Chapter 4 – Prokaryotic Profiles – The Bacteria and Archae – Flashcards

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What are structures common to all bacterial cells?
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Cell membrane, cytoplasm and ribosomes.
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What are Ribosomes function?
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Produce proteins. NOT AN ORGANELLE (DNA, RNA, protein)
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What are structures found in MOST bacterial cells?
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Cell wall (very small #), Surface coating or glycocalyx
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What are structures found in SOME bacterial cells?
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Flagella, pili, fimbriae, capsules, slime layers, inclusions, actin cytoskeleton, endospores.
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What is a "capsule"?
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Outershell/coating. Solid.
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What is an inclusion?
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Internal clusters of stuff for storage of nutrients.
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Why don't bacteria need an actin cytoskeleton?
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Because of their cell wall.
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How many genus of bacteria produce spore?
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3.
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Why aren't all of these structures in all bacteria?
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If something is not useful, a bacteria will quickly evolve to get rid of it.
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Are appendages common in all species?
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No.
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What do appendages provide?
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motility.
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What else are appendages used for?
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Attachment, mating.
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How does mating occur?
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They exchange genetic material NOT sexually.
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What are the three parts of a flagella?
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Filament, hook (sheath), and basal body.
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What is the filament?
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A whip-like helical structure that generates movement.
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What is the hook?
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Holds the filament. Attached to the rod portion of the basal body.
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What is the basal body? What does it consist of?
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The motor. A complex structure consisting of a rod, 4 rings and a motor contained within the cell envelope.
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What is the cell envelope?
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The cell membrane + wall and everything collectively. Gel-like substance.
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What does activation of the motor cause?
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The hook/filament to swivel. AKA movement. It rotates clockwise and counterclockwise.
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What does Monotrichous mean?
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Single flagellum
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What does lophotrichous mean?
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Small bunches/tufts of flagella emerging from the SAME site.
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What does amphitrichous mean?
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Flagella attached to BOTH ends/poles of the cell.
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What does peritrichous mean?
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Flagella dispersed randomly all over the cell.
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What does the flagella function in?
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Chemotaxis - movement of the cell in response to a chemical signal.
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What are the 2 types of chemotaxis?
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Positive - towards.
Negative - away.
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What is phototaxis?
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Movement towards light.
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How is movement achieved with flaggela?
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Runs + tumbles.
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What are runs?
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Linear movement.
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What are tumbles?
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"Period of assessment" cell stops and reverses directions or spins in place.
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How is a tumble created?
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Clockwise flagellar rotation starting Right.
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What are axial filaments?
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Periplasmic flagella
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Where are periplasmic filaments found?
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A special group of bacteria known as Spirochetes AKA syphilis.
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What does a periplasmic filament consist of? Where is it located?
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A filament and hook but the entire structure is located between the celll wall and membrane.
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What is the area between the cell wall and membrane known as?
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The periplasmic space.
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How does a P.F. create movement?
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Through twisting and flexing actions.
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What is a Pili?
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Elongated, rigid hollow structure
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On what type of bacteria is it sometimes found?
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Gram-negative bacteria.
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What are Pili involved in?
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Attachment, movement and conjugation. Exchange of genetic material
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What is Fimbriae?
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Small bristle-like fibers. Plaque on your teeth.
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What do Fimbriae tend to stick to?
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Each other and to surfaces.
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What is Glycocalyx?
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A sticky "sugar" coating.
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What does Glycocalyx develop as?
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A coating of repeating polysaccharide units, protein or both.
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They differ among bacteria in ______, ______ and _______ ________.
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Thickness, organization and chemical composition.
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What is the slime layer?
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A loose shield that protects some bacteria from loss of water or nutrients. Differs in thickness in different areas
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What is a capsule?
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When the glycocalyx is bound more tightly to the cell and is denser and thicker. Pneumonia.
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What are the functions of Glycocalyx?
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1.)Protects the cell
-Formed by many pathogenic bacteria to protect bacteria against phagocytes
2.)Sometimes helps cell adhere to environment
-Biofilms (plaque)
3.)Helps prevent the loss of water or nutrients
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Does Glycocalyx function in regulation?
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NO. That is the cell membrane's job!
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What are the basic 3 layers of the cell envelope?
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The cell wall (inner), the cell membrane (outer) and in some bacteria the outer membrane (outermost)
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If a cell is Gram-Negative, does it have an outer membrane or no?
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Yes, it has an outer membrane.
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What does a gram-positive cell possess?
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A physically stronger membrane. Two layers - 1.)cell wall 2.)cell membrane
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What does a gram-negative cell possess?
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A more durable/physiologically stronger membrane. 3 Layers - 1.)Outer membrane 2.)Cell Wall 3.)Cell Membrane
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The structure of the cell wall helps to determine the ______ of the bacterium.
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Shape.
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What does the cell wall provide the cell with?
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Strong structural support.
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Why are most cell walls rigid?
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Peptidoglycan. All domain bacteria have this.
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The cell wall keeps the cell from ______ because of changes in pressure due to _______.
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rupturing (lysis)/osmosis.
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The cell wall is the target of many antibiotics. T or F?
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T
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Is the gram-positive wall thinner or thicker than negative?
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Thicker.
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Is there a lot or a little room in between the cell wall and membrane?
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A little. Very narrow.
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What 2 molecules are commonly found in Gram-Positive cell walls?
