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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Structures of Gram-Negative Cell Walls and Their Derived Membrane Vesicles

Terry J. Beveridge
- 15 Aug 1999 - 
- Vol. 181, Iss: 16, pp 4725-4733
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TLDR
Gram-negative cell walls are strong enough to withstand ;3 atm of turgor pressure, tough enough to endure extreme temperatures and pHs, and elastic enough to be capable of expanding several times their normal surface area.
Abstract
Gram-negative cell walls are strong enough to withstand ;3 atm of turgor pressure (40), tough enough to endure extreme temperatures and pHs (e.g., Thiobacillus ferrooxidans grows at ap H of’1.5) and elastic enough to be capable of expanding several times their normal surface area (41). Strong, tough, and elasti c...t hegram-negative cell wall is a remarkable structure which protects the contents of the cell and which has stood the test of time for many, many years. Presumably, these three descriptive traits, have much to do with the tremendous success gram-negative bacteria have had as a life-form on our planet; members of the domain Bacteria inhabit almost all imaginable habitats except those excruciatingly extreme environments in which (some) members of the domain Archaea thrive. Molecular biological methods have not yet given scientists a precise historical record of the origin of gram-negative bacteria, but ancient stromatolites containing fossilized remains of cyanobacterium-like prokaryotes date back to the Archean eon. Over such extraordinary periods of time (much of it when no other life existed), we can imagine that random mutation, selection, and the slowly but ever-changing global

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Biological functions and biogenesis of secreted bacterial outer membrane vesicles.

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References
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The involvement of cell-to-cell signals in the development of a bacterial biofilm

TL;DR: The involvement of an intercellular signal molecule in the development of Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms suggests possible targets to control biofilm growth on catheters, in cystic fibrosis, and in other environments where P. aerug inosaBiofilms are a persistent problem.
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Type III Protein Secretion Systems in Bacterial Pathogens of Animals and Plants

TL;DR: A comparison of the structure, function, regulation, and impact on host cells of the type III secretion systems in the animal pathogens Yersinia spp.
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The complete general secretory pathway in gram-negative bacteria

TL;DR: The unifying feature of all proteins that are transported out of the cytoplasm of gram-negative bacteria by the general secretory pathway is the presence of a long stretch of predominantly hydrophobic amino acids, the signal sequence.
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Crystal structures explain functional properties of two E. coli porins

TL;DR: The crystal structures of matrix porin and phosphoporin both reveal trimers of identical subunits, each subunit consisting of a 16-stranded anti-parallel β-barrel containing a pore.
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Expression of Pseudomonas aeruginosa virulence genes requires cell-to-cell communication

TL;DR: Experiments with gene fusions show that gene lasl is essential for high expression of elastase, and PAI provides P. aeruginosa with a means of cell-to-cell communication that is required for the expression of virulence genes and may provide a target for therapeutic approaches.
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