Lab Quiz #6 – Flashcards
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What does the Tryptophanase/Indole test testing for? |
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The ability of an organism to hydrolyze tryptophan into indole |
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What type of media is used in the Trypophanase/Indole test? What does it contain? |
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SIM agar which contains tryptophan |
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What reagent is used to detect indole in the Tryptophanase test? |
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Kovak's reagent |
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Is tryptophanase an endo or exo enzyme? |
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Endo |
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What are the 4 tests in the IMViC series? |
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1. Indole/Tryptophanase 2. Citrase 3. Methyl Red 4. Voges-Proskauer |
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What does a positive Indole test look like? |
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Red reagent layer after adding Kovak's |
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What does a negative Indole test look like? |
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No reaction after addition of Kovak's. No color. |
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What does the Citrase test test for? |
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Citrase converts citrate into oxaloacetic acid and acetate which is converted into pyruvic acid and CO2 (alkaline) |
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What does a positive citrase test look like? |
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blue media (from alkaline) |
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What does a negative citrus test look like? |
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green media (no change in pH) |
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What does the Methyl Red test for? What is this detected by? |
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Production of acidic end products from breakdown of glucose (detected by pH indicator Methyl Red) |
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What class of organisms does the Methyl Red test target and why? |
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enteric bacteria because glucose is a major substrate used by this class. |
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What does a positive Methyl Red test look like? what pH range is this for? |
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pH rang of 4 (red) |
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What does a negative Methyl Red test look like? what pH range is this for? |
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pH of 6 (yellow) |
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What does Voges-Proskauer test for? (include broad trait and specific end-product) |
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neutral end products of glucose breakdown- acetylmethylarbinol |
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What reagent is used in the Voges-Proskauer test? |
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Barritt's reagent A and B |
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What does a positive Voges-Proskauer test look like? |
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deep rose color after 15 minutes with Barritt's agent added |
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What does a negative Voges-Proskauer test look like? |
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No rose color? |
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What additional traits is the Indole media used to test? |
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H2S production and motility |
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What does the Hydrogen Sulfide test test for? |
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breakdown of Sulfur containing amino acids and other inorganic molecules to create H2S |
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What media is used to detect H2S |
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SIM |
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What does a positive H2S test look like? |
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black precipitate |
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How do you detect motility in a bacteria? what media is used for this? |
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when culture growth is not limited to the line of inoculation (SIM agar) |
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What enzyme is being detected in the Urease test? What are the substrates and products in the reaction and what is the products pH? |
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Enzyme is urease breaks N and C bonds in amides to produce ammonia (alkaline) |
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What are the two reagents in the Urease test? |
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Urea (amide compound) and phenol red (pH indicator) |
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What pH does phenyl red test for in the Urease test? |
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alkaline |
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What does a positive urease test look like? |
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hot pink media |
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what does a negative urease test look like? |
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orange |
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What does the Catalase test test for? |
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presence of catalase which breaks down hydrogen peroxide |
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What is the function of catalase breaking down hydrogen peroxide? where does this hydrogen peroxide come from? |
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Hydrogen peroxide is a byproduct of superoxide dismutase breaking down toxic superoxides |
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What does a positive catalase test look like? |
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bubble production when hydrogen peroxide is added to culture (O2 bubbles) |
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What does the oxidase test test for? |
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Cytochrome oxidase removal of electrons of final protein of the ETC by O2. |
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what reagent is used in the oxidase test? |
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oxidase strip with oxidase reagent |
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what does a positive oxidase reaction look like? |
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dark purple color in 10-30 seconds |
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what does ELISA stand for? |
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enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay |
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What does a direct ELISA test for? |
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detect antigen |
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what does an indirect ELISA test for? |
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detect antibodies |
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What is the binding order for Direct ELISA? |
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antigen--> known antibody with fluorescent label--> observe under light |
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What is the binding order for Indirect ELISA? |
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antigen bound to slide--> patient serum added (antibody)-->florescent anti-antibody (antibody sandwich) |
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For carbohydrate fermentation, what media and pH indicator were used to identify fermentation? |
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media was nutrient broth with phenol red |
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what were the three sugars used to measure carbohydrate fermentation? |
