Microbiology Lecture Notes 3&4 – Flashcards
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Unlock answersWho and what discovery provided the first chink, or weakness in the idea of spontaneous generation? |
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Did Anton van Leewenhoek invent the microscope? |
No. He improved magnification by stacking lenses. [image] |
Today, how do we increase magification of a lens, by stacking or grinding? |
Today we use grinding to improve the magnification of a lens. |
What contemporary of Van Leewenhoek gave us the term "cell" |
Robert Hooke Here is a drawing he made of the cells in a piece of cork. Note: One can remember this by thinking of the pirate Captain Hook, from Peter Pan, locked in a prison CELL [image] |
What nationality was Robert Hooke? Where did his samples of cork come from? |
He was an Englishman His samples of cork came from the sacramental wine bottles of the church. |
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After what structure did Robert Hooke name the cell? |
A monk's room or cell |
Who gave us the name for the structures that make up living things? What is that name? |
Robert Hooke gave us the name CELL for the stuctures that make up living things. |
What did Austrian physician Ignaz Semmelweis contribute to microbiology? |
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For what contribution to microbiology is Robert Hooke most noted? |
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For what contribution to microbiology is Anton Van Leewenhoek most noted? |
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Puerperal Fever [image] |
What is the relationship between Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., grandfather of the Supreme court judge of the same name, to Ignaz Semmelweis? |
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What did Ignaz Semmelweis notice about the incidence of puerperal fever that led him to suspect the doctors in training of contributing to the disease? |
The incidence of puerperal fever increased in the summer months when the doctors in the training came to do their internships at the clinic. |
What practice in Semmelweis's clinic contributed to the prevelance of puerperal fever during the summer months? |
Physicians in training would visit the morgue to work between deliveries.
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What did Semmelweis do to decrease the incidence of puerperal fever during and after childbirth in his clinic. |
Semmelweis required handwashing with a cholrine based product before and after examination of patients. [image] |
Who gave us the first iatrogenic disease? What was that disease? |
Ignaz Semmelweis gave us the first disease caused by medical personel or the first iatrogenic disease, Puerperal Fever |
Who gave us handwashing as a way of interrupting the spread of disease from person to person? |
Ignaz Semmelweis |
What is the major contribution of Ignaz Semmelweis |
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What do we call a disease that is caused by medical personel? |
An iatrogenic disease. Note: Iatro is from the Greek word for doctor, Iatrogenic= doctor-generated or doctor caused disease. |
What do we call a disease that is acquired in a healthcare facility? |
Nosocomial Disease fr. New Latin - nosocomi- hospital |
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If a scrub nurse leaves gauze in a patient and that patient develops an infection, which type of infection is it, nosocomial or iatrogenic? |
IATROGENIC, because it was generated by medical personel. |
Where is staphlococcus aureus, the MRSA bacteria, housed in the body? How is it spread? |
In the nasal sinuses. BY BREATHING or sneezing, as well as other ways, though these were the ones noted in class. [image] |
Do insurance companies generally consider MRSA obtained in a hospital a nosocomial or an iatrogenic condition. |
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In most cases a UTI from an indwelling catheter is considered a nosocomial infection, an inherent risk of having such a catheter, unless some malfeasance or wrong doing can be proven. |
Would an infection resultant from nasal packings left in too long be an iatrogenic or nosocomial infection? |
Iatrogenic, generated by medical personel. |
Who ultimatly determines whether a disease is iatrogenic or nosocomial? |
Insurance Companies |
What type of disease would a health care provider carry liabilty insurance for, iatrogenic or nosocomial? |
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What historical figure is associated with IATROGENIC DISEASE? |
Ignaz Semmelweis, who introduce hand washing into his maternity care to interupt the transmisson of the IATROGENIC puerperal fever. |
What was Ignaz Semmelweis's "payment" for interupting the transmission of puerperal fever? |
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What nationality is Louis Pasteur? What was he originally trained in? [image] |
Pasteur was a Frenchmen. He was a chemist by training. |
What project did the French government give Louis Pasteur? |
The French government tasked Pasteur with understanding what turned some wine into vinegar and preventing it from happening in the future. |
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Pasteurization after its inventor Louis Pasteur |
For what industry was pasteurization invented? |
The French wine industry. |
Is a pasteurized product a sterile product? |
No. Pasteurization is not designed to create a sterile product.
