Micr33 – Microbiology Answers – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
| Prokaryote |
answer
| Comes from the Greek words for prenucleus |
question
| Eukaryote |
answer
| Comes from the Greek words for true nucleus. |
question
| Prokaryote |
answer
| One circular chromosome, not surrounded by a nuclear membrane, no histones, no membrane bound organelles, bacteria: peptidoglycan cell walls, archaea: pseudomurein cell walls, binary fission |
question
| Eukaryote |
answer
| Paired chromosomes surrounded by a nuclear membrane, histones, membrane bound organelles, polysaccharide cell walls, mitotic spindle. |
question
| Prokaryotic cell shape |
answer
| Average size: 0.2-1.0 microns x 2-8 microns Monomorphic Few are pleomorphic |
question
| Glycocalyx |
answer
| Outside cell wall Usually sticky Capsule: neatly organized Slime layer: unorganized |
question
| Flagella |
answer
| -outside cell wall -made of chains of flagellin -attached to a protein hook -anchored to the wall an membrane by the basal body |
question
| Motile cells |
answer
| Rotate flagella to run or tumble Move toward or away from stimuli Flagella proteins are H antigens |
question
| Axial filaments |
answer
| Also called endoflagella, in spirochetes, anchored at one end of cell, rotation causes cell to move. |
question
| Fimbriae |
answer
| Fimbriae allow attachment |
question
| Pili |
answer
| Pili facilitate transfer of DNA from one end of cell to another, gliding motility, twitching motility |
question
| Peptidoglycan |
answer
| Polymer of disaccharide N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM) |
question
| Peptidoglycan in Gram-Positive Bacteria |
answer
| Linked by polypeptides at NAM |
question
| Gram-Positive Cell Wall |
answer
| Thick peptidoglycan Teichoic acids: - lipoteichoic acid links to plasma membrane -wall Teichoic acid links to peptidoglycan -may regulate movement of cations and provide antigenic specificity Polysaccharides covering the cell wall may provide antigenic specificity as well |
question
| Gram-Negative Cell Wall |
answer
| Thin peptidoglycan, outer membrane, periplasmic space |
question
| Gram-Negative outer membrane |
answer
| Lipopolysaccharides, lipoproteins, phospholipids Forms the periplasm between the outer membrane and the plasma membrane. Protection from phagocytes, complement, and antibiotics |
question
| Gram stain mechanism |
answer
| Crystal violet-iodine crystals form in cell -gram positive: alcohol dehydrates peptidoglycan, CV-I crystals do not leave -gran-negative: alcohol dissolves outer membrane and leaves holes in peptidoglycan, CV-I washed out |
question
| Gram positive cell wall |
answer
| 2-ring basal body, disrupted by lysozyme, penicillin sensitive |
question
| Gram-negative cell wall |
answer
| 4-ring basal body, endotoxin, tetracycline sensitive |
question
| Atypical cell walls |
answer
| Acid-fast cell walls Waxy lipid (mycolic acid) bound to peptidoglycan Mycobacterium Nocardia |
question
| Damage to cell wall |
answer
| Lysozyme digests disaccharide in peptidoglycan, penicillin inhibits peptide bridges in peptidoglycan |
question
| Protoplast |
answer
| Wall-less cell with a plasma membrane intact |
question
| Spheroplast |
answer
| Gram-negative cell with a remnant of the outer wall left plus an intact plasma membrane |
question
| Protoplasts an spheroplasts are susceptible to osmotic lysis |
answer
| That's bad |
question
| L forms |
answer
| Are wall-less cells that swell into irregular shapes (still live and divide) |
question
| The plasma membrane |
answer
| Phospholipid bilayer, peripheral proteins and integral proteins, transmembrane proteins |
question
| Fluid mosaic model |
answer
| Membrane'sas viscous as olive oil Proteins move to function Phospholipids rotate and move laterally |
question
| Selective permeability |
answer
| Allows passage of some molecules |
question
| Enzymes in plasma membrane |
answer
| For ATP production |
question
| Chromatophore and thylakoids |
answer
| Photosynthetic pigments on foldings of plasma membrane |
question
| Damage to plasma membrane |
answer
| By alcohols, quaternary Ammonium, polymyxin antibiotics cause leakage of cell contents |
question
| Simple diffusion |
answer
| Movement of a solute from high to low concentration |
question
| Facilitated diffusion |
answer
| Solute combines with a transporter protein in the membrane |
question
| Facilitated diffusion |
answer
| Solute combines with a transporter protein in the membrane |
question
| Osmosis |
answer
| The movement of water across a selectively permeable membrane from an area of high water concentration to an area of low water concentration |
question
| Osmotic pressure |
answer
| The pressure needed to stop the movement of water across the membrane. |
question
| Aquaporin |
answer
| The channel through which water moves through the plasma membrane |
question
| Isotonic solution |
answer
| Equal concentration |
question
| Hypotonic |
answer
| Water moves into cell. Might burst. |
question
| Osmotic lysis |
answer
| Cell bursts from osmosis |
question
| Hypertonic solution |
answer
| Water moves out of the cell causing cytoplasm to shrink |
question
| Plasmolysis |
answer
| Cell shrinks |
question
| Active transport |
answer
| Requires a transporter protein and energy in the form of ATP |
question
| Group translocation |
answer
| Requires a transporter protein and PEP (a special form of active transport in prokaryotes. Substances are altered as they are transported. |
question
| Cytoplasm |
answer
| The substance inside the plasma membrane (not a void, it is a very rich environment) |
question
| The nucleoid |
answer
| Bacterial chromosome. No boundary to mark nucleoid location |
question
| PEP |
answer
| Phosphoenol pyruvate |
question
| The prokaryotic ribosome |
answer
| Protein synthesis. Complete 70S structure. Made of 1 small subunit (30S) and one large unit(50S). S stands for Svedberg unit. Ribosome is non membranous. It is made of protein and RNAs |
question
| Meta chromatic granules (volutin) |
answer
| Phosphate reserves, for generating ATP |
question
| Polysaccharide granules |
answer
| Energy reserves |
question
| Lipid inclusions and sulfur granules |
answer
| Energy reserves |
question
| Carboxysomes |
answer
| Ribulose 1,5-diphosphate carboxylase for CO2 fixation |
question
| Gas vacuoles |
answer
| Protein-covered cylinders Help organisms float for photosynthetic purposes |
question
| Magnetosomes |
answer
| Iron oxide (destroys H2O2) Hydrogen peroxide is toxic, this helps rid of it. |
question
| Svedberg unit |
answer
| "S" in ribosomes. Accounts for size, weight, and shape. A unit of sediments |
question
| Endospores |
answer
| Resting cells. Resistant to desiccation, heat, chemicals. -Bacillus(genus) -Clostridium(genus) |
question
| Sporulation |
answer
| Endospore formation |
question
| Germination |
answer
| Return to vegetative state |