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lactose, glucose, sucrose |
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Which bacteria had acid and gas productions (yellow with bubble)? |
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E. coli |
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Which bacteria had no fermentation (no acid or gas)? |
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A. faecalis and Pseudomonas |
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Selective Media |
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selects among a specific groups of bacteria- usually share common trait (gram positive, gram negative, halophiles) |
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3 types of selective Media |
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-Crystal Violet Agar -Phenylethyl Alcohol Agar -7.5% Sodium Chloride Agar |
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Phenylethyl Alcohol Agar (what does it inhibit, what does it select for) |
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Inhibits Gram negative (alcohol disrupts membrane) Selects for Gram Positive cocci |
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Crystal Violet Agar (what does it inhibit, what does it select for) |
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Inhibits Gram Positive Selects for Gram Negative |
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7.5% Sodium Chloride Agar (what does it inhibit, what class of bacteria does it select for, give an example of a bacteria in this class) |
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inhibits anything non-halophilic Selects for halophiles Ex: Staphylococcus |
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Differential Media |
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Selects specific organism within a group of bacteria (identifies species) |
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3 types of Differential Media |
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-Mannitol Salt Agar -MacConkey Agar -Eosin-Methylene Blue Agar |
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Mannitol Salt Agar (What group does it select for, what does it differentiate and how, provide examples) |
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salt selects for halophiles- Staphylococcus Mannitol fermentation (pathogenic trait) differentiates epidermidis from aureus Ex: S. aureus ferments mannitol and turns red media yellow |
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MacConkey Agar (What group does it select for, what does it differentiate and how, provide examples) |
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Selects for gram negative (crystal violet inhibits gram positive) Differentiates lactose fermenting bacteria (coliforms) Lactose fermentation produces acids which turn the pH indicator red Ex: E. coli, citrobacter, Enterobacter, Klebsiella |
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Eosin-Methylene Blue Agar (What group does it select for, what does it differentiate and how, provide examples) |
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Selects for gram negative lactose fermenters (coliforms) Differentiates between E. coli and all other coliforms- E. coli produces metallic green color -Enterobacter aerogenes (coliforms)- pink colonies w central dark purple spot |
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Enriched Media- example? |
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Contain nutrients to support a wide variety of bacterial growth as well as additional unique requirements of fastidious growers Ex: blood agar |
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Blood Agar (what does it differentiate? what are the three types of growth?) |
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Differentiates hemolytic Streptococcus species (enriched and differential media) 1. Alpha hemolysis 2. Beta hemolysis 3. Gamma hemolysis |
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Alpha hemolysis (what does it look like and what organism shows this type of growth?) |
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Partial breakdown of hemoglobin shows green/light brown sheen around colonies (biliverden) Ex. E. coli |
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Betta hemolysis (what does it look like and what organism shows this type of growth?) |
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Full breakdown of red blood cells leaves clear space- lyse cells using beta-hemolysin (streptolycin) Ex: S. pyogenes |
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Gamma hemolysis (what does it look like and what organism shows this type of growth?) |
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no hemolysis- whitish grey sheen on surface of media Ex: S. epidermidis |
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Enteric Bacteria (2 types) |
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Bacteria that colonize the intestinal tract- coliform and non-coliform -ferment glucose -facultative anaerobes -usually gram negative bacilli |
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Coliforms |
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lactose fermenting enterics Ex: E. coli, citrobacter, Enterobacter, Klebsiella |
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[image] |
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mannitol salt agar |
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[image] |
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Alpha Hemolysis (Blood Agar) |
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[image] |
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Betta Hemolysis (Blood Agar) |
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[image] |
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Gamma Hemolysis (Blood Agar) |
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[image] |
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MacConkey Agar |
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[image] |
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Eosin Methylene Blue Agar (E. coli) |
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[image] |
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Eosin Methylene Blue Agar (Enterobacter Aerogenes) |
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Psychrophil |
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5-15 degrees C |
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Mesophil |
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15-40 degrees C |
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Thermophil |
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40-80 degrees C |
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Hyperthermophil |
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80-110 degrees C |
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Best temp for S. marcenscense |
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20 degrees C (mesophil)- red pigment |
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3 toxic Oxygen forms (superoxides) |
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Superoxide Peroxide Hydroxyl |
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3 enzymes for superoxide breakdown. Where are they found? |
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Found in aerobes - Superoxide dismutase -Catalase -Peroxidase |
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What agar medium was used in the oxygen requirement experiments? |
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Brain heart fusions in deep tubes |
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What area in the agar do aerobes grow? |
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at the surface of the tube |
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what area in the agar do obligate anaerobes grow? |
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bottom of the tube |
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what area in the agar do facultative anaerobes grow? |
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throughout the agar with more at the surface |
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What is the final electron acceptor for aerobes? |
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oxygen |
