Answers on Determinative Bacteriology Flashcards
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            | GBS commonly colonizes what areas? | 
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        | Lower GI tract and Vaginal epithelium of healthy adults. | 
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            | The first GBS strain was studied by whom? | 
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        | Rebecca Lancefield. | 
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            | First GBS strains studied by Lancefield were isolated from what? | 
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        | Cows with mastitis. | 
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            | First report of GBS in humans appeared in what year? | 
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        | 1938 | 
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            | What is the gram stain and morphology of GBS? | 
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        | Gram positive cocci in chains. | 
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            | GBS Example Species? | 
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        | Streptococcus agalactiae | 
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            | GBS hemolysis? | 
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        | Beta | 
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            | GBS: Bacitracin, R or S? | 
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        | Resistant | 
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            | What is taxonomy? | 
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        | Systematic categorization of organisms into a coherent scheme. | 
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            | A taxon... | 
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        | Provides order, organisms with a common characteristic are recognized and assigned to the same group or rank (taxon). | 
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            | Linnaeus (1753) classification... | 
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        | 2 kingdoms, Animalia (animals and protozoa) and Plantae (plants, algae, bacteria, fungi) | 
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            | Haeckal (1866) classification... | 
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        | 3 kingdoms, Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants, multicellular algae), and Protista (unicellular algae, bacteria, fungi, protozoa). | 
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            | Whittaker (1969) classification... | 
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        | 5 Kingdoms, Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Protista (algae, protozoa), Fungi (fungi), Monera (prokaryotae). | 
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            | Woese (1981) classification... | 
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        | 3 domains, Archaea, Bacteria, Eukarya | 
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            | Linnaeus and Haeckel classified organisms based on... | 
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        | microscopic observations. | 
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            | Whittaker (1969) classified organisms based on what? | 
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        | (1969) Improvements in microscopy and biochemical methods. | 
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            | In 1981 Woese classified organisms based on... | 
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        | 16s rRNA sequences. | 
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            | Classical approach to classification assigns microorganisms based on... | 
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        | morphology and physiology | 
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            | Numerical taxonomy groups microorganisms ... | 
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        | into phenoms based on their similarities | 
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            | Molecular classification is based on... | 
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        | nucleic acid comparisons | 
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            | Classical Approach of classification: Structure/Morphology What do they look at? | 
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        | Shape, size, arrangement, sheaths, flagella and their arrangement, Gram stain, spores). | 
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            | Classical Approach of classification: Biochemical/physiological. What do they look at? | 
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        | carbohydrates utilized, optimum temp.m rand of temp. optimum pH, range of pH, growth factors required, O2 requirement, end product fermentation, antibiotic sensitivities. | 
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            | The numerical approach to classification is based on the work of whom? | 
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        | French botanist Michael Adanson. | 
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            | Explain the numerical approach of classification. | 
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        | All observable characteristics carry equal weight. Similarities between 2 or more organisms are determined using 2 methods. Both methods compare the number of identical characteristics to the total number of characteristics observed in the organisms. | 
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            | Phenoms are clusters based on the _________ approach to classification. | 
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        | Numerical | 
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            | What is used to determine DNA homology between two organisms? | 
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        | Nucleic Acid Hybridization | 
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            | Name some different molecular approaches to classification... | 
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        | Base sequence analysis, DNA probes, 16s rRNA analysis, nucleic acid hybridization, Mol % G/C. | 
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            | How are phylogenic trees developed? | 
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        | From 16s rRNA analysis | 
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            | Why is 16s rRNA used to make phylogenic trees? | 
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        | Because there are highly conserved regions, the slight differences can determine phylogenic relationships. | 
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            | Give an example of taxonomic ranks.... | 
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        | Kingdom, division, class, order...etc Family, Genus, Species,...biovar Serovar, pathovar, morphovar... | 
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            | What forms on your shower curtain? | 
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        | Biofilm | 
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            | What causes pink colonies to form on your shower curtain? | 
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        | Methalobacteria-utilizes single carbon sources | 
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            | What causes yellow colonies on the shower curtain? | 
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        | Sphingomonas->found in dental water lines and AC lines. | 
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            | Describe the GRAM POSITIVE cell wall. | 
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        | Thick peptidoglycan layer. | 
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            | Describe the GRAM NEGATIVE outer membrane. | 
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        | Outer membrane consists of LPS (lipopolysaccharide) | 
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            | Name the four genera of the family Micrococcaceae | 
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        | Micrococcus, Planococcus, Staphylococcus, Stomatococcus | 
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            | Family Micrococcaceae is typically catalase ______ and grows in _____ % NaCl | 
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        | POSITIVE, 5% | 
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            | What is the bridge between the peptidoglycan linkages? | 
