Microbiology 204; Waldmann: Exam 2 – Flashcards
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Unlock answers| biological species | 
| a group of inter-breeding organisms | 
| bacterial strain | 
| a group of genetically-identical bacteria | 
| bacterial species | 
| a group of very similar strains that differ significantly from other strains; a group of bacteria that share 70% or more biochemical similarity | 
| genus | 
| a group of closely-related species (taxonomy term) | 
| kingdom | 
| the highest classification rank used in traditional classification (up to the mid-70s); a group of closely-related phyla | 
| domain | 
| the highest classification rank used in modern taxonomy since the mid-70s; a group of closely-related phyla | 
| spirilla | 
| coiled bacteria | 
| spirochetes | 
| unusual spiral-shaped bacteria that have a sheath surrounding the cell | 
| cocci | 
| spherical bacterial | 
| vibrio | 
| comma-shaped bacteria | 
| bacilli | 
| rod-shaped bacteria | 
| streptobacilli | 
| rod-shaped bacteria in chains | 
| streptococci | 
| spherical bacteria in chains 
 [image] | 
| staphylococci | 
| spherical bacteria in clusters | 
| diplococci | 
| spherical bacteria in pairs | 
| coccobacilli | 
| very short rods or slightly elongated round bacteria | 
| genome | 
| all of the genetic material in a virus, cell, or organism | 
| lipopolysaccharides | 
| molecules found in the outer membrane of Gr- bacteria; can be toxic to humans | 
| cell membrane (aka plasma membrane) | 
| a thin layer surrounding the cytoplasm in cells | 
| cell wall | 
| a layer immediately outside the cell membrane function: supports the cell membrane (prevents cell lysis); determines the Gr rxn of the cell; anchors teichoid acids in Gr+ bacteria; many layers thick in Gr+ bacteria but only 1-3 layers thick in Gr- cells | 
| outer membrane | 
| a [typically ruffled] layer outside the cell membrane and the cell wall; found only on prokaryotes; found mainly on Gr- bacteria function: holds secreted materials in the periplasm; protects cell by preventing the penetration of some chemicals (i.e. antibiotics) | 
| periplasm or periplasmic space | 
| the space between the outer membrane and the cell membrane; found only on prokaryotes; found mainly on Gr- bacteria function: contains enzymes & other material that protect & nourish the cell by breaking down entering compounds | 
| glycocalyx | 
| a layer coating the cell (found outside all other layers) function: attachment, protection against dehydration & phagocytes; can create a biofilm | 
| slime layer | 
| thin & flexible glycocalyx | 
| capsule | 
| thick & rigid glycocalyx | 
| biofilm | 
| a community of microbes attached to a surface; can be caused by glycocalyx or by pilus | 
| pilus | 
| a thin, relatively short, hair-like projection from a prokaryotic cell; can create a biofilm | 
| inclusion body | 
| granules (larger than ribosomes) visible in prokaryotic cells function: store excess nutrients or energy | 
| plasmid | 
| a small accessory DNA molecule in P&E cells; looks like a chromosome, only smaller; rare & linear in eukaryotic cells; common & looped in prokaryotic cells | 
| lysozyme | 
| an enzyme made by many organisms to break bonds in peptidoglycan | 
| penicillin | 
| a compound produced by fungi in the genus Penicillium to prevent the formation of peptide cross-bridges in peptidoglycan | 
| peptidoglycan | 
| the compound used by bacteria to make cell walls | 
| endospore | 
| a structure that stores a copy of the bacterial chromosome during periods of harsh conditions; formed by some Gr+ bacteria | 
| vegetative cell | 
| an actively-growing plant or bacterial cell | 
| germination | 
| the first of two stages of the process of forming a vegetative cell from an endospore | 
| sporogenesis (aka sporulation) | 
| the process in which a vegetative cell forms an endospore | 
| binary fission | 
| a process of splitting in two; in micro, it is the process in which a prokaryotic cell splits to form two daughter cells | 
| doubling time (aka generation time) | 
| the time it takes for a prokaryotic cell to complete the cycle of cell reproduction | 
| lag phase | 
| the first phase in the plot of the growth of a culture | 
| lag phase | 
| the phase in the plot of the growth of a culture when bacteria are put in a new culture and they do not grow immediately | 
| log growth phase | 
| the second phase in most plots of culture growth; cells are growing rapidly and constantly in this phase | 
| stationary phase | 
| the third phase in most plots of culture growth; the phase in which cell number does not change because cell divisions are balanced by cell deaths | 
| log death phase | 
| the fourth and last phase in culture growth plots; the decline phase; the phase in which cells die logarithmically | 
| log growth phase | 
| the phase in plots of culture growth in which cell number increases logarithmically as doubling time remains constant | 
| log growth phase | 
| the phase in plots of culture growth which ends when nutrients become scarce or when waste products become concentrated and inhibit growth | 
| log death phase | 
| the phase in plots of culture growth which occurs when nutrients are extremely scarce and/or waste products are very concentrated | 
