Flagella: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Flagella are long protusions on the back of a cell such as the tail of the [[Sperm|sperm]]&nbsp;cell. They can propel a cell through liquid or fluid mediums via their undulation and fluctation. [[Eukaryotic flagella|Eukaryotic flagella]] are enlongated versions of [[Cilia|cilia]]&nbsp;whereas [[Bacterial flagella|bacterial flagella]] are completely different both in structure and mechansims&nbsp;<ref>Albert, B. et al. (2008) Molecular Biology of the Cell. New York: Garland Publishing</ref>.&nbsp;  
Flagella are long protusions on the back of a cell such as the tail of the [[Sperm|sperm]]&nbsp;cell. They can propel a cell through liquid or fluid mediums via their undulation and fluctation. [[Eukaryotic flagella|Eukaryotic flagella]] are enlongated versions of [[Cilia|cilia]]&nbsp;whereas [[Bacterial flagella|bacterial flagella]] are completely different both in structure and mechansims&nbsp;<ref>Albert, B. et al. (2008) Molecular Biology of the Cell. New York: Garland Publishing</ref>.&nbsp;  


<br> '''Bacterial Flagella''' Bacterial flagella are made entirely of protein and have a diameter of around 12-30nm. Several thousand protein subunit molecules of Flagellin make up one bacterial flagellum, of these molecules there are two types. Three types of flagella arrangement are understood to occur: monotrichous, peritrichous and lophotrichous. Monotrichous flagellum are single and [[Polar]], a peritrichous arrangement occurs with flagella over the entire cell surface, whilst lophotrichous arrangements occur when there are many polar flagellum.<ref>Brooks et al: Jawetz, Melnick &amp;amp; Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, 24th edition, The McGraw-Hill Compaines, Inc, 2007</ref>  
<br> '''Bacterial Flagella''' Bacterial flagella are made entirely of protein and have a diameter of around 12-30nm. Several thousand protein subunit molecules of Flagellin make up one bacterial flagellum, of these molecules there are two types. Three types of flagella arrangement are understood to occur: monotrichous, peritrichous and lophotrichous. Monotrichous flagellum are single and [[Polar]], a peritrichous arrangement occurs with flagella over the entire cell surface, whilst lophotrichous arrangements occur when there are many polar flagellum.<ref>Brooks et al: Jawetz, Melnick &amp;amp;amp;amp; Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, 24th edition, The McGraw-Hill Compaines, Inc, 2007</ref>  


=== Reference  ===
=== Reference  ===
Line 7: Line 7:
<references />  
<references />  


Brooks et al: Jawetz, Melnick &amp; Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, 24th edition, The McGraw-Hill Compaines, Inc, 2007
<br>

Revision as of 22:07, 22 October 2012

Flagella are long protusions on the back of a cell such as the tail of the sperm cell. They can propel a cell through liquid or fluid mediums via their undulation and fluctation. Eukaryotic flagella are enlongated versions of cilia whereas bacterial flagella are completely different both in structure and mechansims [1]


Bacterial Flagella Bacterial flagella are made entirely of protein and have a diameter of around 12-30nm. Several thousand protein subunit molecules of Flagellin make up one bacterial flagellum, of these molecules there are two types. Three types of flagella arrangement are understood to occur: monotrichous, peritrichous and lophotrichous. Monotrichous flagellum are single and Polar, a peritrichous arrangement occurs with flagella over the entire cell surface, whilst lophotrichous arrangements occur when there are many polar flagellum.[2]

Reference

  1. Albert, B. et al. (2008) Molecular Biology of the Cell. New York: Garland Publishing
  2. Brooks et al: Jawetz, Melnick &amp;amp;amp; Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, 24th edition, The McGraw-Hill Compaines, Inc, 2007