Q.11 Bacteria containing a tuft of flagella that comes out from one pole is called ___. (A) Lophotrichous (B) Peritrichous (C) Monotrichous (D) Amphitrichousand yellow seeds (vvgg), the following phenotypic distribution was obtained in the F2 progeny (assume both parents to be pure breeding for both the traits, and self-cross at F1 generation): i) 2340 plants with violet flowers and green seeds ii) 47 plants with violet flowers and yellow seeds iii) 43 plants with white flowers and green seeds iv) 770 plants with white flowers and yellow seeds Which one of the following interpretations explains the above phenotypic distribution? (A) Same genes control both flower and seed colors (B) Genes for flower and seed colors are genetically interacting (C) Genes for flower and seed colors are present on the same chromosome (D) Flower color in this plant species is a polygenic trait

Q.11 Bacteria containing a tuft of flagella that comes out from one pole is called ___.
(A)
Lophotrichous
(B)
Peritrichous
(C)
Monotrichous
(D)
Amphitrichous

The correct answer is (A) Lophotrichous. Bacteria with a tuft of flagella emerging from one pole feature multiple flagella bundled at a single end, enabling coordinated propulsion. This arrangement matches the description precisely among the options.

Option Explanations

  • (A) Lophotrichous: Multiple flagella form a tuft at one pole, acting together for directed movement, as in Pseudomonas fluorescens or Spirillum volutans.

  • (B) Peritrichous: Flagella distribute across the entire cell surface, excluding poles, allowing bundle formation during swimming, seen in E. coli or Salmonella.

  • (C) Monotrichous: A single flagellum attaches at one pole for propulsion, typical in Vibrio cholerae.

  • (D) Amphitrichous: Single flagella (or rarely tufts) appear at both poles, as in Alkaligenes faecalis.

Bacteria tuft flagella one pole lophotrichous arrangement defines microbes like Pseudomonas with bundled polar flagella for swift navigation in viscous environments.

Flagella Structure Basics

Flagella consist of flagellin protein filaments, basal body motors, and hooks, rotating via proton motive force for bacterial motility. Gram-negative types feature L, P, and MS rings; Gram-positive have fewer.

Arrangement Types Compared

Type Flagella Description Pole Location Examples
Lophotrichous Tuft (multiple) at one pole Single end Pseudomonas fluorescens, Spirillum volutans 
Peritrichous Multiple over entire surface All around E. coli, Salmonella 
Monotrichous Single flagellum One pole Vibrio cholerae 
Amphitrichous Single (or tufts) at both poles Both ends Alkaligenes faecalis 

Lophotrichous tufts bundle at polar organelles for energy-efficient thrust.

CSIR NET Relevance

This topic falls under Unit 1 (Microbiology), testing flagellar arrangements for identification and motility mechanisms vital for exams. Examples like Campylobacter jejuni highlight pathogenic roles.

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