Microbiology 202 Quiz 3 – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Staphylococcus and Micrococcus are both in which family? |
answer
Micrococcaceae |
question
Where are staphylococcus and micrococcus most likely to be found? |
answer
on the human body, especially skin. |
question
what are the 6 common traits of staphylococcus and micrococcus ? |
answer
gram positive, growth in tetrads(micrococcus) or clusters (staphylococcus), no endospores, tolerate salty conditions. both are catalase positive. |
question
How do micrococcus cells carry out respiration? |
answer
strict aerobe |
question
how do staphylococcus cells carry out respiration? |
answer
facultative |
question
Which type of staph cell causes TSS? |
answer
staphylococcus aureus |
question
what is the most common type of staph? |
answer
staphylococcus epidermidis |
question
Which type of Staph sometimes causes a urinary tract infection? |
answer
staph sarophyticus |
question
what type of agar is mannitol agar? |
answer
selective: high salt concentration that selects staph and micro..but also differential because it contains pH indicator phenol red |
question
What's the best way to tell the difference between micrococcus and staphylococcus? |
answer
what they do in the absence of oxygen...micrococcus won't ferment mannitol but staphylococcus would |
question
which staph cannot ferment mannitol? |
answer
s. epidermidis |
question
What is the purpose of the novobicin assay, and how does it work? |
answer
to further differentiate staph strains....antibiotic resistance test. |
question
what is the only staph strain that is resistant to novobiocin? |
answer
s. saprophyticus |
question
If a bacteria is sensitive to an antibiotic, what is the diameter of "no growth" that will occur? |
answer
18mm |
question
How does S. aureus cause clotting? |
answer
the bacteria produces coagulase, which interacts with fibronogen, which is an insoluble protein and clogs circulatory system,. |
question
how do we detect coagulase? |
answer
bead connecting assay |
question
can m. luteus ferment glucose? |
answer
no |
question
which strept does not produce catalase? |
answer
streptococcus enterococcus |
question
are pseudomonas pathogenic? |
answer
no |
question
which type of gram negative bacteria have flagella? |
answer
pseudomonas |
question
are pseudomonas gram positive or negative? |
answer
gram negative rods (bacilli) |
question
which type of gram negative bacteria produce pigments that are water soluble? |
answer
psuedomonas |
question
are all psuedomonas strike aerobes? |
answer
no--some can live anaerobically if nitrate is available. |
question
can pseudomonas carry out fermentation? |
answer
no...strictly electron transport chain |
question
Can psuedomonas oxidize glucose? |
answer
yes, but only under aerobic conditions |
question
what is the O/F assay? |
answer
seeks to identify pseudomonas through the oxidation of glucose --> production of organic acids in aerobic environment |
question
How are Enterics defined? |
answer
gram negative rods, all facultative aerobes, do not produce spores, ...found in large intestines, ferment glucose to produce acid and gas |
question
All enterics ferment glucose, but do all enteric ferment lactose? |
answer
no |
question
what is the difference between coliform and noncoliform? |
answer
types of enteric that CAN ferment lactose are called coliforms. |
question
What are three types of coliform enterics? |
answer
E. coli, enterobacter, klebsiella, citrobacter |
question
What are types of noncolifrom enterics? |
answer
proteus, salmonella, shigella, serratia, providencia |
question
are MaConkey plates differential or selective? |
answer
both....selective because it only allows the growth of gram negative bacteria and differential because it has a pH indicator to distinguish coliforms from non coliforms |
question
On Maconkey agar, how can you tell is an enteric can ferment lactose? |
answer
the agar around the bacteria will be bright red for a positive reaction |
question
what kind of indicator is used in the MaConkey agar assay for enterics? |
answer
neutral red |
question
What is the difference between EMB plates and MaConkey agar plates? |
answer
EMB is more selective than MaConkey |
question
what is considered a positive reaction for lactose fermentation on EMB agar? |
answer
colonies will become dark red //purple to black..therfore we can assume these are coliform species |
question
if a bacteria has a green metallic sheen on EMB agar, what can we say bout it? |
answer
enteric, coliform, REALLY FERMENTS, and probably e. coli |
question
what is the purpose of the methyl red assay? |
answer
to differentiate between bacterial species that produce a small amount of organic acids and high concentration |
question
What is the Voges-Proskaueh assay? |
answer
test for presence of acetoin |
question
how does the methyl red indicator work? |
answer
turns red at extremely high organic acid concentratoin..turns orange at pH 4.6-5.6 and turns yellow around neutral pH |
question
what is the purpose of the citrate assay? |
answer
to detect the use of citrate as carbon source |
question
Is Simmons Citrate agar differential or selective? |
answer
selective for gram negative...differential in that it changes color for which type of carbon source used. |
question
what is a positive reaction for citrate assay? |
answer
if there is macroscopic evidence of cell growth and if the medium is deep or royal blue in color, this is considered a positive reaction |
question
Would e. coli be able to survive on citrate alone? |
answer
no...it wouldn't. if it was a positive reaction, it probably would be E. aerogenes. |
question
Which species is noted for its ability to produce urease? |
answer
proteus |
question
does urease production increase or decrease pH? |
answer
increase |
question
what is a positive reaction for the urease assay? |
