Chapter 4 – Microbiology Answers – Flashcards
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            | Bacteria used as insecticide | 
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        | Bacillus thuringensis | 
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            | Bacteria used in warfare causing 1. anthrax and 2. food poisening | 
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        | Bacillus anthracis and Clostridium botulinum | 
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            | 5 features of prokaryotes | 
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        | 1. one circular chromosome 2. no histones 3. no organelles 4. peptidoglycan cell walls 5. binary fission  | 
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            | Bacillus | 
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        | rod shaped | 
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            | coccus | 
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        | spherical | 
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            | spirillum | 
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        | wave shaped | 
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            | vibrio | 
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        | curved rod | 
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            | spirochete | 
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        | corkscrew | 
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            | strepto | 
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        | chain | 
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            | staphyl | 
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        | cluster | 
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            | 8 cell | 
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        | sarcinae | 
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            | 2 examples of pleomorphic bacteria | 
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        | 1. Rhizobium 2. Corynebacterium  | 
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            | adavtages of having small size (3) | 
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        | 1. accumulate nutrients quickly 2. metabolize quickly 3. grow quickly  | 
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            | largest bacteria known | 
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        | Epulopiscium sp. | 
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            | What is glycocalyx made of? | 
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        | polysaccarhides | 
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            | 2 functions of glycocalyx | 
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        | 1. source of food under adverse conditions 2. absorbs water, prevents dehydration  | 
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            | biofilm is associated with this type of glycocalyx | 
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        | slime layer | 
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            | why does a capsule increase pathogencity of bactuera? | 
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        | white blood cells cannot grab them, prevents phagocytosis | 
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            | 3 functions of cell wall | 
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        | rigidity, shape, prevents osmotic lysis | 
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            | Tetrapeptide side chaings hang from... | 
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        | NAM | 
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            | Peptide cross bridges do what | 
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        | link layers of PG together maintain integrety of cell wall  | 
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            | # layers of PG in Gram + cell wall | 
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        | 10-12 | 
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            | Teichoic acids roles and composition | 
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        | present in gram + regulate movement of cations alcohol/glycerol and phosphate provide antigenic variation  | 
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            | antigentic variation | 
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        | ability of distinguish between bacterial cells | 
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            | Gram negative cell wall | 
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        | thin layer of PG no teichoic acids outer membrane  | 
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            | composition of outer membrane in gram neg | 
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        | LPS (lipopolysarcharide) -made of Lipid A and O polysaccharide  | 
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            | Lipid A O polysaccharide  | 
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        | endotoxin antigen, used for distinguishing bacteria  | 
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            | example of a bacteria whose antigen identifies it | 
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        | E Coli O157:H7 | 
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            | how penecillan works | 
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        | kills PG in gram + bacteria, specifically by breaking peptide cross bridges | 
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            | acid fast cell wall composition | 
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        | waxy lipid (mycolic acid) bound to peptidoglycan | 
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            | 2 examples of acid fast cell wall bacteria | 
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        | 1. Mycobacterium - causes TB 2. Nocardia  | 
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            | mycoplasma bacteria | 
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        | -lack cell walls -there are sterols in plasma membrane help protect from lysis -smallest of all bacteria, most contaminating in labs  | 
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            | archea cell wall composition | 
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        | pseudomurein or pseudoPG lacks NAM and D-amino acids  | 
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            | Plasma membrane composition | 
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        | phopholipid bilayer and proteins | 
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            | fluid mosaic model | 
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        | lipids and proteins are free to move around, about as viscous as olive oil | 
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            | functions of plasma membrane | 
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        | -selective permiability -enzymes for ATP production (lack mitochondria) -photosynthetic pigments  | 
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            | damage to plasma membrane caused by | 
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        | 1. alcohol 2. detergent 3. polymyxin antibiotics casue leakage,death  | 
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            | simple diffusion | 
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        | passive transport, usually gaseous molecules | 
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            | facilitated diffusion | 
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        | passive, larger molecules ex. glycerol goes through transporter protein  | 
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            | osmolerity in cell | 
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        | 0.85%, ex. saline | 
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            | classical active transport | 
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        | -uses ATP or PMF -substance not altered across membrane -uses transporter proteins  | 
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            | group translocation | 
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        | molecular is chemically altered, this prevents it from leaving cell ex. glucose is phosphorolated  | 
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            | what bacteria does not have flagella? | 
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        | cocci | 
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            | flagellin proteins in the filament are | 
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        | H proteins, recognized by immune system ex. E Coli  | 
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            | monotrichous | 
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        | 1 flagellum at 1 end | 
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            | ampthitrichous | 
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        | 1 flagellum at each end | 
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            | lophotrichous | 
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        | many flagellum at one end | 
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            | peritrichous | 
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        | entire cell wall has flagella | 
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            | chemotaxis and phototaxis | 
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        | movement towards or away from a chemical or light | 
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            | what bacteria causes stomach ulcers | 
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        | Helicobacter pylaorii strong flagella can swim through mucous  | 
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            | what bacteria causes stomach ulcers? | 
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        | Helicobacter pylaorii strong flagella can swim through mucous  | 
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            | mode of movement by bacteria in ocean | 
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        | gaseous vesicles | 
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            | what type of cells have pili and fimbriae? | 
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        | gram negative | 
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            | function of pili | 
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        | gliding/twitching movement DNA transfer  | 
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            | Fimbriae | 
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        | used to attach to things, eg inside of small intestine | 
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            | structures found in cytoplasm | 
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        | DNA and ribosomes | 
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            | bacterial chromosome (nucleoid) characteristics (4) | 
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        | 1. no nuclear membrane 2. no histones 3. circular DNA 4. Haploid DNA (only 1 copy of each gene)  | 
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            | plasmids description | 
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        | circular, double stranded DNA, extra-chromosomal autonomis from nucleoid not required by cell  | 
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            | benefits of plasmids | 
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        | can contain genes for: -antibiotic resistance -toxic metal resistance -production of enzymes  | 
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            | transfer of plasmids | 
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        | takes place through pili | 
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            | function of ribosomes | 
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        | make proteins | 
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            | somposition of bacterial ribosome | 
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        | small subunit = 30S large subunit = 50S complete ribosome = 70S  | 
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            | human ribosome complete unit | 
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        | 80S | 
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            | antibiotic effect on ribosomes | 
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        | antibiotics can be targeted towards bacterial ribosomes without harming human ribosomes | 
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            | content and use of metachromatic granule | 
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        | phosphate, used to make ATP | 
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            | presence of metachromatic granule indicates what species of bacterium? | 
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        | Corynebacterium diphtheriae | 
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            | who produces endospores? | 
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        | gram + | 
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            | when are endospores produced? | 
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        | when a bacterium is stressed because of lack of C or N | 
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            | how long can endospores survive? | 
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        | 100k+ years | 
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            | the process of endospore formation is known as | 
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        | sporulation | 
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            | endospores are made of what? | 
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        | DPA dipicolnic acid |