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What does pastuerization aim to prevent? |
Premature food spoilage and disease |
What events in microbiology put the proverbial nail in the coffin of spontaneous generation? |
Louis Pasteur's experiments, in part those related to the wine industry. |
What led Pasteur to surmise that microscopic living organisms could produce disease? |
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What do we call the idea that living things come only from other living things? |
BIOGENESIS |
What does biogenesis state? |
Living things come only from other living things. |
Who conducted experiments with chicken cholera and what did those experiments entail? |
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Who made the discovery that when material from a sick individual is introduced into a healthy individual the disease spreads? What experiment allowed this individual to reach this conclusion? |
Louis Pasteur discovered that when material from a sick individual is introduced into a healthy individual, the disease spreads. He discovered this via experiments with chickens and chicken cholera. |
Why did Pasteur's public demonstration on the transmission of chicken cholera fail to produce sick chickens? |
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What did the chicken cholera experiment inadvertantly create? |
Vaccination! [image] |
Is rabies a viral or bacterial disease? |
VIRAL |
How many strains of rabies exist? |
Just 1 |
Is it possible to live after exhibiting clinical symptoms of rabies? |
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What did Pasteur's innoculation against rabies do for the animals he gave it to? |
It prevented the onset of symptoms |
How long is the incubation period for rabies? |
It varies widely, from 10 days to several months depending upon site of entry of the organism. |
What two diseases did Pasteur famously interrupt? |
Chicken cholera and rabies |
What is the major contribution of Robert Koch? |
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What do we call the series of four steps or criteria used to link a specific organism with a specific diesease? |
Koch's Postulates [image] |
List Koch's postulates. |
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What is meant by a "pure cutlure"? |
A culture in which one and only one organism is growing |
Whose work allowed us to equate a specific organism with a specific disease? |
Robert Koch |
Whose work gave us information like: A Morbillivirus virus causes measels and streptococcus pyogenes causes strep throat. |
Robert Koch's postulates which equated a specific organism with a specific disease. |
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Who gave us aseptic surgery? |
Joseph Lister Think Lister = Listerine [image] |
What contribution did Joseph Lister make to microbiology? |
Joseph Lister gave us aseptic surgery
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Who was the British orthopedic surgeon who famously treated instead of amputating the compound fracture of an 11 year old indigent London boy?
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What were bandages with which Lister wrapped the broken leg of the young boy soaked in? |
Phenol or carbolic acid |
Who taught us that we could control microorganisms by using certain chemicals? |
Joseph Lister who gave us aseptic surgery via carbolic acid or phenol. (after whom listerine is named) |
What is Paul Ehrlich famous for? |
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Who invented a drug treatment effective against the bacteria that produces syphilis in 1910. |
Paul Ehrlich |
Who is the father of chemotherapy? |
Paul Ehrlich |
What is the difference between a drug and an antibiotic? |
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What is chemotherapy? Who is credited with beginning it? |
The treatment of disease with chemicals. Paul Ehrlich |
What was Alexander Fleming's major contribution to microbiology? |
Alexander Flemming discovered Penicillin
Think: Flem = Phlegm = Disgusting
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Under what circumstances did Alexander Flemming discover penicillin? |
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What do we call the areas of clearing around antibiotic substances in a plated media? |
Zones of Inhibition [image] |
What was Barbara McClintock's major contribution to microbiology? |
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Why are transposons, which have the ability to relocate themselves from one place on the chromosome to another, relatively easy to see in bacteria? |
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Do transposons exist in human chromosomal material? |
It's questionable. |
Do all cells in our bodies contain a complete copy of our DNA? |
Yes |
What do we call a gene that has the potential to cause cancer? |
An oncogene is a gene that has the potential to cause cancer. |
