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Freeze-Etching and X-Ray Diffraction of the Isolated Double-Track Layer from the Cell Wall of a Gram-Negative Marine Pseudomonad
Author(s) -
Andrew Forge,
J. W. Costerton,
K. Ann Kerr
Publication year - 1973
Publication title -
journal of bacteriology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.652
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1067-8832
pISSN - 0021-9193
DOI - 10.1128/jb.113.1.445-451.1973
Subject(s) - cell wall , biophysics , membrane , cleavage (geology) , cell membrane , layer (electronics) , lipid bilayer , molecule , biology , phospholipid , crystallography , cell , materials science , biochemistry , chemistry , nanotechnology , paleontology , organic chemistry , fracture (geology)
The isolated double-track layer of the cell wall of the gram-negative marine pseudomonad studied here contains a cleavage plane. This finding localizes the single cleavage plane of the cell wall and shows that the molecular architecture of this layer provides the lipid-enriched layer which cleaves preferentially in the frozen cell. The observation that the isolated double-track layer of the cell wall is sufficiently ordered at the molecular level to yield a well-defined X-ray diffraction pattern with a d-spacing of 0.44 nm shows that its molecular architecture is very similar to that of true membranes. This specific d-spacing is produced by the highly ordered packing of the hydrophobic portions of phospholipid molecules. Therefore, the double-track layer of the cell wall has been shown, by these two biophysical means, to have a molecular architecture which would allow it to function as the membrane-like “molecular sieve” layer, whose presence has been deduced from physiological data. This layer is important in the retention of cell wall-associated enzymes and in the control of the movement of large molecules through the cell wall.

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