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Microbiology: Unit 1

front 1

Define microbe

back 1

Cellular entity that is not a component of a tissue or similar structure as that which comprises metazoans.

front 2

T/F: Microbes are generally only able to be seen with the aid of a microscope

back 2

True

front 3

T/F: Microbes are visible to the naked eye when they form aggregations such as a biofilm or a colony.

back 3

True

front 4

T/F: Microbes are found among the domains Eukarya, Bacteria, and Archaea.

back 4

True

front 5

T/F: Microbes include viruses which are not considered cells.

back 5

True

front 6

T/F: Microbes and/or microbial activities are involved in the decomposition of organic matter in the soil.

back 6

True

front 7

T/F: Microbes and/or microbial activities are involved in water treatment plants.

back 7

True

front 8

T/F: Microbes and/or microbial activities are involved in the production of vaccines and antibiotics.

back 8

True

front 9

T/F: Microbes and/or microbial activities are involved in many biotechnology applications.

back 9

True

front 10

You are observing a cell through a light microscope and note that it has no apparent nucleus. You conclude that it most likely...

back 10

is either a bacteria or archaea

front 11

T/F: Regarding Pasteur's experiments with the S-neck flask, there was air involved

back 11

True

front 12

T/F: Regarding Pasteur's experiments with the S-neck flask, there was a food source involved

back 12

True

front 13

T/F: Regarding Pasteur's experiments with the S-neck flask, all microorganisms were killed before the beginning of the experiment

back 13

True

front 14

T/F: Regarding Pasteur's experiments with the S-neck flask, any possibility of contamination was removed.

back 14

True

front 15

T/F: In order to establish that a certain bacterium causes disease, it is necessary to obtain a pure culture of the bacterium from an infected animal

back 15

True

front 16

T/F: In order to establish that a certain bacterium causes disease, it is necessary to inject a healthy animal with a pure culture of the suspected bacterium

back 16

True

front 17

T/F: In order to establish that a certain bacterium causes disease, it is necessary to show that the bacterium is not present in healthy animals

back 17

True

front 18

T/F: In order to establish that a certain bacterium causes disease, it is necessary to perform a Gram stain on the bacterial cells

back 18

False

front 19

T/F: In order to establish that a certain bacterium causes disease, it is necessary to show the same bacterium is isolated from infected animals

back 19

True

front 20

What are Chemolithotrophs?

back 20

Soil bacteria discovered by Winogradsky; capable of using inorganic molecules as energy sources.

front 21

T/F: Resolution can be improved by using a longer wavelength of light

back 21

False

front 22

T/F: Resolution can be improved by using a lens with high value of numerical aperture

back 22

True

front 23

T/F: Resolution can be improved by using immersion oil and the oil immersion objective lens

back 23

True

front 24

T/F: Resolution can be improved by improving contrast by use of a stain or other method

back 24

True

front 25

Which microscope has similar resolution to the light microscope, does not require staining of the sample, allows one to view cells in their living state, and takes advantage of differences in the refractive indexes of cell structures to provide contrast?

back 25

Phase-contrast microscope

front 26

Total magnification=

back 26

(Objective lens magnification) x (ocular lens magnification)

front 27

What is the purpose of the parabolic surface of the objective lens?

back 27

refracts light that then meets at a focal point

front 28

What enables lenses to magnify an image?

back 28

Refraction

front 29

What enables selective labeling of cellular structures with light emitting dyes?

back 29

Fluorescence microscopy

front 30

What will typically stain some cells one color and other cells another color?

back 30

A differential stain

front 31

In comparing light microscopy with electron microscopy, one would employ the:

(Q11)

back 31

no data

front 32

T/F: Electron microscopy has a resolution about 1000X greater than a light microscope

back 32

True

front 33

For electron microscopy, ________rather than lenses are used to focus the beam of electrons.

back 33

Magnets

front 34

T/F: Live specimens are not able to be observed by electron microscopy

back 34

True

front 35

T/F: For electron microscopy, scanning EM reveals the surface features of a specimen

back 35

True

front 36

What are prokaryotic cell membranes comprised of?

back 36

Phospholipids and proteins

front 37

Gram_______ bacteria have two phospholipid-containing membranes

back 37

negative

front 38

What are Hopanoids?

back 38

Small hydrophobic molecules that serve to reinforce the phospholipid bilayer

front 39

__________ are prokaryotes whose phospholipid fatty acid structure differs from otherprokaryotes

back 39

Mycobacteria and Archaea

front 40

List components of peptidoglycan

back 40

N-acetylglucosamine,

N-acetylmuramic acid,

amino acids,

peptide cross-links

front 41

Lipid inclusions contain_________.

back 41

poly-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) or poly-hydroxyalkanoate (PHA)

front 42

What do Magnetosomes enable cells to do?

