Micro: Flora Flashcards

(96 cards)

1
Q

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote: Chromosome

A

Prokaryote: single circular
Eukaryote: multiple chromosomes

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2
Q

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote: Nucleus

A

Prokaryote: no nucleus
Eukaryote: Nucleus

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3
Q

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote: Membrane bound organelles

A

Prokaryote: no membrane bound organelles
Eukaryote: membrane bound organelles

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4
Q

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote: cell wall

A

Prokaryote: PPG cell wall
Eukaryote: cell walls in plant but no ppg

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5
Q

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote: Ribosomes

A

Prokaryote: 70S
Eukaryote: 80S

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6
Q

Normal Flora are what?

A

Microorganisms that are normally present in a specific site

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7
Q

Are normal flora harmful?

A

Usually harmless, even beneficial

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8
Q

4 main functions of normal flora

A
  1. Help block pathogenic invaders
  2. Production of antimicrobial substances
  3. Aid in vitamin absorption
  4. Stimulates development of the immune system
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9
Q

How is the pH of the urogenital tract?

A

Low pH

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10
Q

Urogenital tract is maintained by ___________

A

Lactobacillus

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11
Q

What flora/bacteria are present in the eye?

A

Staphylococcus epidermidis (+ cocci)
Staphylococcus aureus (+ cocci)
Strep Pneumo (+ cocci)
Corynebacterium species (+ rods)

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12
Q

Tears contain the antimicrobial enzyme ____________ which help limit what?

A

Lysozyme

Help limit the bacterial population of the conjunctiva

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13
Q

How does bacteria number change along the alimentary canal in the GI tract?

A

Increasing number along the alimentary canal

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14
Q

Transient flora of skin help keep it _______ and _______ pH

A

Dry
Acidic pH

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15
Q

Resident flora of the skin

A

Cause regeneration
Staph epi
Coagulase
Anaerobes

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16
Q

Bacteria species that inhabit the mouth and nose

A

Coryne (+ rods)
Strep viridans
Strep mutants

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17
Q

In what situations can normal flora produce disease?

A

If displaced from normal site
If potential pathogen gains competitive advantage
Immuno-compromised individuals

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18
Q

Normal flora, if in their normal location are often _________, however when overgrown or removed from their normal location can result in __________

A

Helpful
Disease

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19
Q

The plasma membrane of the bacterial cell functions in what way?

A

Controls what enters and leaves the cell

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20
Q

Cell wall (bacterial cell) has what function?

A

Provides shape to the cell

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21
Q

Glycocalyx is the external surface of a plasma membrane that is important for _________________

A

cell-to-cell communication

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22
Q

Why can the glycocalyx aid in identification?

A

Because it varies from species to species

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23
Q

Flagella aid in _____________

A

Movement

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24
Q

Flagella are highly _______

A

Antigenic (produce an immune response)

