Prokaryotic Organisms – Flashcards

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What are the 3 basic ways a prokaryotic organism is classified?
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1.)metabolism 2.)oxygen requirements 3.)movement
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What is a photoroph?
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Use light energy to extract carbon
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What is a photoautotroph?
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Obtain carbon from an inorganic compound like CO2
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What is a photoheterotroph?
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Obtain carbon from organic compound like glucose
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What is a chemotroph?
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Use chemical energy to extract carbon
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What is a chemoheterotroph?
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obtain carbon from organic compounds like glucose
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What is a lithoautotroph?
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Obtain carbon from inorganic compounds like CO2
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What are aerobes?
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Use oxygen as their final electron acceptor in metabolism
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What are anaerobes?
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Do not use oxygen as their final electron acceptor, often use sulfate, nitrate, carbonate or pyruvate. Some cannot survive in the presence of oxygen.
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What is ecophysiology?
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A preferred environment.
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Where do some microbes thrive?
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terrestrial, aquatic, on or within animals, extreme conditions
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Can all bacteria move the same way?
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No, only a small number of bacteria are unique in their movement.
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What are 3 subcategories of anaerobic chemotrophs?
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Anaerobic lithoautotroph, anaerobic chemoheterotrophs, and anaerobic phototrophs.
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What domain has some members of the anaerobic lithoautotroph? How?
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Domain archaea. Some can utilize hydrogen gas and carbon dioxide which makes methane which makes them METHANOGENS.
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What do anaerobic chemoheterotrophs use as their final electron acceptor?
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Get energy from glucose, final electron acceptor is anything other than oxygen.
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What is a fermentor? what are 5 fermentors?
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Uses pyruvate as the final electron acceptor.

1.)clostridium
2.)Streptococus
3.)Enterococcus
4.)Lactobacillus
5.)Proprionibacterium
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What are some characteristics of clostridium? Where are they found? What do they cause?
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Forms spores. Gram positive, rods. They are found in the soil and digestive tract. Can cause gas, gangrene, tetanus, botulism, and food poisioning.
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What are some characteristics of streptococcus? What is it found? What does it cause?
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Gram positive cocci. Found in our normal oral flora. Can cause streptococcal pharyngitis (strep) and pneumonia.
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What are some characteristics of Lactobacillus? Where is it found? What does it cause?
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Gram positive rod. Found in the mouth and vagina during child-bearing years. Causes acidic environment in vagina and are sometimes used in food protection.
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What are some characteristics of enterococcus? Where is it found? What does it cause?
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Gram positive cocci. Found in the intestinal tract of animals/humans. Causes the inhibition of the growth of other bacteria including some pathogens.
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What are some characteristics of proprionibacterium? Where is it found? What does it cause?
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Gram positive, rod. Found on human skin. Causes acne lesions.
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Could the planet maintain aerobic life without anaerobic phototrophs?
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NO.
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What are 2 subcategories of anaerobic phototrophs?
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Anoxygenic phototrophs and Oxygenic Phototrophs.
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What do anoxygenic phototrophs use instead of carbon dioxide/water/sun to make food?
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Hydrogen sulfide or organic compounds and sunlight.
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How to anoxygenic phototrophs vary?
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based on their bacteriochlorophylls they posses
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What do purple bacteria sulfur use?
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Hydrogen sulfide
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What do purple non-sulfur bacteria preferentially use?
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Multiple organic and inorganic substances such as Hydrogen instead of H20.
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What does Green sulfur use?
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Hydrogen sulfide.
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What does green non-sulfur bacteria use?
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Multiple organic compounds.
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What are oxygenic phototrophs?
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The cyanobacteria are the primary oxygen producers of the earth. Cyanobacteria are gram negative and have mult. shapes but usually cocci.
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Do cyanobacteria play a role in nitrogen fixation?
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Yes.
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Are aerobes the largest group?
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Yes.
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What are aerobic lithoautotrophs?
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They obtain energy by oxidizing reduced INORGANIC chemicals and require oxygen as their final acceptor. Usually archaea.
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What are sulfur-oxidizing bacteria? Where is it found?
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Found in sewage polluted waters and have been identified as being a major cause of bioleaching after strip mining activities.
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What are nitrifiers? What do they affect?
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Oxidize either ammonia or nitrite, they affect a fertilizer's effectiveness.
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What are hydrogen-oxidizing bacteria? where are they found?
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Found in hot springs and are thought to be among the first organisms of the earth.
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What are aerobic chemoheterotrophs?
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Either obligate or facultative aerobes.
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What are 4 obligate aerobes?
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1.)bacillus 2.)micrococcus 3.)mycobacterium 4.)pseudomonas
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What is bacillus? What is one disease it causes?
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A spore forming gram positive organism that are commonly found in the soil. B.Antracis = antrhax (wild/not weapons grade)
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What is micrococcus? Is it linked to human disease?
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A gram positive cocci that is common on dust and soil particles. Do not cause human disease.
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What is mycobacterium? What are most? What are diseases it causes?
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Acid fast positive, usually gram positive, branched rod that is widespread in nature.

