Microbiology Exam 1 – Donaldson – Flashcards

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Microbe
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single cell organism
range in size from mm to nm; can only see individual cells through a microscope
not all are bad- bacteria in stomach
not all can survive alone- biofilms (community of bacteria) or viruses
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Major advancements had to be made in order sto study microorganisms
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Microscopes powerful enough to observe microbes
Molecular Biology
Sequencing of genomes
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Robert Hooke
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Built first compound microscope
Looked at piece of cork under microscope
First to describe cells, but never observed single celled organisms
Published findings in Micrographia in 1665
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Anton van Leeuwenhoek
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Father of microbiology
improved the microscope to be able to observe single celled organisms
Referred to them as "animal cubes"
First to describe how heat can kill microbes (coffee)
Died from bacteria he was observing
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Franscesco Redi, Lazzaro Spallanzani, Louisi Paseur
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Important in proving mmicrobes arise from other microbes
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Francesco Redi
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Italian priest that showed maggots did not spontaneously appear on decaying meat
Showed that maggots only appeared when meat was exposed to flies
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Lazzaro Spallanzani
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Italian priest who disproved spontaneous generation of microbes
Sealed flask of sterilized meat did not produce microbes
Critics argued that his experiment did not contain air, so results weren't valid
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Louis Pasteur
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Took Spallanzani's results one step further: Boiled broth then placed in swan necked flask
Flasks allowed air in, but no microbes
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John Tyndall
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When he did Pasteur's experiment, he sometimes had growth
Discovered that some organic matter can contain heat-resistant spores
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Germ Theory of Disease
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Pasteur proposed that the transmission of microbes cause disease
Robert Koch proposed 4 criteria that must be met in order to determine if a microbe causes a disease
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Koch's Postulate
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1.Microbe always present in diseased organism, absent in healthy
2.Microbe isolated from diseased organism and grown in pure culture
3.Microbe isolated must cause disease in healthy organism
4.Re-isolate same microbe from the now-sick individual
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Exceptions to Koch's Postulates
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Certain bacteria cause certain diseases
Viruses mutate
Viruses have to have host
Some bacteria can't be cultured in pure form
Some microbes elicit symptoms
Some microbes can cause different diseases
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Application of Koch's Posulates
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Barry Marshall- Hilicobacter pylori causative agent of stomach ulcers
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John LIster
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Listerine, aniseptic surgery
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Ignaz Semmeiweis
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Hand washing in hospitals
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Alexander Fleming
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Penicillin (found by accident)
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Edward Jenner
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Smallpox vaccine
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Microbial Classification
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Can classify by biochemical properties
Woese's three domains of life- based on 16s rRNA, archae are not bacteria, but both prokaryotes
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Endosymbiont Theory
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Mitochondria were bacteria
Chloroplasts were cyanobacteria
Bacteria internalized into larger cells and lived together (endosymbiosis)
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Tools used in microbiology
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Media, Incubator, Winogradsky column, Centrifuges, Molecular techniques, Microscopy
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Media
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Food or sample for growing microorganisms
Pure culture isolation
Beginning solid media had gelatin
Later used agar (polymer of galactose)
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Incubator
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Oven used to grow bacteria
Different bacteria grow at different temperatures
Aerobic- require O2
Anaerobic- require no O2
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Autoclave
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Uses high pressure- 15psi
And Steam- 121 C to sterilize material
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Winogradsky column
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Most microbes can't grow on typical medium
Used to culture diverse bacterial populations
Mud mixed with shredded newspaper (carbon source)
Gradients depict different bacterial populations
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Molecular Techniques
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DNA sequencing
Restriction Enzymes
PCR
Recombinant DNA
Closing
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Microscopy
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Must be used to identify and characterize individual microbes
Typical bacteria is 1-3 micrometers
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Lenses
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Light bends as it passes from one medium to another
Refractive index is a measurement of how much light slows down as it passe through a medium
The directin and magnitude of the bend depends on the refractive indices of the two medium (i.e. air and glass)
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Microscope lenses
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The shorter the focal length the more magnification
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Microscope Resolution
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ability of a lens to separate or distinguish small objects that are close together
The shorter the wavelength, the greater the resolution
Wider lens closer to specimen can increase resolution
Also immersion oil can increase resolution
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Types of microscopes:
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Bright-field microscop
