Abstract

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the analysis of the chemical composition and primary structure of the murein. Murein (peptidoglycan, mucopeptide) is the main cell wall polymer of eubacteria and is common to both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. There are only a few prokaryotic organisms, such as mycoplasmas and archaebacteria, which lack murein. The glycan moiety is rather uniform and shows only a few variations such as O-acetylation or O-phosphorylation or the exceptional absence of peptide substituents. The peptide moiety of the murein shows, in contrast to the glycan part, a considerable variation. Extensive investigation of the chemical structure of murein has demonstrated the existence of almost 100 different variations of the peptide moiety. Depending on the mode of cross-linking two main groups of murein, named A and B, have been distinguished. The different structure of cell walls of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria necessitates discrete methods for preparing cell walls. The cell walls of Gram-positive bacteria reveal in profile one thick and more or less homogeneous layer, whereas Gram-negative bacteria have thinner, but distinctly layered cell walls with an outer membrane resembling the cytoplasmic membrane in profile.

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