HEAL 4300 Microbiology Exam #1

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122 Terms

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microorganism (microbes):

- ubiquitous (found everywhere)

- integral role in energy and nutrient flow on earth

- produce CO2, NO, and CH3

- can evolve into larger organisms

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characteristics of prokaryotes

Bacteria = single celled, no true nucleus

Archaea = single celled, no true nucleus, distinct from bacteria

- 10x smaller than eukaryotes

- lack of organelles

- all are microorganisms

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characteristics of eukaryotes

- predominantly single celled

- have a nucleus

develop into highly complex, multicellular organisms

- larger in size

- a small minority compared to bacteria and archaea

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characteristics of viruses

- most abundant inhabitants of the oceans

- not independently living cellular organisms

- exist at the level of complexity somewhere between large molecules and cells

- composed of a small amount of hereditary material surrounded by a protein coat and sometimes a membrane

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characteristics of prions

- smaller and simpler than viruses

- no nucleic acids, only protein, act like infectious microorganisms

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sizes of microorganisms

eukaryote 10,000nm (10 micrometers)

bacterium/archaeon 1,000nm (1 micrometer)

viruses 100 nm

prions 10nm

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pathogens:

microbes that cause disease

infectious diseases are important causes of death worldwide

human actions can play a role in the emergence or reemergence of pathogenic microbes

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genetically modified organisms:

manipulates the genetics of microbes, plants, and animals for the purpose of creating new products and genetically modified organisms (GMOs_

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bioremediation:

uses microbes already present or introduced intentionally to restore stability or clean up toxic pollutants

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recombinant technology:

makes it possible to transfer genetic material from one organisms to another and deliberately alter DNA

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abiogenesis:

spontaneous generation, belief that invisible vital forces present in matter led to the creation of life

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biogenesis:

living organisms arise only from others of the same kind

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Louis Pasteur

- studies role of microbes in fermentation of beer

- invented pasteurization

- conduced the first studies linking human disease to infection

- swan-necked flask experimentation disproved abiogenesis

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Joseph Lister

used aseptic techniques in surgery, which greatly reduced the number of post-surgical infections

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Robert Hooke

- studies household objects, plants and trees

- described cellular structures and drew sketched of living cells

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Antonie van Leeuwenhoek

- constructed over 150 small microscopes that could magnify 300x

- manufactures simple microscopes to study fabrics

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Robert Koch

developed a series of logical steps that established whether an organisms is pathogenic and which disease it caused

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organism classification

the orderly arrangement organisms into a hierarchy

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taxonomy

the science of classifying living things

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nomenclature

the assignment of scientific names to the various taxonomic categories and to individual organisms

binomial system:

genus species (g. species)

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classification

the orderly arrangement of organisms into a hierarchy

domain

kingdom

phylum (division)

class

order

family

genus

species

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organic vs inorganic

organic - carbon based

inorganic - non-carbon based

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amino acids

- when combined, make proteins, the predominant organic molecules in cells

- about 20 different types

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structure of amino acids

primary: type, number, and order of amino acids

secondary: arises when various functional groups interact by forming hydrogen bonds

tertiary: created by additional bonds between functional groups

quaternary: when more than on polypeptide forms a large, multiunit protein

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carbohydrates

combinations of carbon and water

contribute to structural support and protection; serve at nutrient and energy stores

-ose

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types of carbohydrates

monosaccharides

disaccharides

polysaccharides (cellulose, agar, chitin, peptidoglycan, glycocalyx)

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lipids

- important storage

- triglycerides: glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids (saturated or unsaturated)

- yield twice as much energy per gram as other storage molecules

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types of lipids

steroids: complex ringed compounds found in cell membranes and as animal hormones cholesterol: reinforced the cell membrane in animal cells and cell-wall-deficient bacteria

wax:

- ester formed between a long-chain alcohol and a saturated fatty acid

- found in the cell wall of bacteria that causes TB/leprosy, contributing to disease-causing potential

- natural waterproofing

phospholipids

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structure of phospholipids

(charged/polar) hydrophilic head - phosphate with functional alcohol

(nonpolar) hydrophobic tail - fatty acid

plasma membrane organization

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nucleotides

building blocks of DNA and RNA

purines: adenine and guanine

pyrimidines: cytosine, thymine, and uracil

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types of nucelotides

DNA: contains genetic coding material for each organism's heredity

RNA: responsible for carrying out DNA's instructions and translating the DNA program into proteins that can perform life functions