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25
Pili (aka fimbriae) aid in ____________ and ___________
Attachment and conjugation
26
5 stages of bacterial growth
1. Binary fission 2. Lag phase 3. Log phase 4. Stationary phase 5. Death phase
27
Do temperature and pH contribute to growth of bacteria?
Yes
28
Heterotrophs require ________ for growth
Organic carbon
29
Do autotrophs require organic carbon for growth? Why or why not?
No, because they reduce carbon dioxide
30
What type of organism requires a large number of growth factors or very specific ones?
Fastidious organism
31
Obligate aerobes must have __________ and only get energy from ______________ respiration
Oxygen Aerobic respiration
32
Facultative aerobes can convert ____________ when there is no oxygen
Fermentation
33
Microaerophilic aerobes survive with a small amount of ___________
Oxygen
34
True anaerobes get energy from ___________
Fermentation
35
Bacterial genome consists of:
Single chromosome Plasmid Transposons
36
The single chromosome in the bacterial genome contains _________ genes
Essential
37
Plasmid contains ____________ genes
Nonessential
38
Transposons are ________ DNA sequences
Mobile
39
What is a bacteriophage?
Virus that replicates inside a bacterial cell
40
Two types of bacteriophages
virulent and temperate
41
Virulent bacteriophage will ______ the bacteria
Lyse
42
Virulent bacteriophage produces hundreds of ___________
Progeny
43
What are the two scenarios in which a temperate bacteriophage can impact a cell?
A - lyses cell, no progeny, cell dies B - no progeny, no cell lysis, phage incorporated into the bacteria
44
What happens when the temperate phage is activated from within the bacterial genome?
Phage becomes virulent Bacteria ultimately die and phages will be released
45
3 mechanisms of bacterial gene transfer
Conjugation Transduction Transformation
46
Conjugation is _______ to ______ transfer
Cell to cell
47
Conjugation mechanism
Via donor cells sex pili and formation of cytoplasmic bridge
48
Two forms of transduction
generalized and specialized
49
Generalized transduction produces a ____________ phage
Bacterial-DNA-only
50
Specialized transduction produces a new phage that has what DNA?
Both phage and bacterial DNA
51
In specialized transduction, when this DNA is transferred to another host, it is all incorporated into the genome creating a ____________
Prophage
52
Transformation is the transfer of genes by ______ DNA
Naked
53
What is the process of transformation
DNA crosses membrane and one strand is destroyed, remaining single strand finds a spot and cuts and pastes itself into the genome
54
Transformation is useful in introducing _________ genes
Cloned
55
DNA segments with the ability to move from place to place on the chromosome
Transposons
56
Transposons are responsible for much of the spread of ______________
Antibiotic resistance
57
Staining characteristics that help identify microbes
Gram reaction Acid fast Fungal
58
Gram + have a _________ cell wall
thick peptidoglycan
59
How do gram (+) bacteria stain?
*DEEP PURPLE* - crystal violet stain adheres to the thick peptidoglycan layer
60
Gram - bacteria have a ________ cell wall
Thin PPG
61
How do gram (-) bacteria stain?
*PINK* - crystal violet washes off, safranin binds to cell wall
62
Definitive microbial diagnosis involves ____________
Culturing the organism
63
Enriched media promotes ____________ growth
Non-selective
64
Enriched media is good for what organism?
Fastidious organisms
65
Enriched media examples
blood agar and chocolate agar
66
Growth conditions of enriched media
Mimic growth conditions by controlling O2 and CO2
67
Examples of selective media
MacConkey's agar Hektoen Enteric agar Thayer Martin
68
What is the most common selective media?
MacConkey agar
69
What does MacConkey agar select for?
gram negative rods
70
Disk diffusion method
An agar-diffusion test to determine microbial susceptibility to chemotherapeutic agents.
71
Minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)
A laboratory measure of the lowest concentration of a drug needed to kill a certain standardized amount of bacteria.
72
4 single enzyme tests
catalase, coagulase, oxidase and urease
73
Catalase test is used to differentiate between what?
Staph vs. Strep
74
The oxidase test is used to differentiate what bacteria?
Gram (-)
75
Urease test differentiates ___________________
Enterobacteriaceae
76
Coagulase Test
Separates Staph aureus from other staph spp.
77
Direct hybridization uses a ________
Probe
78
PCR benefits
Fast Quick Allows amplification millions of times
79
PCR disadvantages
Cross-contamination can lead to false + Expensive
80
Bacterial Pathogenesis 5 steps
1. Entry into host 2. Adhesion to host cells 3. Propagation 4. Damage to host cells via toxin or inflammatory response 5. Evasion of host defenses
81
An isolated pathogen from a sick patient should create the same disease in a susceptible patient, if it is truly the etiologic agent. What postulate is this?
Koch's postulates
82
Person to person spread of an infectious disease
Communicable disease
83
Non-communicable infectious disease is?
Not spread by person to person contact
84
What is a highly communicable disease under everyday circumstances?
Contagious disease
85
An epidemic occurs when what occurs?
Unusually high disease frequency
86
A pandemic occurs when what occurs?
The incidence of disease is unusually high for population or world
87
How does transmissibility contribute to virulence?
How easy the pathogen can be transferred
88
How does adherence contribute to virulence?
How well does the pathogen adhere
89
How does invasion enzymes and invasins contribute to virulence?
Allow the pathogen to get in
90
Exotoxin is very __________
Poisonous
91
Strongest known exotoxin
Botulinum toxin
92
Are exotoxins broken down by heat?
Yes
93
Exotoxin is carried on __________ or ____________
Plasmids or bacteriophages
94
Endotoxin is heat _______
stable
95
Endotoxin causes a variety of systemic effects, including ______.
Fever Shock Thrombosis
96
Spore structure
1. Exosporium: outer layer (protein) 2. Spore coat: PPG 3. Cortex: PPG 4. Wall: PPG 5. Core: DNA