back 42

orient themselves directionally, i.e., north/south

front 43

Gas vacuoles are a feature of ________.

back 43

aquatic bacteria

front 44

Carboxysomes are found in __________.

back 44

bacteria that utilize carbon dioxide

front 45

Fimbriae and Pili are generally used for__________.

back 45

attachment, not motility.

front 46

T/F: Specialized pili are used used for DNA transfer between bacterial cells

back 46

True

front 47

Counterclockwise flagellar movement results in________.

back 47

smooth forward motion

front 48

T/F: Flagellar motion in a bacterium occurs in a wave-like motion like a eukaryotic flagellum

back 48

False

front 49

T/F: When a bacterium is tumbling it is not moving in any particular direction and stops.

back 49

True

front 50

Stalk formation in certain bacteria results in____________.

back 50

immobilization of the cells in their environment.

front 51

Archaea have cell walls that are not made of peptidoglycan, but rather of a similar structure called___________.

back 51

pseudomurein

front 52

A____________ is a polysaccharide layer that is only loosely associated with the exterior of the cell

back 52

slime layer

front 53

T/F: The periplasmic space is an area that lies outside of the LPS layer of Gram-negative cells

back 53

False

front 54

_____________ follows DNA replication in bacteria and is where new cell wall synthesis occurs.

back 54

Septum formation

front 55

What are specific nutrients that a cell cannot make and must obtain from its environment?

(Q20)

back 55

no data

front 56

If you prepared a liquid (aqueous) growth media containing mineral salts, trace elements, no organic carbon source, and light you would be selecting for________.

back 56

Photoautotrophs

front 57

The formation of a mother cell, the production of dipicolinic acid, asymmetric septation are all part of which process?

back 57

endospore formation

front 58

T/F: A fed batch culture will grow indefinitely

back 58

False

front 59

T/F: The best method for determining viable cell numbers in a sample is to ____________.

back 59

dilute the sample and do the spread plate method.

front 60

T/F: Differential media allows one to visualize different biochemical properties among bacteria.

back 60

True

front 61

The____________ transports molecules into the cell then phosphorylates the molecule, thereby maintaining the gradient to allow more molecules to move inside

back 61

phosphotransferase system (PTS)

front 62

___________ are the prominent flora beneath icebergs in the arctic and antarctic.

back 62

Pyschrophilic bacteria

front 63

Exposure to temperatures above 40-45C will trigger the heat shock response in___________.

back 63

mesophilic bacteria

front 64

The fastest growth rate for a species occurs at temperatures where___________.

back 64

a cell's proteins work most efficiently

front 65

____________ possess features that allow their proteins and cell membranes to function at high temperature.

back 65

Thermophiles

front 66

T/F: Eukaryotic cells are generally as heat tolerant as bacteria

back 66

True

front 67

(Q29)

back 67

no data

front 68

List enzymes that help protect cells from damage caused by reactive oxygen species (superoxide radical, hydroxyl radical)

back 68

Catalase, SOD, and peroxidase enzymes

front 69

Concerning catalase, SOD, and peroxidase enzymes, __________ have only some, or none of these protective enzymes.

back 69

Anaerobic bacteria

front 70

Concerning catalase, SOD, and peroxidase enzymes, an __________ typically has all of these enzymes.

back 70

obligate aerobe

front 71

T/F: Antiseptics are of higher strength since they are used for cleaning of inanimate objects; disinfectants are used on living tissue such wound cleaning or surgical preparation.

back 71

False

front 72

Gases like ethylene oxide are effective in sterilizing_____________.

back 72

areas that are difficult to penetrate with liquid antimicrobials

front 73

T/F: Probiotics are antibiotics used to eliminate certain groups of bacteria from the gut.

back 73

False

front 74

Organisms adapted to grow at overwhelmingly high pressures are called___________.

back 74

barophiles

front 75

By themselves, heterorophs would deplete the world of__________ sources and starve to death.

back 75

organic carbon

front 76

During respiration, electrons (originating from cytoplasmic reductions) are______________.

back 76

passed through carriers of increasing reduction potential

front 77

Anaerobic respiration is the use of______________.

back 77

an alternative electron acceptor in respiration (i.e., anything other than oxygen)

front 78

Define nitrification.

back 78

the complete reduction of nitrate to N2 during anaerobic respiration

front 79

This atmospheric gas is produced from the reduction of an alternative terminal electron acceptor in microbial respiration.

back 79

N2

front 80

The proteins of the electron transport systems are usually_____________.

back 80

located within a membrane where they can produce a transmembrane ion gradient

front 81

Why is a large amount of energy is released when oxygen accepts electrons?

