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Archaea differ from bacteria in that archaea lack peptidoglycan.
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What about archaea and bacteria?</h3>
- Although archaea lack internal membranes, they do have a cell wall and swim by using flagella.
- The difference between bacteria and archaea is that bacteria have an ester-linked cell membrane, while archaea have an ether-linked cell membrane.
- Organelles and other internal membrane-bound structures are not present in the cells of bacteria and archaea.
- In contrast to eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea do not have a nucleus that separates their genetic material from the rest of the cell.
- Similar to Eubacteria, Archaea have a polysaccharide and glycoconjugate-rich cell wall.
- The strong cell borders that archaea form despite not having peptidoglycan make them resistant to high internal osmotic pressure.
Learn more about archaea and bacteria here:
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The safety procedural step that must always be performed
when setting up a vacuum filtration apparatus is that first, you should always
wear the proper protective equipment, next is that the vacuum filtration—you should
clamp the flask of which is needed, securely to the ring stand. It must be
secure or it may be in the way of performing the experiment.