Freeze-etched cells of Bacillus subtilis have been studied with the electron microscope. The outer surface of the plasma membrane, i.e. the side facing the cell wall, is covered with numerous granules and short strands, each measuring approximately 50 A in diameter. These strands are occasionally seen to enter the cell wall. The inner surface of the plasma membrane, i.e. the side facing the cytoplasm, appears to be sparsely dotted with small particles measuring about 50 A. The envelope of mesosomes differs from the plasma membrane. Blunt protrusions arise from its outer surface; the inner surface appears smooth. Stalked particles, as described by other investigators after negative staining with phosphotungstic acid, were not observed on any membrane surface in our material. Preparations were also made of specimens prefixed in osmium tetroxide prior to freeze-etching. Under these conditions the bacterial membranes appeared to be surprisingly well preserved. In contrast to directly frozen, unfixed cells, some osmium tetroxide-fixed preparations showed a differentiation in cytoplasm and nucleoplasm, which made it possible to observe the close association of the mesosome with the latter.
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1 November 1968
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November 01 1968
STRUCTURAL FEATURES OF MESOSOMES (CHONDRIOIDS) OF BACILLUS SUBTILIS AFTER FREEZE-ETCHING
N. Nanninga
N. Nanninga
From the Laboratory of Electron Microscopy, the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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N. Nanninga
From the Laboratory of Electron Microscopy, the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Received:
April 22 1968
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
Copyright © 1968 by The Rockefeller University Press
1968
J Cell Biol (1968) 39 (2): 251–263.
Article history
Received:
April 22 1968
Citation
N. Nanninga; STRUCTURAL FEATURES OF MESOSOMES (CHONDRIOIDS) OF BACILLUS SUBTILIS AFTER FREEZE-ETCHING . J Cell Biol 1 November 1968; 39 (2): 251–263. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.39.2.251
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