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Teichoic acid & Lipoteichoic acid.
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What is techoic acid?
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Binds together layers or peptidoglycan.
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What is lipoteichoic acid?
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Links the peptidoglycan layers to the lipid cell membrane.
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Gram-positive cells are ____ susceptible to lysis but ______ permeable than gram-negative bacteria.
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less/more
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Gram-Negative cell walls have a wide or narrow periplasmic space?
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Wide.
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What is the LPS layer?
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Similar to the cell membrane except it contains specialized polysaccharides and proteins.
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What is the innermost layer of Gram-Neg bacteria?
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A phospholipid layer anchored by lipoproteins to the peptidoglycan layer below.
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What is the outermost layer of the LPS?
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Contains lipopolysaccharide with two important components: Lipid A/O-Specific Polysaccharide
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What is Lipid A?
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Found within the bilayer, recognized by our immune systems.
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What is O-Specific Polysaccaride?
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Found externally, used to identify certain strains/species of bacteria (E Coli)
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What does the outer membrane of Gram-Neg bacter serve as?
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Partial chemical sieve. REGULATION. Only small molecules can penetrate.
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Gram-Neg bacteria are _____ permeable because of LPS but ____ susceptible to lysis than gram-pos bacteria.
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less/more
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What is the cell membrane also known as?
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The cytoplasmic membrane or plasma membrane.
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What does the cell membrane primarily contain?
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Phospholipids and proteins.
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What are the functions of the cell membrane?
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1.)Provides site for functions
-energy rxn, nutrient processing,
synthesis.
2.)Regulates transport
-selectively permeable (main fxn)
3.)Secretion
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What are the contents of cell cytoplasm of Bacteria?
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Gelatinous soultion, Chromatin body, Plasmids, Ribosomes, Inclusions, Actin Cytoskeleton.
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The gelatinous solution is the site for many biochemical and synthetic activities. T or F?
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T
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Gelatinous soultion is ____ - 80% water.
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70
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What is the chromatin body?
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A collection of DNA. Single, circular strand of essential DNA.
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Where is the chromatin body?
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The nucleoid. No membrane around it. A DENSE area of the cell.
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Are plasmids essential?
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No, but are helpful!
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Where are plasmids found?
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Floating in cytoplasm or attached to chromatin body.
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What do plasmids often confer?
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Protective traits (drug resistance or production of toxins/enzymes)
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Can plasmids be transferred to one bacterium to another?
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Yes, thereby transferring traits it carries.
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What do ribosomes do?
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PRODUCE PROTEINS
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What are Ribosomes made of?
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rRNA and protein
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What are Ribosomes characterized by?
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S-units. The prokaryotic ribosome is 70S
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What are inclusions?
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Storehouse for nutrients. Stored there when abundant, taken from there when depleted.
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Aquatic bacteria use inclusions to hold gas for what?
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Buoyancy.
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What is the actin cytoskeleton?
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Long polymers of actin that contribute to cell shape. (not as much as cell wall)
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What are dormant bodies?
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Produced by Bacillus, Clostridium and Sporosarcina. ALL GRAM POSITIVE RODS.
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How many life stages do these bacteria have?
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2. Vegetative & Endospore
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What happens during the Vegetative cell phase?
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They are metabolically/actively growing. Can be induced by the environment to undergo spore formation AKA sporulation.
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What happens during the Endospore phase?
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Cell must be stimulated by the depletion of nutrients.(Temp/h20..) Process takes 6-8 hours (30-45 mins for bacteria) Vegetative cell changes to a sporangium. DNA is replicated. A septum forms dividing the cell unequally. The larger portion engulfs the smaller resulting in a FORESPORE. A thick peptidoglycan coat forms around forespore. Now is an endospore.
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The endospore remains dormant until the conidtions improve around it. There are some endospores as old as 250 million years old. T or F?
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T.
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Is this process reversible?
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NO.
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Can Endospores withstand extremes in heat, drying freezing, radiation and chemicals?
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Yes
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What is Germination?
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The breaking of Endospore dormancy.
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In the presence of _____ and a specific ________ agent, the spore will break down and a vegetative cell will develop rapidly.
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water/germination
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Are most endospores harmless to human health?
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Yes.
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What is one example of bacteria that depend on spores?
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Bacillus antracis.
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What are the three general shapes of bacteria?
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1.)Coccus - sphereical
2.)Bacillus - rod-shaped
3.)Spirillium - curviform/spiral
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What are the two subcategories of bacillus?
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Coccobaccilus - short and plump like football
Vibrio - gently curved like boomerang
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What does pleomorphism mean?
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When cells of a single species vary to some extent in size and shape. Ex: e coli
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Which shape of bacteria has the most variety in arrangement?
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Cocci
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What are the 6 arrangement possibilities of Cocci?
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1.)Singles- isolated. uncommon
2.)Pairs (diplococcic)- pneumonia
3.)Tetrads- group of 4 non-chain square
4.)Irregular clusters (staphylococci)- grape-like structure
5.)Chains (streptococci)- B.Sub
6.)Cubical packet (sarcina)- cube 3-d
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What are the 4 arrangement possibilities of Bacillus?
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1.)Singles
2.)Pairs
3.)Chain
4.)Row of cells oriented side by side (Lincoln logs)
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What are the 2 arrangement possibilities of Spirilla?
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1.)Usually SINGLES
2.)Occasional Short Chain
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