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        | Pentaglycene. | 
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            | Micrococcus...cell arrangement and morphology. | 
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        | Gram positive cocci in tetrads and clusters. | 
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            | Micrococcus....aerobic or anaerobic? | 
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        | Aerobic | 
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            | Micrococcus....motile or non-motile? | 
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        | Non-motile | 
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            | Micrococcus...Catalase? | 
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        | POSITIVE | 
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            | Micrococcus...Oxidase??? | 
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        | POSITIVE | 
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            | Where is micrococcus found? | 
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        | In the environment and transient skin flora in humans and other animals. | 
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            | Name the 2 species of Micrococcus? | 
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        | M. luteus, M. lylae | 
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            | Planococcus....cell arrangement and morphology | 
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        | Gram positive cocci in pairs and tetrads | 
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            | Planococcus....aerobic or anaerobic? | 
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        | Aerobic | 
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            | Planococcus...motile or non-motile?? | 
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        | MOTILE COCCUS! All strains have 1-3 flagella | 
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            | Planococcus....Catalase? | 
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        | POSITIVE | 
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            | Corynebacterium....Gram stain andarangement | 
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        | Gram POSITIVE, straight or slightly curved, thin rods. They have "club ends". Chinese letter formations. | 
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            | Who described Corynebacterium strand in 1883? | 
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        | Klebs | 
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            | Who proved corynebacterium caused dipnhtheria? | 
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        | Loeffler (1884) | 
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            | First Nobel Prize in Medicine given to?? | 
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        | German doctor Von Bering for developing the anti-toxin to diphtheria. | 
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            | Corynebacterium genus are mostly catalase??? | 
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        | POSITIVE | 
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            | Corynebacterium genus are mostly...motile or nonmotile? | 
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        | Non-motile | 
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            | Corynebacterium genus cell walls contain what? | 
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        | mycolic acid, arabinose and galactose. | 
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            | Corynebacterium is found where? | 
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        | In nature, soil, water, on humans reside on the skin and mucous membranes. Nasopharynx, vagina and skin. | 
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            | A pseudomembrane forms in the airway with what bacterial infection? | 
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        | Corynebacterium diphtheriae | 
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            | Name some cell wall structures of Corynebacterium... | 
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        | Chemotype IV, Mycolic acids, Straight chain saturated, unsaturated fatty acids, Menaquinones, Vit K2 | 
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            | Four distinct colony (biotypes) types of Corynebacterium diphtheria are...? | 
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        | gravis, mitis, intermedius, belfanti. | 
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            | Corynebacterium biochemical and media reactions. | 
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        | PYR -, Phosphotase -, Esculin -, Urea -, produces acid from glucose and maltose (not sucrose, mannitol or xylose). | 
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            | Gravis shape? | 
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        | Short irregular rod, starch positive | 
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            | Mitis shape? | 
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        | long curved irregular rod, starch negative | 
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            | Intermidus shape? | 
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        | long rod, starch negative. | 
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            | Two tests for toxigenicty in ID of Corynebacterium? | 
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        | Schick test (in vivo) and Elek test (in vivo). | 
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            | Specialized transduction has two types. | 
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        | Lysogenic and lytic | 
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            | One molecule of toxin A can kill one eukaryotic cell in what bacteria? | 
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        | Corynebacterium diphtheria | 
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            | Most of the family Micrococcaceae are strict _________ (aerobes or anaerobes)?? | 
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        | AEROBES | 
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            | Planococci and Staphylococci belong to what phyletic line? | 
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        | Bacillus/Lactobacillus/Streptococcus | 
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            | Micrococci and Stomatococci belong to what phyletic line? | 
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        | Amycelial actinomycetes | 
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            | Staphylococci are in what phylum? | 
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        | Firmicutes | 
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            | Planococci are marine cocci that grow in ___% NaCL | 
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        | 15% | 
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            | Stomatococcus (part of the repiratory tract normal flora) is now a member of what genus? | 
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        | Rothia. So Stomatococcus mucilaginosus is no Rothia mucilaginsa. | 
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            | Planococcus...Oxidase??? | 
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        | POSITIVE | 
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            | Planococcus strains are capable of growth in up to ___% NaCl | 
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        | 15% | 
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            | Name 2 species of Planococcus | 
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        | P. citreus, and P. kocuri | 
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            | An encapsulated Grap positive coccus that is part of the normal human respiratory tract is genus.... | 
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        | Stomatococcus (Rothia). It is also associated with endocarditis. | 
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            | What is a non motile, weakly catalase + species of stomatococcus? | 
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        | S. mucilaginosus, currently known as R. mucilaginosa | 
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            | Staphylococcus....morphology and arrangement? | 
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        | Gram positive cocci in grape like clusters. | 
