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Its function is to anchor peptidoglycan to cell membrane (:

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Q: What is the function of lipoteichoic acid in gram positive bacteria?
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A procaryotic cell wall that has primarily peptidoglycan with small amounts of teihoic acid and lipoteichoic acid?

Gram +


Are acid fast bacteria gram positive or negative?

it is positive


What is the function of gram positive?

Gram positive bacterias have a cell wall which will stain in violet color.The following characteristics are generally present in a Gram-positive bacterium.cytoplasmic lipid membrane teichoic acids and lipoids are present, forming lipoteichoic acids which serve to act as chelating agents, and also for certain types of adherence.thick peptidoglycan layercapsule polysaccharides (only in some species) if present, it contains two rings for support as opposed to four in Gram-negative bacteria because Gram-positive bacteria have only one membrane layer.flagellum (only in some species)The Gram positive cell wallThe Gram positive cell wall is characterised by the presence of a very thick peptidoglycan layer, which is responsible for the retention of the crystal violet dyes during the Gram staining procedure. It is found exclusively in organisms belonging to the Actinobacteria (or high %G+C Gram positive organisms) and the Firmicutes (or low %G+C Gram positive organisms). Bacteria within the Deinococcus-Thermus group may also exhibit Gram positive staining behaviour but contain some cell wall structures typical of Gram negative organisms. Imbedded in the Gram positive cell wall are polyalcohols called teichoic acids, some of which are lipid-linked to form lipoteichoic acids. Because lipoteichoic acids are covalently linked to lipids within the cytoplasmic membrane they are responsible for linking the peptidoglycan to the cytoplasmic membrane. Teichoic acids give the Gram positive cell wall an overall negative charge due to the presence of phosphodiester bonds between teichoic acid monomers.


What acid kills bacteria?

Stomach acid kills bacteria, which is hydrochloric acid.


Is lactic acid bacteria a bacteria?

Yes lactic acid fermenting bacteria is also a bacteria. It is rich in milk, yogurt. It ferments the lactose in the milk to lactic acid.

Related questions

A procaryotic cell wall that has primarily peptidoglycan with small amounts of teihoic acid and lipoteichoic acid?

Gram +


Are acid fast bacteria gram positive or negative?

it is positive


What is function of hydrocloric acid?

As gastric acid it breaks down protein AND kills bacteria.


What gram reaction do you expect from acid-fast bacteria?

Gram positive


What is the function of gram positive?

Gram positive bacterias have a cell wall which will stain in violet color.The following characteristics are generally present in a Gram-positive bacterium.cytoplasmic lipid membrane teichoic acids and lipoids are present, forming lipoteichoic acids which serve to act as chelating agents, and also for certain types of adherence.thick peptidoglycan layercapsule polysaccharides (only in some species) if present, it contains two rings for support as opposed to four in Gram-negative bacteria because Gram-positive bacteria have only one membrane layer.flagellum (only in some species)The Gram positive cell wallThe Gram positive cell wall is characterised by the presence of a very thick peptidoglycan layer, which is responsible for the retention of the crystal violet dyes during the Gram staining procedure. It is found exclusively in organisms belonging to the Actinobacteria (or high %G+C Gram positive organisms) and the Firmicutes (or low %G+C Gram positive organisms). Bacteria within the Deinococcus-Thermus group may also exhibit Gram positive staining behaviour but contain some cell wall structures typical of Gram negative organisms. Imbedded in the Gram positive cell wall are polyalcohols called teichoic acids, some of which are lipid-linked to form lipoteichoic acids. Because lipoteichoic acids are covalently linked to lipids within the cytoplasmic membrane they are responsible for linking the peptidoglycan to the cytoplasmic membrane. Teichoic acids give the Gram positive cell wall an overall negative charge due to the presence of phosphodiester bonds between teichoic acid monomers.


What is a protective function conferred by the stomach?

The gastric acids, it is a very acid mixture HCl (hydrocloric acid). this extrem acid environment kills MOST bacteria


What is meant by gram positive?

Gram positive bacterias have a cell wall which will stain in violet color.The following characteristics are generally present in a Gram-positive bacterium.cytoplasmic lipid membrane teichoic acids and lipoids are present, forming lipoteichoic acids which serve to act as chelating agents, and also for certain types of adherence.thick peptidoglycan layercapsule polysaccharides (only in some species) if present, it contains two rings for support as opposed to four in Gram-negative bacteria because Gram-positive bacteria have only one membrane layer.flagellum (only in some species)The Gram positive cell wallThe Gram positive cell wall is characterised by the presence of a very thick peptidoglycan layer, which is responsible for the retention of the crystal violet dyes during the Gram staining procedure. It is found exclusively in organisms belonging to the Actinobacteria (or high %G+C Gram positive organisms) and the Firmicutes (or low %G+C Gram positive organisms). Bacteria within the Deinococcus-Thermus group may also exhibit Gram positive staining behaviour but contain some cell wall structures typical of Gram negative organisms. Imbedded in the Gram positive cell wall are polyalcohols called teichoic acids, some of which are lipid-linked to form lipoteichoic acids. Because lipoteichoic acids are covalently linked to lipids within the cytoplasmic membrane they are responsible for linking the peptidoglycan to the cytoplasmic membrane. Teichoic acids give the Gram positive cell wall an overall negative charge due to the presence of phosphodiester bonds between teichoic acid monomers.


What kind of bacteria can harm animals?

Just about any - gram negative, gram positive and acid-fast are all known to have pathogenic bacteria within them.


Cite the purpose of following reagents in a differential staining procedure?

To distinguish between acid fast positive and acid fast negative bacteria. Acid fast positive bacteria will stain red to pink color and acid fast negative bacteria will stain blue. Acid fast positive bacteria have mycolic acid in their cell wall, which will stain with carbol fuchsin and not decolorize with acid alcohol. Acid fast negative bacteria do not have mycolic acid in their cell wall, and become decolorize with the acid alcohol. Counterstain of methylene blue needs to be done in order to see the acid fast negative.


What acid kills bacteria?

Stomach acid kills bacteria, which is hydrochloric acid.


How does acid-fast bacteria differ from gram bacteria?

Acid-fast and Gram stain are two different types of staining technique. Bacteria that stain with acid-fast techniques are called "acid fast bacteria." Bacteria that don't stain with acid-fast techniques are called "not acid fast." At the same time, bacteria can be "Gram-positive" or "Gram-negative." For example, Nocardia is a bacterium that is acid-fast and Gram-positive. Usually the reason people care about these designations is in order to figure out what species a bacteria is. The issue usually arises in the context of a patient's sample that has grown bacteria. At first the doctors won't be sure which bacteria it is. They'll have guesses based on how the patient presented, but they won't know, and they want to know because that will help them pick the best treatment. A first step toward "speciating" the bacteria is to do a Gram stain on it. This is because for historical reasons determining whether a bacteria is Gram-positive or Gram-negative goes a long way toward speciating it. Acid-fast staining is less common, and is used mostly for diagnosing tuberculosis (caused by Mycobacteria, which are acid-fast bacteria). There are details about the cell walls that determine whether an organism will stain with Gram stain (thick walls without mycolic acids) or acid-fast, but hopefully this answers your question.


Function for hydrochloric acid for digestive secretions?

kills bacteria activates pepsinogen to decrease the Ph level ( make it more acidic)