Most are saprobes. harmless.

M. tuberculosis - tuberculosis
M. leprea - leprosy
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What is pseudomonas? What are they useful for? Where are they found? Do they cause disease? If so, what?
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Gram negative rods. Useful for bioremediation. Found in soil and water. Yes, P. aeruginosa.
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What are facultative aerobes?
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Aerobes that prefer oxygen in their environments but can survive without it.
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What are 3 subcategories of facultative aerobes?
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Corynebacterium, enterics, and staphylococcus.
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What are corynebacterium? What is the one species that causes diphtheria?
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Gram positive rods that live harmlessly in the throat. C.Diphtheriae.
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What are enterics?
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Gram negative rods that live in the intestinal tract that can be harmless or pathogenic.
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What is the harmless form of an enteric?
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Enterobacter and most E.Coli
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What is the pathogenic form of an enteric?
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Shigella, Salmonella, and some E.Coli
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What is the harmless strain of staphylococcus living on the skin?
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S. epidermidis.
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What is the pathogenic strain of staphylococcus living on the skin?
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S. aureus.
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What is a terrestial environment?
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Soil.
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What are 4 forms of bacteria that have a resting stage?
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1.)Endospore-formers.
2.)Cyst formers
3.)Microcyst formers
4.)Conidia formers.
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What is an endospore former?
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Clostridium and Bacillus.
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What is a cyst former? What do they play a big role in? What is a cyst?
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Azotobacter. Nitrogen Fixation. A resting cell that can resist drying and UV light but NOT heat.
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What are microcyst formers?
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Myxobacteria from slime molds in the vegetative state then form fruiting bodies when conditions turn for the worst.
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What is a microcyst?
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Dormant cells that can resist drying, heat and radiation and make up fruiting bodies.
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What are conidia formers? What important medicine do they form? What is a conidia?
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Streptomyces. Form the mycin antibiotics. A conidia is a cluster of spores that can be dispersed by air currents.
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Which bacteria form root nodules? They are the primary...
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Rhizobia. NITROGEN fixators.
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How do root nodules function with a plant?
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Form symbiotic relationships with legumes (beans)
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What 2 bacteria derive their nutrients from other aquatic organisms?
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Vibrio and Legionella.
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What is vibrio bacteria?
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Gram negative rod that obtains nutrients from a symbiotic relationship from the host.
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What does V. Cholerae cause in humans?
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Cholera.
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What is legionella?
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Gram negative rods that reside within protozoa.
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What does L. pneumophila cause in humans?
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can cause respiratory disease.
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Where was L. pneumophila first ioslated? Where is it found today?
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In an air conditioning system. Vegetable sprayers at the grocery store, unclean pools.
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What is a bacteria that lives on the skin? Can it cause a skin infection?
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Staphylococcus. Yes.
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What are the 7 bacteria that live in mucous membranes?
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1.)Streptococcus
2.)Clostridium
3.)Haemophilus
4.)Neisseria
5.)Teponema
6.)Borrelia
7.)Helicobacter
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Where is steptrococcus found?
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Respiratory tract/oral cavity & pharynx.
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Where is clostridium found?
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Intestinal tract/soil.
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Where is haemophilus found?
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Respiratory tract. Pink eye.
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Where is neisseria found?
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Oral cavity and other mucus membranes. Gingevitis.
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Where is treponema found?
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The body fluids and oral/genital tracts. Syphillus.
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Where is borrelia found?
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Body fluids and multiple mucus membranes. Lyme disease.
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Where is helicobacter found?
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Reside in stomach lining. ulcers in stomach.
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What are two obligate intracellular parasites?
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Ricketttsia and Chlamydia
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What is Rickettsia?
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Transmitted by insect vectors and causes rash/ Rocky Mountain Spotted fever.
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What is chlamydia?
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Transmitted from person to person particularly by body fluids. It's an STD.
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What are spirochetes?
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Gram negative spirillium move via axial filament.
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How does a spirochete move?
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Corkscrew movement.
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What is an axial filament?
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Sets of flagella found at the poles of bacteria located within the periplasm.
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What is an example of a spirochete?
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Treponema that causes syphillus and Borellia which causes lyme disease.
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