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Pseudopeptidoglycan
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Everything about Pseudopeptidoglycan totally explained

Pseudopeptidoglycan (also known as pseudomurein) is a major cell wall component of some archaea that differs from bacterial peptidoglycan in chemical structure, but resembles eubacteria peptidoglycan in morphology, function, and structure. The basic components are N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetyltalosaminuronic acid (Peptidoglycan has N-acetylmuramic acid instead), which are linked by a β-1,3-glycosidic bond. Whenever pseudopeptidoglycan is present in an organism, lysozyme is ineffective. Lysozyme is a host defense mechanism, which can break the B-1,4-glycosidic bonds causing the peptidoglycan to become destroyed. However, pseudopeptidoglycan has the B-1,3-glycosidic bond rendering lysozyme useless.

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