such a small molecule so it needs to be bound to a protein that recognises the transporters to move it across the cell. Eventually, they get put into membrane-bound structures if it was free within the cells, it would be highly toxic. In the previous picture, we saw an example of a gram +ve bacterium but here, we see the outer membrane which means that we are looking at a gram -ve bacterium. All of the other structures are the same. Here, we see a good representation of the granules and dna (free-floating in the cytoplasm) Cytoplasm = all of the inside of the cell. Composed of water at 90% very thick, gel-like composition. Organised by a cytoskeleton: less complex than eukaryotic cells (primitive by comparison)

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