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            | Staphylococcus....aerobic or anaerobic? | 
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        | Facultatively anaerobic | 
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            | Staphylococcus...motile or nonmotile? | 
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        | Non motile | 
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            | Staphylococcus is catalase ____ and oxidase ___. | 
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        | Catalase positive, oxidase negative. | 
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            | Staphylococcus is salt tolerant to ___% | 
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        | 10% | 
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            | Staphylococcus hemolysis? | 
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        | Varies depending on species. | 
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            | Staphylococcus is genetically related to .... | 
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        | Enterococci, Streptococci, Lactobacilli, and Bacillus | 
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            | How many species of Staphylococcus are there and how many are associated with mucous membranes in humans and animals? | 
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        | 35 species, 17 associated with mucous membranes. | 
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            | Name some Staphylococcus species... | 
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        | S. capitis, S auricularis, and S. intermedius. | 
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            | What is the most important human pathogen? | 
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        | S. aureus | 
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            | Where is S. aureus found? | 
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        | In the external environment and anterior nares of 20-40% of adults. | 
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            | Differentiate between Micrococcus from Staphylococcus using what tests? | 
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        | Furazolidone disk, oxidase disk, bacitracin disk, lysostaphin, acid from glucose under anaerobic conditions. | 
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            | Staphylococcus is furazolidone....susceptible or resistant? | 
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        | Susceptible | 
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            | Staphylococcus is oxidase....? | 
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        | Negative | 
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            | Staphylococcus is bacitracin....susceptible or resistant? | 
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        | Resistant | 
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            | Staphylococcus is lysostaphin....susceptible or resistant? | 
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        | susceptible | 
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            | Does Staphylococcus produce acid from glucose under anaerobic conditions? | 
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        | Yes, Positive result | 
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            | Micrococcus is furazolidone....susceptible or resistant? | 
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        | Resistant | 
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            | Micrococcus is oxidase...? | 
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        | Positive | 
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            | Micrococcus is bacitracin....susceptible or resistant? | 
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        | Susceptible | 
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            | Micrococcus is lysostaphin....susceptible or resistant? | 
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        | resistant | 
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            | Does Micrococcus produce acid from glucose under anaerobic conditions? | 
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        | No, negative test results. | 
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            | There are two sources for genetic pathogenesis in S. aureus. What are they? | 
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        | Lysogenic conversion and chromosomal encoded virulence genes. | 
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            | Certain staphylococcal virulence genes are encoded by prophages.....what are they? | 
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        | Staphylokinase, PVL, enterotoxin, and exofoliatin. | 
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            | Some chromosomal encoded virulence genes (for staphylococcus) include... | 
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        | hemolysins, proteases, Protein A, clumping factor, capsule production and nucleases. | 
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            | What determines the pathogenicity of S. aureus? | 
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        | Cellular antigens, like capsules, polysaccharide A, Protein A, Clumping factor, and adhesions. | 
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            | What helps prevent ingestion of a microbe by polymorphonuclear cells? | 
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        | A capsule | 
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            | What are the most common polysaccharide capsules of Staph? | 
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        | 5 and 8. Both are antiphagocytic | 
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            | What contains linear ribitol teichoic acids and functions in adherence of gram positive bacteria to mucosal surfaces? | 
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        | Polysaccharide A | 
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            | S. aureus cell walls have a unique protein that binds the Fc region of host IgG molecules, what is this protein called? | 
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        | Protein A | 
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            | How does Protein A work in S. aureus? | 
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        | The protein interferes with host immune system, specifically by interfering with opsonization and ingestion of bacteria by polymorphonuclear cells. | 
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            | What substance forms the basis for the coagglutination test in the lab? | 
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        | Protein A | 
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            | Protein A is ____ daltons and is immunogenic. | 
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        | 42,000 | 
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            | What is clumping factor (S. aureus)? | 
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        | Bound or surface material that is able to bind fibrinogen and fibrin. This helps S. aureus to attach to surfaces. | 
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            | What are adhesions? | 
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        | Surface proteins that enable the bacterium to bind to proteins such as collagen. These are covalently incorporated into the structure of the peptidoglycan. | 
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            | What is in some strains of S. aureus that allows it to form biofilms on cardiac or other implanted devices which gives humans a greater risk of developing infections? | 
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        | Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) | 
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            | SNPs produce ________ _______ _________ _, which adheres to host _________ and adheres to implants. (In S. aureus) | 
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        | Fibronectin binding Protein A (FnBPA), FIBRONECTIN. | 
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            | A single amino acid substitution within the FnBPA can do what? | 
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        | affect virulence. | 
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            | Lysostaphin is what? | 
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        | An endopeptidase that cleaves the pentaglycene bridge. | 
