Genecks Posted September 20, 2013 Posted September 20, 2013 I'm reading Biochemistry - 4th edition - Voet and Voet. It says this: Although prokaryoteslack the membranous subcellular organelles characteristicof eukaryotes (Section 1-2), their plasma membranes maybe infolded to form multilayered structures known asmesosomes. The mesosomes are thought to serve as thesite of DNA replication and other specialized enzymaticreactions. Uhhhhhh.... I thought mesosomes were artifacts... Are they not? Something change in the realm of biology in the past couple of years?
CharonY Posted September 20, 2013 Posted September 20, 2013 That has been under discussion on and off and certain EM people do not like the idea of artifacts within biological samples (although they are copious). In more recent times (sometime after 2005, I believe) people have more accepted that mesosomes are not pure artifacts per se, but rather a physical manifestation of certain damages to membranes, which can happen under a variety of conditions. So on EM they are the result of artifacts, but these ultrastructural changes also happen in vivo (though often accompanied by cell death), but are certainly not organelles as created by the organism. It was not that big of a contention for microbiologists anyway and biochemist tend to lag behind these areas for a few years. Considering the significance (or lack thereof), the time frame and the scope of the book it appears that they just missed it. 2
Mad-Scientist Posted December 3, 2013 Posted December 3, 2013 Interesting, I was wondering about this when I came across it in many of the recent text books. Still seems like there quite some discussion about this going on.
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