Dark-field microscope
Phase contrast
Flourescent
Electron
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Bright-Field Microscope
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produces a dark image against a brighter background
Typically has 3 to 5 objective lenses
We use this type in the lab
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The Dark-Field Microscope
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Image is formed by light reflected or refracted by specimen
Produces a bright image of the object against a dark background
Used to observe living, unstained preparations
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Phase-Contrast Microscope
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Enhances the contrast between intracellular structures having slight differences in refractive index
Excellent for observing living cells
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Fluorescent Microscope
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Concept differs from previous microscopes in that the image is seen because of flourescent light emitted from the object
Expose specimen to UV light and forms image resulting from flourescent light
Specimens usually stained with flourochromes
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Electron Microscope
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Electrons behave like wave lengths
Allows great resolution
Sample must absorb electrons--coat with heavy metal (lenses are magnetic fields)
Transmission and Scanning
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Transmission Electron Microscop (TEM)
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Sample is fixed in chemical
Sliced into thin sections
Stained with metal
Very High Resolutions
Good for looking at internal structures
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Scanning electron microscopes (SEM)
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SAmple is coated with metal
Used to observe external structure and morphology
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Specimen Preparation
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Most specimens must be fixed onto slide and stained in order to be examined
Heat fixation- preserves morphology but not internal structures
Chemical fixation - used with larger, more delicate organisms
Chemical penetrates cell to preserve internal structure
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Dyes
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Dyes are used to observe cells
Dyes have two common features
Have chromophore group
Able to bind to cells
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Simple stain
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Uses 1 dye to stain cells
Used to determine cell size, shape, and arrangement
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Differential Stain
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Divides bacteria based on different staining properties
Gram staining separates into two groups- gram positive and gram negative
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Bacterial Morphology
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Cocci- sphere shape
Bacilli - rod shape
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Cocci
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Bunches- staphylococci
Chains- Streptococci
Groups of 2- diplococci
Groups of 4- tetrad
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Bacilli
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Single- bacillus
Chains- Streptobacilli
Groups of 2- Diplobacilli
Clusters- Coccobacilli
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Shapes
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Vibrios = bent shape
Spiral
Irregular
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Common Traits of Bacteria
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RNA Polymerase
Ribosomes
Cell wall containing peptidoglycam
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Undiscovered Bacteria
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Many species uncharacterized
Many bacteria cannot yet be grown
Unclassified Organisms- identified solely through rRNA sequence
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Deep-branching thermophiles
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Diverged early from eukaryotes
Grown at very high temperatures
Aquifex and Thermotoga - live in near-boiling water
Deinococcus-Thermus -- Lives at lower temperatures
Extremely radiation resistant
Very rapid DNA repair
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Cyanobacteria
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Only bacteria that produce oxygen gas
Many fix nitrogen
Subcellular structures - thylakoids are the site of photosynthesis, similar to chloroplasts
Gas Vessels- used for motility
Many form akinetes - specialized spore cells that survive long periods of dessication and germinate when conditions improve
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Gram-Positive Firmicutes
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Rods and cocci
No outer membrane but thick cell wall
Many are pathogens (disease-causing)
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Gram-positive endospores
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Extremely heat-resistant for millennia
Toxin-formers (botox, tetanus, gangrene
Spore forms inside mother cell
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Gram-positive actinobacteria
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Acid-fast cell walls
Waxy lipids in cell walls
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Proteobacteria (gram-negative)
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Largest group - 5 major classes
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Alpha Proteobacteria
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Photoheterotrophs
Endosymbionts
CAuse rocky mountain spotted fever
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Beta Proteobacteria
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Lithotrophs - nitrate, sulfur, and iron oxidizers
Pathogenic
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Gamma Proteobacteria
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Lithotrophs- some are phototrophs
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Enteric Gamma Proteobacteria
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Facultatively anaerobic rods
Many are motile
Many form biofilms
Pathogens
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Delta Proteobacteria
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Some forms attack other bacteria in "packs" - social movement
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Epsilon Proteobacteria
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Smallest group of proteobacteria
Helicoptor Pylori- cause of stomach ulcers
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Nitrospirae
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Spiral shape
Most oxidize nitrite to nitrate
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Bacteroidetes/Chlorobi Group
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Obligate Anaerobes- grow only in absence of oxygen
Bacteroids- Major flora of human colon, break down toxins in food, provide food
Chlorobi- Green sulfur bacteri
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Spirochetes
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Flexible, narrow spiral shape