back 81

because oxygen is a strong electron acceptor/oxidizing agent

front 82

Define cofactors

back 82

Small molecules that associate with the protein

front 83

Many of the redox centers that comprise the electron transport system (ETS) are integral components of larger protein complexes, whereas others, such as_______, freely diffuse within the membrane as they ferry electrons between other ETS components.

back 83

quinones

front 84

During___________redox reactions happen in the cytoplasm and ATP is generated via substrate-level phosphorylation.

back 84

fermentation

front 85

What is the most likely explanation for the high numbers of sulfate reducers present in marine environments?

back 85

Sulfate is a very abundant anion in seawater, second only to chloride

front 86

Arrange the following items in the order in which they receive electrons from glycolysis and TCA oxidations and harness the energy to establish a transmembrane proton gradient.

back 86

1. NAD+

2. Oxidoreductase

3. Quinone

4. Terminal oxidase

5. Oxygen

front 87

The relationship between the reduction potential, E, and the change in free energy, ΔG is such that if E is __________, then ΔG is __________ and the reaction is __________.

back 87

positive; negative; favorable

front 88

For what process are the electrons from glycolytic reactions returned to the partially oxidized food source instead of being passed through an ETS system to a terminal electron acceptor.

back 88

fermentation

front 89

What processes contribute to the proton motive force during aerobic respiration?

back 89

TCA cycle, glycolysis, electron transport system

front 90

What determines which electron donor and electron acceptor a given microbe uses in its anaerobic ETS?

back 90

The available donors and acceptors will induce gene expression of their redox enzymes, thereby allowing their use.

front 91

The earliest life forms on our planet may have used which electron acceptor?

back 91

Fe3+

front 92

T/F: Autotrophs comprise only those types that can use light energy, i.e. photosynthesize

back 92

False

front 93

What are the types of autotroph?

back 93

photoautotrophs and chemoautotrophs

front 94

Though not all members of this kingdom fit into one of the following 3 groups, many can be categorized as being methanogens, halophiles, or thermophiles, including hyperthermophiles

back 94

Archaea

front 95

An attenuated strain of a pathogenic bacteria or virus provided to a person__________.

back 95

may prevent disease in the individual by later exposure too a more virulent form of the strain

front 96

Pasteur's work with the french wine industry proved what?

back 96

  • That microbes are responsible for the chemical processes that produce wine
  • Microbial growth and metabolism can occur in the absence of air
  • The formation of acetic acid during wine production was due to the presence of contaminating microbes

front 97

T/F: Pasteur's work with the french wine industry proved that microbes can cause disease

back 97

False

front 98

T/F: Viruses are considered cells

back 98

False

front 99

Though changes were made later, the__________was originally formed to contain all microorganisms

back 99

Kingdom Protista

front 100

The evolution of_________allowed for later evolution of cells with an aerobic metabolism

back 100

Cyanobacteria

front 101

The__________contains the peptidoglycan layer of gram-negative bacteria

back 101

periplasmic space

front 102

Crystization of membrane phospholipid fatty acids (like cyclopropane) would confer_____________.

back 102

more rigid straighter hydrocarbon chains

front 103

Polysome formation in bacteria is able to occur because_____________.

back 103

They lack a nuclear membrane

front 104

What serves to help maintain the shape of the cell?

back 104

Bacterial cytoskeleton element MreB

front 105

What yields a high quantity of polypeptide in a short time interval?

back 105

Polysome formation

front 106

What is duplicated in the initial stage of DNA replication?

back 106

Ori sequence

front 107

What is a loose, unorganized assemblage of polysaccharide-protein material secreted by a bacterium that surrounds the cell.

back 107

Slime layer

front 108

Who discovered lithotrophic bacteria?

back 108

Winogradsky and Beijerinck

front 109

Who performed experiments with the swan necked flask?

back 109

Louis Pasteur

front 110

What did Louis Pasteur use the swan necked flask to show?

back 110

Oxygen does not allow spontaneous generation

front 111

The most abundant molecule in the cell is___________.

back 111

water

front 112

A second, outer membrane is found in____________.

back 112

Gram-negative bacteria

front 113

Aspirin, like many pharmaceutical drugs, can access the cell because it is a weak acid. This occurs because_____________.

back 113

As a weak acid it can cross the membrane when in its uncharged form.

front 114

Bacteria carry out bidirectional replication of their single chromosome by using_____replisomes that each contain______DNA polymerase enzymes.

back 114

2;2

front 115

How many different cellular components are in Gram-negative bacterium?

back 115

4

front 116

What are metachromatic granules?

back 116

Energy storage granule

front 117

What are sulfur granules a product of?

back 117

phototrophic or lithotrophic bacteria

front 118

Which of the following specialized structures/inclusion would aquatic photoautotrophic bacteria likely possess?