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what is the final elector acceptor for obligate anaerobes? |
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molecules other than oxygen |
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In the catalase experiment, what solution is added to the tubes |
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hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) |
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What represents a positive reaction in the catalase test? |
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formation of O2 bubbles |
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in a normal cell, where would the hydrogen peroxide being neutralized by catalase come from? |
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superoxide dismutase breaks down toxic superoxides and produces hydrogen peroxide. |
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What agar and reagent is used in the amylase test? |
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starch agar and Gram's iodine |
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What reaction is being tested for in the amylase test? |
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Starch hydrolysis into simple sugars (glucose) |
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What does a positive Amylase test looks like (with Gram's iodine added)? |
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cleared zone (halo) surrounding the growth |
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What does a negative Amylase test looks like (with Gram's iodine added)? |
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Blue to black color in the medium |
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What agar is used in the lipase test? |
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Tributyrin agar (with lipid)- blue color |
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What reaction is being tested in the lipase test? |
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hydrolysis of ester bonds by lipase |
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What does a positive lipase test look like? |
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clear halo surrounding growth. Loss of apacity |
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What does a negative lipase test look like? |
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Medium remains opaque blue color surrounding growth |
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What media is used in the Casein test? |
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milk agar |
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What reaction is being tested in the Casein test? |
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breakdown of casein, a protein in milk, by protease |
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What does a positive results in the Casein test look like? |
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loss of opacity surrounding the bacterial growth |
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What does a negative result in the casein test look like? |
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medium surrounding the bacterial growth remains opaque |
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[image] |
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Casein Test |
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[image] |
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Amylase Test |
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[image] |
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Lipase Test |
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[image] |
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Gelatinase Test |
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What agar and broth was used for the temperature experiment? |
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Nutrient broth and TSA platse |
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What method was used to inoculate the oxygen requirement bacteria in brain hear fusion? |
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shake tube inoculation |
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What are the 4 exoenzymes? |
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1. lipase 2. amylase 3. gelatin 4. casein |
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in the gelatin experiment, what enzyme is breaking down gelatin and what is it breaking gelatin down into? |
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gelatinase breaks gelatin down into amino acids |
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how many ml to one micro liter? |
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1ml = 1000ul |
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In the DNA extraction experiment, what is done to the strawberry cells to expose the DNA? |
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The cells are treated with detergent (SDS) in a buffer solution |
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In the DNA extraction experiment, how is protein precipitated out of the solution? |
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presence of salt in the DNA extraction buffer |
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In the DNA extraction experiment, how is cellular waste and particles removed from solution? |
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filtered out |
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In the DNA extraction experiment, how is DNA precipitated from the filtered solution? |
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Addition of cold ethanol |
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Transformation- What two genes were present in the plasmid vector? |
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amp resistance and GFP |
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Transformation- how did we select for transformed bacteria? |
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plated on amp agar |
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Transformation- what was done to E.coli to induce competency? |
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CaCl2 and heat shock |
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Transformation- what were the growth areas surrounding transformed bacteria called? |
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satellite colonies |
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What is another name for the disk diffusion test (antibiotics)? |
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Kirby-Bauer |
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What is the area surrounding an antibiotic disk that restricts growth called? |
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zone of inhibition |
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What are two typical gram + bacteria? |
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B. cereus and S. aureus |
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What three sugars do phenol red tubes contain for carbohydrate fermentation? |
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1. glucose 2. lactose (galactose + glucose) 3. sucrose (fructose + glucose) |
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In carbohydrate fermentation, which bacteria usually produces acid? |
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S. aureus |
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In carbohydrate fermentation, which bacteria doesn't undergo gas or acid production? |
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Pseudomonas |
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What type of agar is used to test for dental caries susceptibility? |
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Snyder Agar |
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What does a Snyder test test for? |
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acid production from the breakdown of glucose by lactobacilli |
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What pH does Snyder agar test for? What is the color change for a positive result? |
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test for acidic environment. Changes from green to yellow in presence of pH 4.4 and below |