Questions
Single choice
What are the main differences between the walls of Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria?
Options
A.Cell wall in Gram positive is thinner (10nm) and contain special polysaccharides (teichoic acids).
B.Cell wall in Gram positive is thicker (15-18nm) and contain significant amounts of chitin.
C.Cell wall in Gram negative is thinner (10 nm), contains significant amounts of polysaccharides, lipoprotein and lipopolysaccharide.
D.Cell wall in Gram negative is thinner (10nm), contains significant amounts of peptidoglycan.
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Step-by-Step Analysis
First, let's restate what each option claims about bacterial cell walls to set the stage for evaluation.
Option 1 claims that Gram-positive walls are thinner (10 nm) and contain teichoic acids. This contradicts standard knowledge, which assigns a thicker peptidoglycan layer to Gram-positive bacteria and teichoic acids are indeed present there, not a thin wall.
Option 2 states that Gram-positive walls are thicker (15-18 nm) and contain significant amounts of chitin. While Gram-positive walls are thick, they do not contain chitin (chitin is found in fungi, not bacteria), so this option combines a partly correct observation with an incorrect component, makin......Login to view full explanationLog in for full answers
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