No. Escherichia coli is a friendly bacterium that is way to big to fit inside a cell.
Not. E Coli is a bacterium.
E. coli is the name of a type of bacteria.
No, E. Coli is not a parasite. Far from it, in fact. E. Coli is an essential microorganism in your intestines that aids in the digestion of sugar and other nutrients. There are literally billions of them in every healthy human digestive tract and without them we could not survive. However, There is a special line of E. Coli (O-157) that arise which are prominent causes of urinary tract infections.
Intracellular parasite-- An organism which can only feed and live within the cell of a different animal.
The illness is caused by a chlamydia, which is a type of intracellular parasite closely related to bacteria.
They're not mutually contradictory. (The second is just environmental limitations.)
Escherichia coli
No, Streptococcus pneumoniae is not an intracellular obligate parasite. It is a bacterium that typically colonizes the upper respiratory tract of humans and can cause infections such as pneumonia, sinusitis, and meningitis. It is capable of surviving and replicating both inside and outside of host cells.
No. E-Coli is a bacterium.
e coli
intestinal tract is the habitat for bacteria such as E-coli. habitat must provide the need for an organism to survive. Predator parasite produces decomposer are types organism
Chlamydia is a sexually transmitted bacterial infection. It is caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, a gram-negative bacteria with a coccoid shape that is an obligate intracellular parasite. It is curable.