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Electron Tomography in the Study of Bacterial Structure and Function

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Kenneth H. Downing*
Affiliation:
Life Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Haixin Sui
Affiliation:
Life Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Luis R. Comolli
Affiliation:
Life Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Hoi-Ying Holman
Affiliation:
Earth Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Extract

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Bacteria contain a wealth of mechanisms that organize their internal and external components into a highly polar structure, frequently with distinctive shape, and constrain certain metabolic functions to particular parts of the cell. For example, cell division generally takes place at the middle of the cell, and a host of interacting proteins are involved in ensuring that the division site is positioned properly. Thus, in spite of the lingering perception among some scientists that these cells are simply bags of freely diffusing enzymes, there is much to be learned from ultrastructural studies. Light microscopy has given evidence of cytoskeletal components that presumably establish and maintain cell shape and participate in cell division.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2005

References

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