back 118

Thylakoids, Carboxysomes, and Gas vacuoles

front 119

What are thylakoids?

back 119

Membrane-bound compartments inside chloroplasts and cyanobacteria. They are the site of the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.

front 120

The carboxysome is likely found in__________.

back 120

an autotroph

front 121

What is the H antigen?

back 121

The slender threadlike portion of the flagellum

front 122

Counterclockwise rotation of flagella/flagellum produces__________.

back 122

runs toward an attachment

front 123

What can produce a type of motility involving intermittant attachment?

back 123

fimbrae/pili

front 124

What can the Enter-Douderoff pathway, the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway, and the Pentose Phosphate shunt all do?

back 124

Oxidize glucose to different intermediates and generate NADH and/or NADPH

front 125

Are catabolic processes exothermic or endothermic?

back 125

Exothermic

front 126

What type of process leads to the formation of smaller mmolecules from larger, complex molecules.

back 126

Catabolic processes

front 127

Food sources for catabolism supply___________; the energy from these is ultimately used to form ATPs.

back 127

electrons

front 128

Glycolysis inititially requires energy input in the form of_________.

back 128

ATP hydrolysis

front 129

Glycolysis forms ATP via_____________.

back 129

substrate level phosphorylation

front 130

What does glycolysis yield?

back 130

ATP and NADH

front 131

What is an example of anabolism?

back 131

DNA replication

front 132

What is anabolism?

back 132

The synthesis of complex molecules in living organisms from simpler ones together with the storage of energy; constructive metabolism.

front 133

Lactic acid fermentation is so named because lactic acid is which of the following?

back 133

end product

front 134

During lactic acid fermentation, NADH reduces ________to________.

back 134

pyruvate;lactic acid

front 135

If a small molecule is found at greater concentration inside the cell than outside, it can be concluded that____________.

back 135

energy was required to produce the concentration gradient.

front 136

In addition to generating reducing power (i.e., NADPH) for biosynthesis, the pentose phosphate pathway also provides precursors for synthesis of which of the following?

back 136

nucleic acids, aromatic amino acids

front 137

If one molecule of glucose were fully catabolized via aerobic respiration to CO2 and H2O, the ATP yield would be roughly times______that obtained from fermentation.

back 137

20

front 138

Ethanolic fermentation results in what end product(s)?

back 138

alcohol and carbon dioxide

front 139

The breakdown of starch is a________process carried out by_________?

back 139

catabolic; bacteria

front 140

What is important for catabolism of sugars? respiration, fermentation, or both?

back 140

Both

front 141

What is the main electron carrier for both respiration and fermentation?

back 141

NADH

front 142

What is a major intermediate for both respiration and fermentation?

back 142

Pyruvate

front 143

A high ATP yield (most from oxidative phosphorylation) is a characteristic of what?

back 143

Respiration

front 144

Most carbon being released as CO2 is a characteristic of what?

back 144

Respiration

front 145

Electrons reducing an external electron acceptor (e.g., O2), is a characteristic of what?

back 145

Respiration

front 146

A low ATP yield (primarily from glycolysis) is a characteristic of what?

back 146

Fermentation

front 147

Electrons from catabolism ending up back on partially oxidized substrate is a characteristic of what?

back 147

Fermentation

front 148

Reactions that oxidize the organic materialhave a________H and a________∆S.

back 148

negative; positive

front 149

Why does the process of acquiring nutrients from a more dilute external environment require expenditure of energy by the cell?

back 149

Entropy is decreased.

front 150

Fermentation pathways have the __________ in common.

back 150

oxidation of NADH to NAD+

front 151

Bioremediation of certain pollutants (such as aromatic hydrocarbons) may be effectively accomplished via syntrophy, involving__________.

back 151

different species of microbes catalyzing sequential reactions.

front 152

Define Syntrophy

back 152

A relationship involving exchange of nutrients.

front 153

What pathway would be fully operational only in respiring bacteria?

back 153

TCA cycle

front 154

What are Mycoplasma?

back 154

Bacterial species that lack a cell wall.

front 155

What are mycolic acids?

back 155

Unusual cell wall components of mycobacteria species

front 156

What bacteria are unable to grow in the complete absence of oxygen?

back 156

Microaerophiles

front 157

The aggregation of cells, attachment to a surface, and formation of an extracellular polysaccharide miatrix are all part of which process?

back 157

biofilm formation

front 158

Define generation time

back 158

The length of time needed for a cell to divide.

front 159

Determining the nutritional requirements of a particular bacterial species is best determined by____________.

back 159

the length of time needed for the cell to divide

front 160

The reactions that extract energy from molecules like glucose are called____________.

back 160

catabolic reactions

front 161

____________refers to all of the metabolic reactions that build or assemble more complex molecules from simpler ones.

back 161

Anabolism