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types of RNA

mRNA: copy of a gene that provides the information for the order and type of amino acids in a protein

tRNA: carrier that delivers the correct amino acids for assembly

rRNA: major component of ribosomes (16S rRNA in small subunit, 23S and 5S rRNA in large)

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ribosomes

site of protein/RNA synthesis

bacteria and archaea ribosome = 70S (50s + 30s)

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inoculating:

introducing a small sample (inoculum) into media to culture microbes

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incubation:

a controlled environment to encourage the growth of microbes to a macroscopic level

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isolation:

based on the concept that if cells are separated on a nutrient surface, they will produce distinct colonies

ex. streak plate method

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inspection:

assessing appearance (shape/size), cellular metabolism, nutrient requirements, products/enzymes, genetic/immunologic characteristics

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identification:

using appearance (shape/size), cellular metabolism, nutrient requirements, products/enzymes, genetic/immunologic characteristics to identify culture growths

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three physical forms of lab media

liquid

semisolid

solid

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what is agar and why is it useful?

solid @ room temp, cam liquify at 100F, flexible/moldable

not digestible nutrient for most microorganisms

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colony:

a macroscopic cluster of cells appearing on a solid medium arising from the multiplication of a single cell

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types of cultures (physical, chemical, functional)

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pure culture:

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mixed culture:

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contaminated culture:

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general purpose media:

grow as broad spectrum of microbes as possible

generally complex

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enriched media:

contains complex organic substances (blood, serum, hemoglobin, special growth factors) or the growth of hard to grow (fastidious) microbes

used in kab to encourage growth of pathogens

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defined/synthetic media:

precisely chemically defined

contain in/organic compounds

molecular content specified by means of an exact chemical formula

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complex media:

one or more components are not chemically defined

contains extract of animals, plants, or yeasts (blood, serum, meat extract/infusions, milk, yeast extract soybean digests, and peptone)

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selective media:

contains one or more agents that inhibit the growth of certain microbes

used to isolate a specific type of microbes from a sample containing dozens

speed up isolation by suppressing unwanted ones for the growth of desired ones

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differential media:

allow multiple types of organisms to grow by display visible differences in how they grow

variations in size/color/bubbles come from chemical in the media with which microbes react

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microscope characteristics

magnification: real (formed by objective) and virtual image (projected through microscope)

resolution: capacity of an optical system to distinguish two adjacent objects or points from one another

contrast: degree of bending the light undergoes as it passes from one medium to another (refractive index)

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bright field:

forms its image when light is transmitted through the specimen

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dark field:

brightly illuminated specimens surrounded by dark field; used for live and unstained specimens

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phase contrast:

transforms subtle changes in light waves passing through the specimen into differences in light intensity, best for observing intracellular structures

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fluorescence:

modified compound microscope furnished with UV radiation source that causes it to give off light forming its own image against a black background (infections and pinpointing particular cellular structures)

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types of staining

any procedure that applies colored chemicals to specimens

dyes

simple

differential

positive stain" dye sticks to specimen to give it color

negative: does not stick to specimen but settles on outer boundary forming silhouette

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dyes for staining

basic dyes (cationic) have a + charge

acidic dyes (anionic) have a - charge

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simple staining:

only require a single dye and is uncomplicated

cause all cells to appear more/less the same color regardless of type = only reveal shape, size, and arrangement

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differential stains

use 2 different colored dyes (primary + counterstain) to distinguish cell types/pats

requires additional chemical reagents to produce desired reaction

gram

acid-fast

endospores

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gram staining (differential):

emphasizes differences in structure of cell wall and how it reacts to series of reagents applied to cells --> diagnose infection and guide drug tx

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gram positive bacteria

bacteria that have a thick peptidoglycan cell wall, and no outer membrane.

They stain very darkly (purple) in Gram stain.