Flagella at ends
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Chlamydiae
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Obligate Intracellular parasites
Larger reticulate body
Grows within cells, cannot survive outside host
Small elementary bodies transfer to new host and can survive outside host, similar in function to spore
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Planctomycetes
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Multiple internal membranes
Double membrane surrounds nucleoid
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Verrucomicrobia
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Irregular shape
Contains tubulin
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Bacterial cell structure and division
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Cytoplasm contains compact genome and ribosomes
Cytoplasm is surrounded by cell envelope- includes cell membrane, cell wall (peptidoglycan) and outer membrane
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Gram-positive cell wall
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Thick cell wall
Thin periplasm
Plasma membrane
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Gram-negative cell wall
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Outer Membrane
Thin cell wall
thick periplasm
plasma membrane
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Cell Membrane
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Made of phospholipid bilayer
Proteins embedded in membrane- integral and peripheral proteins, transport materis into and out of cell, senses the outside world, anchor membrane to envelope
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Transport
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Protons pushed out cell by pumps
Generates proton motive force
PMF is used to generate ATP- ATP synthase uses PMF for energy
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Transporters
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move material into or out of the cell
passive transport follows concentration gradient of material
Passive diffusion lets small molecules into cell
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Periplasm
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Not empty space
Contains protein oligosaccharide, salts, and the peptidoglycan
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Peptidoglycan layer
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Provides strength and rigidity to cell
Sugar chains wrapped in circles around cell
Sugar chains linked to each other by short polymers of amino acids or peptides
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Outer Membrane
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Composed of phospholipid, Lipopolysaccharid (LPS) and protein
LPS is an endotoxin- elicits immune response
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Bacterial Nucleoid
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Single loop of stranded DNA
Single molecule of DNA
Attached to cell envelope
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Gene Expression
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RNA Polymerase transcribes DNA to mRNA
Ribosome translates RNA to Protein
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Cell Division
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Cell elongates as it grows (adds new cell wall at equator)
DNA replicates to make 2 chromosomes
Cell undergoes septation
Binary Division
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Photosynthesis
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Cyanobacteria have thylakoids
Carboxysomes fix carbon and use energy to make sugar
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Inclusion bodies- Intracellular deposits of material
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Glycogen- sugar for energy
PHB (fatty acid polymer) for energy
Polyphosphate to store material
Sulfur for disposal
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Cell Attachment
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Fimbriae and pili attach cells to surfaces
Secretion systems attach cells to prey
Essential for bacterial pathogemicity
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Cell Motility
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Flagella- long, helical protein filaments attached at ends and over whole cell
Flagella rotate to propel cell
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Chemotaxis
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Movement away or towards a chemical
Chemoattractors cause flagella to rotate counter-clockwise pushing bacteria forward (run)
Chemorepellents cause flagella to rotate (or tumble) clockwise, pushing bacteria away
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Microbial Growth
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Microbial nutrition
All life requires: Electron flow to drive processes
Energy to move electrons
Materials to make cells
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Electron Flow Requires
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Source of electrons
Electron Acceptor
Source of energy
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Facilitated Transport
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Transport proteins are required
Substrate moves along centration gradient; no energy is required
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Active Transport example
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Phosphotransferase system
Modifies material as it enters the cell
Used to phosphorylate glucose once it enters the cell
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Nutrient Types
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Micronutrients- small amounts of nutrients required
Macronutrients- large amounts of nutrients needed
Nutrients required by bacteria differ between species
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Ways to obtain pure culture
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Streak Plate- streak cells on plate, agar inhibits spread of microbes on plate, all cells in colony derive from single cell
Dilution of culture in broth- reduces number of cells in each tube, spread liquid on plate to see single colonies
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Ways to monitor Growth
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Agar plate
Counting Chamber
Spectrophotometer
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Growth cycle of bacteria
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Lag Phase- cells synthesizing materials, not dividing
Log phase= exponential growth
Stationary Phase
Death Phase
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Biofilms
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Cells secrete material to hold to a surface
Cells acting together, cells signal to each other, protects against dispersion, prevents antibiotics from infiltrating
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Cell Differentiation
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Cells respond to changing environment
Endospores- protect against bad conditions, forms inside mother cell
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Variations in the environment can impact growth
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pH
Temperature
Osmlarity
Oxygen Content
Pressure
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