answer
if the broth turns bright pink within 24 hours, it has the ability to produce urease |
question
what is the positive reaction for the H2S assay? |
answer
if the SIM agar turns black |
question
what does the indole production assay test for? |
answer
the breakdown of the amino acid tryptophan |
question
Why do we add Kovac's reagent to the broth? |
answer
it will combine with indole present to form a red compound |
question
what are the approx. lengths of flagella? |
answer
30 to 40 nanometers |
question
Do most enterics have flagella? |
answer
yes except klebsiella and shigella |
question
what's the difference between bacterial strains and and species? |
answer
strains: derived from a single colony...there are thousands of strains within one species |
question
What is the name of the guide used to identify ID of enterics? |
answer
Enterotube Interpretation Guide |
question
What do we look for to indicate fecal contaminated water? |
answer
coliforms |
question
What is the presumptive test? |
answer
a series of dilutiions to assess if there are coiforms present in large to trace amounts of water. |
question
coliforms are an example of an ______ species |
answer
indicator |
question
What is the confirmed test? |
answer
uses EMB agar to determine if the results from the presumptive test actually came from coliforms |
question
What is the completed test when testing for fecal contamination? |
answer
a colony is picked from the confirmed test EMB plate and grown up again in another lactose broth with a Durham tube. it tests to see if it is positive for gas from lactose and gram negative rod |
question
How do we determine if E. coli and Salmonella are in meat? |
answer
selection through HE agar...selective for gram negative...high bile salts so there is high selection for salmonella and shigella |
question
how is HE agar differential? |
answer
differentiates between "lactose or sucrose fermenters" and "nonfermenters" |
question
what is a positive result in the HE agar assay? |
answer
if the colonies and the medium surrounding the colonies becomes pink-orange |
question
what is considered a negative reaction in the HE agar lactose fermentation assay? |
answer
if the colonies appear blue-green |
question
What is a positive reaction for the H2S production on HE plates? |
answer
black center of colony |
question
what is nitrogen fixation? |
answer
the reduction of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia or ammonium. |
question
what is the name of the bacteria genus that fixes nitrogen? |
answer
rhizobium |
question
what are some examples of the legume family? |
answer
clover, alfalfa, pea, soybeans |
question
what is the symbiotic relationship between nodules and nitrogen fixing bacteria? |
answer
the nitrogen fixing bacteria give the plant nitrogen, the plant gives the bacteria shelter |
question
what is nitrogenase? |
answer
the enzyme that turns N2 to NH4+ |
question
how do nitrogen fixing bacteria affect the soil? |
answer
make it more fertile because they release ammonia after the nearby plants die |
question
what type of cells are rhizobium cells? |
answer
gram negative rods...once the symbiotic relationship is established, they change shapes and turn into club-shaped bacteriod forms |
question
what is weird about rhizobium cells after they are in an established relationship with a plant? symbiotically? |
answer
they stain gram positive |
question
what is unique about cyanobacteria? |
answer
they are able to carry out photosynthesis and use nitrogen to create glucose |
question
can azobacter use photosynthesis? |
answer
no |
question
How does mannitol salt broth select nitrogen fixers? |
answer
the medium inhibits the growth of non-N2 fixers by denying these species of the nitrogen compounds they need to make amino acids and proteins |
question
Mannitol is used as a selective agent for Azobacter cells. How? |
answer
Azobacter cells can survive on mannitol as the only organic molecule available for carbon and energy. But many other nitrogen fixing species would need other nutrients |
question
what shape are azobacter cells? |
answer
cysts |
question
what is nitrification? |
answer
the process of converting NH4+ to NO2- and then to NO3 |
question
In nitrification, which species first carries out the first oxidation? |
answer
nitrosomas |
question
in nitrification, which species carries out the second oxidation? |
answer
nitrobacter |
question
are nitrosomas and nitrobacter photosynthetic? |
answer
noo, chemotrophic |
question
what is leaching? |
answer
the removal of nitrates from the soil by water |
question
what are examples of denitrifyers? |
answer
bacillus and pseudomonas |
question
what is a positive result for the test of denitrification? |
answer
bubble |
question
in the indole assay's Kovac's reagent, what are the roles of butanol and dimethylaminobenzaldehyde? |
answer
butanol- absorbes the indole, dimethyl amino: combines with reagent's aldehyde group to produce red color. |
question
Say you started with a mixed culture of E. coli and Enterobacter aerogenes. If you were going to choose one of the media described in this lab to favor the growth of Enterobacter aerogenous over E. coli, which medium would you choose? |
answer
methyl red indicator, clearly turned the E. aero yellow and the E.coli red ..this means that E. coli ferments more lactose than E. aerogenes |
question
Why is the urease assay so helpful for the identification of Proteus species, and why is this relevant to the Proteus species' ability to cause kidney infections? |
answer
production of ammonia fro urea damages kidneys |
question
How or why can two different isolates or pure culture produce two different brocades and yet be identified by the Enterotube system as being the same species ? |
answer
there are different strains within species "not genetically identical" |