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bacteria, archaea, eukarya
distinguished by 16S rRNA sequences as described by Woese |
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stromatolites of cyanobacteria date to more than 3.5 billion years ago; these photosynthetic bacteria produced the oxygen needed for the evolution of aerobic microbes |
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aceulluar infectious agents |
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viruses, viroids, virusoids, and prions |
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proposed by Pasteur, proved by Koch |
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first vaccination in Western medicine (against smallpox) |
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disproved spontaneous generation; pasteurization |
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proved germ theory of disease by use of four postulates |
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first to sterilize surgical instruments |
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discovered first antibiotic (penicillin) |
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a polymer of monosaccharides |
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comprises the main component of the lipid-lipid bilayer of all cellular membranes; integral proteins also play important functions in transport, structure, and signaling |
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twenty common ones in proteins |
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hold together amino acids into proteins |
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enzymes that catalyze biochemical reactions in cells |
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ATP, the main reservoir for chemical energy in all cells |
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DNA and RNA, polymers of nucleotides |
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small circular DNAs of bactera and fungi; replicate independently of chromomal DNA |
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contains the condensed bacterial chromosome (circular DNA) |
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70S in bacteria comprised of 50S and 30S subunits, 80S comprised of 60S and 40S subunits in eukaryotes |
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thick coated particle that forms inside some bacteria containing nucleoid; it is stable to radiation, chemicals, drying |
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meter=unit of length measurement |
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compound light microscope |
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ocular lens 10X objective lenses 4X, 10X 40X and 100X bright field and darkfield techniques |
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phase contrast microscopy |
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yields detailed images of living cells based upon differences in the refractive indexes of their components |
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achieves best magnification because oil has the ame refractive inde as glass and it is the most powerful lens |
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fluorochromes absorb light and reemit it |
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fluorochromes attached to antibodies bind to protein antigens and cause them to light up |
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uses beam of electrons focused by magnets two types |
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look at contents of cells |
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look at the surface of cells |
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one stain colors all cells the same |
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color different cells differently |
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crystal violet stains G+ purple and G- pink |
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carbol fuschin stains mycobacteria hot pink and methylene blue stains other bacteria blue |
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bacterial cell wall composition |
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peptidoglycan; alternating copolymers of NAG and NAM are cross-linked together into a three dimensional matrix |
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cross-links peptidoglycan; sensitive to penicillin |
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long motility structures (bacterial flagella are much smaller and simpler than eukaryotic flagella; they move powered by ATP, but the mechanism are different) eukaryotic cilia are identical in cross section to eukaryotic flagella |
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motility structures in spirochetes (G-) |
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contains DNA organized into pairs of chromosomes; surrounded by nuclear envelope which has pores for transport between the nucleus and the cytoplasm |
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site of ribosomal RNA synthesis and assembly of ribosomal subunits |
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mitochondria and chloroplasts |
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produce ATP both are belived to have evolved from bacteria (endosymbiont theory) both have inner membranes that are important in ATP production (cristae in mitochondira and thylakoids in chloroplasts) |
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rough has ribosomes and is the site of some protein synthesis; smooth has no ribosomes, but it functions in phospholipid synthesis |
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functions in secretion by exocytosis |
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contains lytic enzymes (proteases, nucleases, lipases, etc and low pH) cellular "stomach" |
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brings material into cells in endocytic vesicles; these can fuse with lysosomes |
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membrane-bound structure in eukaryotic cell |
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small har like structures on the surface of bacterial cells; fimbrae functions in attachment; the F pilus functions in DNA transfer from a donor cell to a recipient cell in bacterial conjugation |
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slimy layer for attachment in some bacteria |
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thin cell walls and an outer membrane containing LPS |
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lipopolysaccharide pyrogen that causes fever |
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have unique structures in their cell walls and membranes that enable them to survive in harsh conditions that would kill bacteria |
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either envelopes or are nonenveloped |
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two common structures of viruses |
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icosahedrons and the filaments of morphology |
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lytic life cycle of a virus |
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attachment, entry, synthesis of viral proteins and nucleic acid, assembly of progeny viruses, and lysis (Breakage) of cells |
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can enter a period of latency in which the viral genome is integrated into host cell DNA (provirus) |
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a hole in amonolayer of cells caused by one infectios virus particle (PFU=plaque forming unit) serial dilutions and plaque assays are used to measure the number of infections virus particles in a preparations |
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infections protein particles that cause progressive degeneration of the CNS; they are normal brain proteins that misfold and aggregate causing problems |
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molds that have filamentous cells (hyphae) spetate hypae consist of discrete cells versus nonseptate hyphae that multinucleated |
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use carbon dioxide as a source of carbon |
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use oxidation of chemicls |
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use inorganic substances as a source of electrons, but organotrophs use organic compounds |
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have all components known |
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not well defined chemically, but the are a rich source of nutrients |
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like blood agar can support the growth of bacteria well |
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promote the gorwth of some bacteria and inhibit others |
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differences in the appearance of bacterial colonies |
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seen using differential media |
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water moves freely across cell membrane; it enters cell in hypotonic solutions and it leaves cells in hypertonic solutions |
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isolate pure culters of vacteria from a mixture |
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pour plate, count colonies to determine the number if viable vacteria |
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requires ATP or a proton motive force (pH gradient across a membrane) |
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is transport media by an integral membrane protein |
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transport in which covalent modification of the transported substance occurs simultaneously with the transport |
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have homologs of eukaryotic cytoskeletal proteins |
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one bacterium divides to yield two bacteria |
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phases of growth in batch cultures |
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lag, log, stationary, death |
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reduce numbers of colony forming units/ml for successful plating |
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can be made using a hemocytometer |
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can be filtered onto membranes that are placed on agar plates for incubation and colony counts |
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easy spectrophotometric measurement of vacterial growth |
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a devise used for controlled, uniform growth of microbes for extended times |
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grow best in high concentrations of salt |
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affects bacterial growth (minimum, optimum, maximum)
vacteria are classified as mesophiles, thermophiles, extreme thermophiles, pschropiles and psychrotrophs |
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oxygen affects bacterial growth |
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aerobes and microaerophiles need it, but anaerobes don't need it and may be poisned by it (obligate anaerobe) |
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have protective enzymes (catalase, superoxide dismutase) that get rid of reactive oxygen species that otherwise would kill the cell anaerobes can be grown in the lab in a Gas PAk jar |
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kill bacteria by causing mutations in DNA |
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bacteria commonly grow in nature as... |
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biofilms, and the can communicate chemically with one another |
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conditions that kill microbes |
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result in an exponential decrease in the number of viable cells with times |
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destruction of microbes on inanimate objectes |
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destruction of microbes on living tissue |
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reduction in bacterial levels to safe levels |
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heating fluids to reduce microbial levels |
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steam plus pressure kills everything |
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used in biological safetey cabinets to filter microbes from the air |
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membrane filters with defined pore sizes |
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used to filter sterilize fluids that cannot be autoclaved |
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inhibit the growth of vacteria |
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phenolics, alcohols, halogenated compounds, aldhydes, quaternary ammonium compounds, and gases like ethylene oxide |
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can be used fo disinfection and or antisepsis |
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use of chemicals to kill pathogenic microbes |
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