Micro
Micro
The three basic bacterial shapes are coccus (spherical), bacillus (rod-
shaped), and spiral (twisted), however pleomorphic bacteria can
assume several shapes.
of Bacterial Cell
● Cocci (or coccus for a single cell) are round cells, sometimes
slightly flattened when they are adjacent to one another.
● Bacilli (or bacillus for a single cell) are rod-shaped bacteria.
● Spirilla (or spirillum for a single cell) are curved bacteria which can
range from a gently curved shape to a corkscrew-like spiral. Many
spirilla are rigid and capable of movement. A special group of
spirilla known as spirochetes are long, slender, and flexible.
Arrangement of Cocci
Cocci bacteria can exist singly, in pairs (as diplococci ), in groups of four
(as tetrads ), in chains (as streptococci ), in clusters (as stapylococci ), or
in cubes consisting of eight cells (as sarcinae). Cocci may be oval,
elongated, or flattened on one side. Cocci may remain attached after
cell division. These group characteristics are often used to help identify
certain cocci.
1. Diplococci
The cocci are arranged in chains, as the cells divide in one plane.
3. Tetrads
The cocci are arranged in packets of four cells, as the cells divide in two
plains.
4. Sarcinae
The cocci are arranged in a cuboidal manner, as the cells are formed by
regular cell divisions in three planes. Cocci that divide in three planes
and remain in groups cube like groups of eight.
5. Staphylococci
Examples: Staphylococcus aureus
Arrangement of Bacilli
The bacilli are arranged in chains, as the cells divide in one plane.
Examples: Streptobacillus moniliformis
3. Coccobacilli
These are so short and stumpy that they appear ovoid. They look like
coccus and bacillus.
4. Palisades
The bacilli bend at the points of division following the cell divisions,
resulting in a palisade arrangement resembling a picket fence and
angular patterns that look like Chinese letters.
Example: Corynebacterium diphtheria
Arrangement of Spiral Bacteria
Spirilla (or spirillum for a single cell) are curved bacteria which can
range from a gently curved shape to a corkscrew-like spiral. Many
spirilla are rigid and capable of movement. A special group of spirilla
known as spirochetes are long, slender, and flexible.
Vibrio
They are comma-shaped bacteria with less than one complete turn or
twist in the cell.
Example: Vibrio cholera
2. Spirilla
They have rigid spiral structure. Spirillum with many turns. They do not
have outer sheath and endoflagella, but have typical bacterial flagella.
1. Filamentous Bacteria
They are very long thin filament-shaped bacteria. Some of them form
branching filaments resulting in a network of filaments called
‘mycelium’.
Example: Candidatus Savagella
2. Star Shaped Bacteria
Example: Stella
3. Rectangular Bacteria
These bacteria do not have any characteristic shape unlike all others
described above. They can change their shape. In pure cultures, they
can be observed to have different shapes.