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gram negative bacteria

bacteria that have complex cell walls with less peptidoglycan but with lipopolysaccharides (endotoxin)

more toxin and harder to kill

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staining procedure order

crystal violet: added to cell in a smear, stains them all purple

iodine: stabilizer that causes dye to firmly attach to thicker gram + walls

alcohol: dissolves lipids in outer membrane and removes dye from gram - cells

safranin (red): dye counterstains the gram - bacteria after alcohol removes the violet

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acid-fast staining (differential):

differentiates acid-fast (pink) from non acid-fast (blue) bacteria

used for bacteria, fungi, and protozoa

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endospore staining (differential):

forced by heat into resistant bodies called endospores

distinguishes between endospores and vegetative cells

(gram positive, spore forming members of bacillus and clostridium)

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shapes of bacteria

cocci - spherical (1um)

bacillus - rods (2um x 1 um)

spirochete - spiral

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types of appendages

flagella

fimbriae

pili

glycocalyx

s-layer

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flagella

primary function is motility

external

internal - spirochete

structure: filament, hook (sheath), basal body

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flagellar chemotaxis

+ : movement towards a favorable chemical stimulus (nutrient)

- : movement away from a repellant

run: rotation of flagellum counterclockwise, resulting in a smooth linear direction

tumble: reversal of direction of flagellum (clockwise), causing stop and changing course

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fimbriae

small fibers off the surface allowing tight adhesion between cells allowing colonization and infection of host cell

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pili

used in conjugation between bacterial cell to transfer DNA

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glycocalyx

:coating of repeated polysaccharide/glycoprotein units

slime layer: loose, protects against water and nutrient loss

capsule: tightly bound sticky character to colonies on agar protecting against phagocytosis

biofilms: colonies of bacteria conjugated together on a surface

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s-layer

single layers of thousands of copies of a single protein linked together

only produced when bacteria are in a hostile environment

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cell envelopes

cytoplasmic membrane

cell wall (peptidoglycan)

outer membrane

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endospores

forms slowly in response to nutrient depletion --> produced a dormant cell that can survive until nutrients and growth can resume

resistant to many environmental conditions (heat, UV, radiations, disinfectants)

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cytoskeleton

protein filaments that form functional filaments that extend to inner dimensions of the cell

- gives structure and maintains shape

- moves intracellular material

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nucleoid

location of bacterial DNA

supercoiling and nucleoid proteins aid in folding and structure

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essential nutrients

: any substance that must be provided to an organism

macronutrients: required in large quantities and play principal roles in cell structure and metabolism

micronutrients: present in smaller amounts and are involved in enzyme function/maintenance of a protein

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organic nutrients

contain C and H, usually products of living things

can be molecules (methane)) or polymers (carb, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids)

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inorganic nutrients

an atom or simple molecule that contains a combination of atoms other than C and H

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cytosol makeup

70% water

proteins

organic compounds

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autotrophs

organisms that are able to make their own food

energy: sunlight, in/organic molecules

carbon source: CO2

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heterotrophs

organisms that cannot make their own food

energy: sunlight, metabolism, parasites

carbon source: organic

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parasites

derive their nutrients from a living host (cells or tissues)

range from viruses - helminths

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passive diffusion

movement of substances across a semipermeable membrane with the concentration gradient; this process does not require energy

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facilitative diffusion

solute combines with a transporter protein in the membrane

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osmosis

diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane

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active transport

energy-requiring process that moves material across a cell membrane against a concentration difference

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endocytosis

: cell encloses a substance in its membrane and engulfs it

phagocytosis: accomplished by amoebas/WBCs, ingests whole cells or large matter in a vacuole

pinocytosis: ingestion of liquids such as oils or molecules in solution in a vesicle

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temperature ranges for bacterial growth

psychrophiles: -20-15

psychrotolerant: 5-35

mesophile: 10-50

thermophile: 45-80

extreme thermophile: 65-135

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pH ranges for bacteria growth

acidophiles: < 7

alkalinophiles: > 7

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halophiles

grow best in salty conditions

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barophiles

grows best in high pressure environments

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presence of O2 for bacteria growth

aerobes: requires O2 for metabolism

microaerophiles: require O2 at a lower concentration than atmosphere

facultative aerobes: can live with/out O2

anaerobes: does not require O2 for metabolism, die in its presence

aerotolerant anaerobes: does not require O2 for metabolism, can survive in its presence

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bacterial fission

A special type of asexual reproduction performed by bacteria

parent cell enlarges and splits into two cells

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generation time/doubling time:

time required for a compete fission cycle, from a parent cell to two daughter cells

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generation:

increases the population by a factor of two

Nt = (N)2^n

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growth curve

: predictable growth of bacteria

lag: flat period of growth while adjusting

exponential: growth increases geometrically and will continue is conditions are optimal

stationary: cell birth and death rates are equal d/t depleted nutrients

death: cells begin to die at an exponential rate d/t buildup of waste depending on conditions

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endergonic reactions

require the input of energy (ATP)