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Imagine you are very, very tiny. You travel into a Gram-negative bacterium. What is the correct sequence of structures you would pass through from outside the cell on your way to the cytoplasm

Respuesta :

The correct sequence of structures that would occur from outside of the cell to the cytoplasm is:

  • Liposaccharide and protein outer layer
  • Peptidoglycan layer
  • Plasma Membrane

What are Gram Negative bacteria?

The crystal violet stain used in the Gram staining method of bacterial differentiation is not retained by gram-negative bacteria. They can be identified by the structure of their cell envelopes, which are made up of a bacterial outer membrane, an inner cytoplasmic cell membrane, and a thin peptidoglycan cell wall. There are gram-negative bacteria in almost every place on Earth that supports life. The model organism Escherichia coli is one of the gram-negative bacteria.

Gram-negative bacteria have an outer lipid membrane and a thinner peptidoglycan.

Gram-positive bacteria lack an outer lipid membrane and have a thicker peptidoglycan layer.

Gram-positive cells turn purple after being stained with safranin, but gram-negative cells lose their purple tint.

Exotoxins are produced by gram-positive bacteria.

To know more about bacteria with the help of the given link:

https://brainly.com/question/13711924

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