| late log growth, when nutrients are running out; process should be completed by log death phase | 
| the phase of culture growth in which cells that can make endospores would begin sporogenesis | 
| late log growth | 
| the phase of culture growth in which cells that can make antibiotics begin to make them | 
| stationary phase | 
| the phase of culture growth in which antibiotic production is normally most robust | 
| log growth phase | 
| the phase of culture growth in which symptoms arise after a pathogen has entered a host; symptoms occur because the bacteria are releasing waste products that are toxic to the host or because the growing cells damage host tissue | 
| thermophile | 
| an organism or species whose optimal growth rate is at elevated temperatures (between 45 and 70ºC) | 
| mesophile | 
| an organism or species whose optimal growth rate is at moderate temperatures (between 15 and 45ºC) | 
| psychrophile | 
| an organism or species whose optimal growth rate is at low temperatures (below 15ºC) | 
| strict aerobe (aka obligate aerobe) | 
| an organism that must have oxygen in order to survive and reproduce | 
| strict anaerobe (aka obligate anaerobe) | 
| an organism that dies when exposed to oxygen: it survives and reproduces in environments lacking oxygen | 
| facultative | 
| an organism that grows well with or without oxygen | 
| anaerobe | 
| an organism that does not use oxygen (and prefers environments with no or low oxygen) | 
| microaerophile | 
| an organism that grows fastest in an environment with a low level of oxygen | 
| aerotolerant | 
| an anaerobe that is not harmed by oxygen | 
| capnophile | 
| an organism that requires comparatively high CO2 and (often) comparatively low O2 | 
| neutrophile | 
| an organism that grows fastest in an environment that has a pH near 7 | 
| acidophile | 
| an organism that grows fastest in an environment that has a pH below 7 | 
| basophile | 
| an organism that grows fastest in an environment that has a pH above 7 | 
| chemical reaction | 
| a process in which some compounds (reactants or substrates) are converted to new compounds (products) | 
| chemical reaction | 
| a process in which chemical bonds change | 
| metabolism | 
| the set of chemical & physical processes involved in the maintenance of life | 
| anabolism | 
| the energy-consuming process of incorporating nutrients into protoplasm through biosynthesis | 
| catabolism | 
| the chemical breakdown of complex compounds into simpler units to be used in cell metabolism; | 
| catabolism | 
| reactions in which molecules are broken down, releasing energy & subunits | 
| metabolic pathway | 
| a series of cellular reactions in which a product of one reaction is a reactant in the next reaction | 
| catalyst | 
| something that speeds up the rate of a reaction but is not permanently changed by the reaction; most are enzymes; a few are ribozymes | 
| substrate | 
| a reactant in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction | 
| ribozyme | 
| a biological catalyst composed primarily of RNA | 
| enzyme | 
| a biological catalyst composed primarily of protein | 
| cofactor | 
| any nonprotein component (helper) of an enzyme | 
| coenzyme | 
| an organic compound that works with an enzyme (often a vitamin) | 
| reduction | 
| the addition of electrons | 
| oxidation | 
| the removal of electrons | 
| NAD+ and FAD | 
| the electron carriers most commonly used in catabolic reactions | 
| fermentation | 
| the partial oxidation of a nutrient using internal, organic compounds as the final electron acceptor | 
| organic compounds | 
| carbon-based compounds that contain C-C and/or C-H bonds | 
| partial oxidation | 
| not all of the electrons that can be removed from the nutrient are removed (all the energy is not harvested) | 
| aerobic respiration | 
| the complete oxidation of a nutrient using O2 | 
| CO2 (carbon dioxide) | 
| the completely oxidized form of carbon | 
| anaerobic respiration | 
| the complete oxidation of a nutrient using an external final electron other than O2 | 
| phosphorylation | 
| the bonding (adding) of a phosphate group to a molecule | 
| common products of fermentative reactions | 
| 
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| cytochromes | 
| electron carriers in the electron transport system | 
| cytochrome oxidase | 
| the electron carrier that passes the electrons to O2 | 
| Proton Motive Force (PMF) | 
| the energy of the transmembrane proton gradient (an electrochemical gradient similar to a battery) | 
| chemiosmosis | 
| a process in which protons are allowed to flow down an electrochemical gradient and the energy released as they flow down the gradient is used to drive an energy-requiring process, such as the phosphorylation of ADP to form ATP | 
| beta oxidation | 
| a metabolic pathway that oxidizes fatty acids, producing NADH & acetyl-CoA | 
| phototroph | 
| an organism that gets energy from light | 
| chemotroph | 
| an organism that gets energy from chemicals | 
| heterotroph | 
| an organism that gets carbon from organic sources, i.e., carbon-based compounds produced by other living organisms | 
| autotroph | 
| an organism that gets carbon from inorganic sources, typically CO2 | 