What type of things do onogenes influence? |
Onogenes influence the metabolic rate and cohesiveness of cancer cells, among other things. |
What turns oncogenes on? |
No one really knows, but there is the possiblity that these are jumping genes |
Where are oncogenes located? |
Onogenes, like every other gene, are located in the nucleus of every cell in one's body |
What famous contribution did Stanley Prusiner make to microbiology? |
Stanley Prusiner discovered prions as a disease causing agent. Think: PRUSINER= PRIONS |
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What do we call a non-cellular, proteinaceous infectious particle? |
Prions |
What noncellular agent produces slow progessive, ultimately fatal brain disease |
Prions |
How much DNA do proteins have? |
NONE. |
How do prions replicate? What condition does this lead to? |
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Mad Cow Disease is an example of what type of disease? |
A prion disease. [image] |
What does encephalopathy mean? |
Encephalopathy means disorder or disease of the brain. |
Are prions normally found in brain tissue? |
Yes. There is a normal human form. No one knows what they do. |
Where are disease causing prions stored in the body? |
In the brain. |
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[image] Structure and shape of the E.coli 70S ribosome. The large 50S ribosomal subunit (red) and small 30S ribosomal subunit (blue) are shown with a 200 Angstrom (20 nm) scale bar. For the 50S subunit, the 23S (dark red) and 5S (orange red) rRNAs and the ribosomal proteins (pink) are shown. For the 30S subunit, the 16S rRNA (dark blue) and the ribosomal proteins (light blue) are shown. |
Where in the cells of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms is protein synthesized or put together? |
Proteins are put together or synthesized in the ribosomes. [image] |
What do the two subunits that make up ribosomes consist of? |
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Is the cell wall a variant or invariant in bacteria? How about in prokaryotes in general? |
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Besides in the bacterial cell wall, where is peptidoglycan found? |
NOWHERE! The only place peptidoglycan is found is in bacterial cell walls.
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What stucture, invariantly present in bacteria, is composed of peptidoglycan? |
The CELL WALL [image] |
In which bacterial cell type is the peptidoglycan thicker, gram positive or gram negative cells walls? |
Peptidoglycan is thicker in gram positive cell walls than it is in gram negative cell walls. [image] |
What type of bacterial cell, gram positive or gram negative, is characterized by a thin layer of peptidoglycan? |
Gram negative cell walls are characterized by a relatively thin layer of peptidoglycan. |
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What three roles do teichoic acids play in gram positive cell walls? |
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What part of the gram positive cell wall does penicllin target? |
Pencillin targets the formation of peptidoglycan cross-bridges |
What are the two types of techoic acids found in gram positive cell walls? Which hook into the cell wall, and which extend into the plasma membrane? |
Lipotechoic Acids extend into plasma membrane and Wall Techoic Acids hook into cell wall [image] |
If a bacteria gram stains purple, is it likely to have techoic acids in its cell wall? |
Yes. Gram positive bacteria often have techoic acids in their cell walls. Gram negative bacteria do not. |
What structure in a gram positive bacterial cell walls attracts cations? |
techoic acids |
In order for an antibiotic or drug to enter the cell wall of a gram positive bacteria, what structure must it fit through? |
Peptidoglycan.
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What is the only way the cell wall of a gram positive bacteria can preclude entrance into the bacteria? |
By size. If whatever wants to get through is too big, it won't get through. If it's small enough, it can get through. |
What structure allows gram positive bacteria to expand (as in to grow, not to swell in solution) without bursting? |
techoic acids |
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In what type of bacteria is the peptidoglycan of the cell wall a relatively thin laminate stucture and in which is it thick? |
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What do we call the ungated channels in the outer membrane of the gram negative bacteria? |
Porins. [image] |
In what part of what structure in what type of bacteria are lipopolysacchrides found? |
Lipopolysaccharides or LPS are found in the outer membrane of the cell wall of gram negative bacteria. [image] |
What part of the outer membrane of a gram negative cell wall helps to identify the specific strain of a given organism? |
O antigens or O polysaccharides [image] |
In E. coli O157 what does the O stand for?
