Part A A procaryotic cell wall that has primarily peptidoglycan with small amounts of teichoic acid and lipoteichoic acid is A procaryotic cell wall that has primarily peptidoglycan with small amounts of teichoic acid and lipoteichoic acid is [removed] Gram negative [removed] Gram positive [removed] Archaea [removed] Acid fast Part A What structural part of a bacterial flagellum is composed of flagellin? What structural part of a bacterial flagellum is composed of flagellin? [removed] Basal body [removed] Filament [removed] Rod [removed] Hook SubmitHintsMy AnswersGive UpReview Part Part B How are Gram-positive and Gram-negative flagella different? How are Gram-positive and Gram-negative flagella different? [removed] A Gram-positive flagellum does not have a membrane covering its filament; A Gram-negative flagellum does. [removed] Flagella are only found in Gram-negative bacteria. [removed] Each Gram-positive flagellum contains a hook; gram-negatives do not. [removed] A Gram-positive flagellum has only two rings in its basal body; Gram-negatives each have four. SubmitHintsMy AnswersGive UpReview Part Part C The rings The rings [removed] are comprised of globular proteins called flagellin. [removed] are covered by a membrane. [removed] are curved structures into which each filament inserts. [removed] anchor the flagellum to the cell membrane. SubmitHintsMy AnswersGive UpReview Part Part D The basal body is comprised of which structural component(s) of flagella? The basal body is comprised of which structural component(s) of flagella? [removed] Hook [removed] Rod [removed] Rod and Rings [removed] Filament [removed] Rod and Hook [removed] Rings SubmitHintsMy AnswersGive UpReview Part Part E Pathogenic bacteria Pathogenic bacteria [removed] do not have flagella. [removed] are unique because they have a membrane covering the filament. [removed] have a unique basal body structure. [removed] can be identified and classified by differences in their flagellar proteins. SubmitHintsMy AnswersGive UpReview Part A gram-positive bacteria suddenly acquires resistance to the antibiotic methicillin. This trait most likely occurred due to [removed] conjugation. [removed] binary fission. [removed] meisosis. [removed] transformation. [removed] transduction. Which of the following is NOT found in mitochondria and prokaryotes? [removed] circular chromosome [removed] 70S ribosomes [removed] cell wall [removed] binary fission [removed] ATP-generating mechanism Part A Why is ATP necessary for active transport? [removed] ATP is a constituent of the electrochemical gradient. [removed] ATP is an important structural element of transport proteins. [removed] ATP is in higher concentrations inside of the cell. [removed] ATP provides energy to transfer material against its concentration gradient. SubmitHintsMy AnswersGive UpReview Part Part B Which type of active transport protein moves two molecul.