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            | What are the determinants of S. aureus pathogenicity? | 
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        | Extracellular proteins, like catalase, coagulase (free, not bound), hydrolyases, staphylokinase (fibrolysin), Beta lactamase enzyme, pyrogenic exotoxins, other exotoxins (like PVL and epidermolytic toxin) | 
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            | What is the function of catalase in S. aureus? | 
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        | This enzyme inactivates hydrogen peroxide and free radicals formed by the myeloperoxidase system in phagocytic cells after ingestion of microbes. | 
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            | What are the cultural filtrates that act to coat the bacteria with fibrin, rendering them resistant to phagocytosis. | 
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        | Free Coagulase. | 
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            | What does free coagulase do? | 
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        | Converts fibrinogen to fibrin during abscess formation, becomes the walls of the abscess. | 
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            | What are 4 different hydrolylases? | 
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        | Lipases, phospholipase C, hyaluronidase, and themonuclease. | 
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            | The hydrolylase that helps the spread of the organism in cutaneous and subcutaneous tissues is....? | 
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        | Lipase | 
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            | The hydrolylase that impacts tissues and makes them more susceptible to damage from components of the complement system? | 
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        | Phospholipase C | 
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            | The hydrolylase that hydrolyzes the intercellular matrix of mucopolysaccharides thus allowing the organism to spread? | 
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        | Hyaluronidase | 
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            | The hydrolylase that cleaves host DNA and RNA? | 
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        | Thermonuclease | 
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            | Also known as fibrinolysin, this extracellular protein is produced by several strains of S. aureus and dissolves fibrin clots (which contributes to the spread of the organism). | 
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        | Staphylokinase | 
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            | Where do the genes for the Beta lactamase enzyme usually reside? | 
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        | On plasmids. | 
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            | How can resistance genes (Beta lactamase) be transferred from one bacteria to another? | 
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        | Either through transduction or transformation. | 
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            | Over ___% of all S. aureus microbes produce one form of the Beta lactamase enzyme. | 
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        | 80% | 
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            | What is the toxin that is a superantigen and was first seen in patients in 1981? How many daltons is it? | 
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        | Toxic shock syndrom toxin 1 (TSST-1). 22,000 Daltons. | 
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            | TSST-1 is what type of exotoxins? | 
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        | Pyrogenic exotoxin. It stimulates the proliferation of T cells. | 
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            | Heat stable molecules responsible for the clinical picture of food poisoning is.... | 
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        | Enterotoxins | 
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            | What are the enterotoxins responsible for Staph food poisoning? | 
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        | Enterotoxin A-E, H, and I | 
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            | What is genus microbe is responsible for the most common form of food poisoning in the US? | 
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        | Staphylococcus. | 
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            | What two hemolysins does S. aureus produce? | 
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        | Beta hemolysin and delta hemolysin. | 
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            | What is a sphingomyelinase (35,000 daltons) that requires Mg++ for activity and attacks the sphingomyelin content in cell membranes? | 
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        | Beta hemolysin | 
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            | What acts as a surfactant and disrupts the cell membrane to cause channels and results in leakage of cellular components? | 
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        | delta hemolysin | 
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            | What exotoxin has a direct effect on human PMN cell membranes and causes cell swelling and lysis? | 
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        | LPV (leucocidin, Panton-Valentine) | 
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            | What exotoxin is made of 2 proteins (each 24,000 daltons), ET-A heat stable and ET-B not heat stable, one chromosomally encoded, the other plasmid encoded? | 
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        | Exofoliations or epidermolytic toxins. | 
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            | Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome is caused by what exotoxin? How does it work? | 
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        | Exofoliations or epidermolytic toxins. Proteolytic action dissolves the mucopolysaccharide matrix of the epidermis. | 
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            | What kind of diseases can S. aureus cause? | 
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        | abscesses, endocarditis, osteomyelitis, food poisoning, and TSS. | 
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            | What microbe is an infrequent cause of UTI's? | 
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        | Staphylococcus saprophyticus | 
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            | What causes furuncles? | 
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        | S. aureus | 
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            | What causes carbuncles? | 
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        | S. aureus | 
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            | What causes impetigo? | 
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        | S. aureus | 
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            | What can cause scalded skin syndrome also called Lyells disease? | 
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        | S. aureus | 
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            | S. aureus causes TSS (toxic shock syndrome) in what part of the body? | 
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        | The female genital tract. | 
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            | How is it that S. aureus is resistant to penicillin? | 
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        | Beta lactamase genes cleave the Beta lactam ring of penicillin | 
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            | What is MRSA? | 
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        | Methicillin resistant staph aureus | 
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            | What is VISA? | 
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        | Vancomycin intermediate-resistant Staph aureus | 
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            | How is Streptococci, Enterococci, and Streptococci-like bacteria classified? | 
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        | Based on molecular methods, DNA-DNA hybridizations, and 16s rRNA sequencing. | 
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            | What genera of Order _____________ are described by their ability to utilize glucose. | 
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        | Lactobacillales | 