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The "O" [Oh] in E. coli O157 indicates the specific O antigen in the outer membrane of the bacterial cell wall. It is this O antigen or O polysaccharide that allows for identification of the particular strain. [image] |
What do we call the toxins that are part of the outer membrane of the cell wall in gram negative bacteria? |
Lipid A, an endotoxin! - Note: Endotoxins are released at the END of the bacterias life, that is, when it dies. |
When is LIPID A released into the body of the host of a gram negative bacteria? |
LIPID A, an endotoxin, is released upon the death of the bacterial cell |
What gram negative component can lead to endotoxic shock? |
Lipid A, an endotoxin. [image] |
Why is endotoxic shock so difficult to manage? |
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Which type of bacteria, gram negative or gram positive is more effectively treated with penicillin? |
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Which type of bacteria, gram negative or gram positive is more effectively treated with lipid solvents? Why? |
Gram negative bacteria are more effectively treated with lipid solvents because their cell walls have a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) outer membrane. |
If a molecule would like to enter a gram negative cell, through what integral protein channel must it pass? What types of molecules do this on a regular basis. |
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Are the cell walls of bacteria selectively permeable? |
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When a gram negative organism damages or loses its cell wall and therefore takes on an aberrant shape, what do we call it? |
A Spheroplast Protoplasts: Have their cell wall entirely removed and are gram + Spheroplasts: Have their cell wall only partially removed and are gram - These cell may retain metabolic functions
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What do we call a gram positive bacteria that loses or damages its cell wall and therefore takes on an aberrant shape? |
Protoplast [image] |
What are the four main functions of the cell wall in bacteria? |
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In what type of solution does the cell wall protect bacteria? In what type of solution does it offer no protection? |
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Why is hypertonicity/ salt solution used to preserve food? |
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What structure encloses the cytoplasm of the bacterial cell? |
The plasma membrane (or cell membrane) encloses the cytoplasm of the bacterial cell. [image] |
What is the main structural component of the bacterial cell or plasma membrane? |
Phospholipid bilayer [image] |
Why do protoplasts and spheroplast burst in pure water or in very dilute solutions of salt or sugar? |
Because their aberrantly shaped cells lack or contained damaged cell walls. With out an intact cell wall water floods into the cells uncontrolled and the cells burst. |
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Beside phospholipids, what constitutes the plasma membrane in prokaryotic cells? |
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What is the phospholipid bilayer composed of; that is, what molecules make it up? What part of the prokaryotic cell is dominated by this phospholipid bilayer? |
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What do we call the proteins that span the whole width of the plasma membrane in prokaryotic cells? What are these proteins involved in? |
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SIMPLE DIFFUSION is characterized by movment of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration until equilibrium occurs. SIMPLE DIFFUSION occurs in the phospholipid bilayer. [image] |
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OSMOSIS [image] |
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Osmosis, passive diffusion, and facilitated diffusion |
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Ionic Transport.
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ACTIVE TRANSPORT |
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Group Translocation |
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What part of the cell dictates selective permeability, or what can enter or exit the cell? Why? |
THE CELL MEMBRANE because transport is a function of the cell membrane. |
What element(s) of the eurkaryotic cell membrance is(are) absent from the cell membrane of prokaryotes? |
Cholesterol (as well as carbohydrates, though we did not discuss these) p.100 [image] |
What structure gives bacteria their shape? |
The cell wall |
What role does the cell membrane play in energy production? |
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What structure in bacteria is the site of energy production? |
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What role does the cell membrane of bacteria cells play in cell division? |
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