Click here to tell your browser to print these cards.
These are designed to be printed in landscape mode on 4x6 index cards.
To save paper, we recommend using your computer's print preview until you get your printer settings correct.
microscope base |
bottom of the microscope |
microscope arm |
with the base, used to carry the microscope |
microscope stage |
holds the slide |
microscope body tube |
transmit the magnified image |
microscope condenser |
lenses that focus light into a cone |
microscope iris diaphragm |
controls the angle and size of the cone of light |
microscope revolving nosepiece |
holds objective lenses |
microscope obective lenses |
magnify & invert the image |
microscope focal point |
formed when light rays converge at one point |
microscope coarse adjustment |
larger knob used to focus on low power |
microscope fine adjustment |
smaller knob used to focus with high power and oil immersion |
microscope field of vision |
area seen through the microscope |
microscope magnification |
the number of times an image is increased in size |
formula for magnification |
determined by multiplying the power of the objective by the power of the ocular lens |
resolution |
ability to distinguish two points as distinct and separate |
refractive index |
the amount light bends when it enters a new medium |
parfocal |
when one lens is focused, all the other lenses will also be in focus |
which lens has the shortest focal distance? |
oil immersion |
the three basic bacterial shapes |
rods (bacilli), spheres (cocci), spirals |
the field of vision decreases when the magnification... |
increases |
why does immersion oil increase resolution? |
it has the same refractive index as glass (1.52) and the light does not bend between the slide and the objective lens |
when viewing large organisms like fungi or protozoa, it is best to use the ___________ lens |
low power |
spherical aberration |
when the middle of the field of view is in focus but the periphery is blurry. Light passing through the middle of the lens has a different focal point than light passing through the outside |
chromatic aberration |
many colors appear in the field. occurs when each wavelength of light has a different focal point |
In bright field microscopy, the image is made from: |
light that is transmitted through a specimen |
Bacterial stains will _____ the organism |
kill |
The condenser lens ___________ the light |
concentrates |
Refraction is ________ of light rays |
bending |
A microscope produces 2 images. One is _____ and one is ______. |
real virtual |
The virtual image appears ___________ the microscope |
below or within |
The formula for calculating magnification: |
total magnification =
magnification by the objective lens x magnification by the ocular lens |
Resolution is defined as: |
clarity of an image |
The limit of resolution is: |
an actual measurement of how far apart two points must be for the microscope to view them as being separate |
Write the formula for the limit of resolution: |
λ D=----------------------------------- NAcondenser +NAobjective |
Numerical Aperture is: |
a measure of a lens's ability to "capture" light coming from the specimin and use it to make the image |
Using immersion oil makes the numerical aperture__________ |
increase |
In dark-field microscopy, objects appear ________ against a _________ background |
brightly lit dark |
In phase contrast microscopy, the specimen appears as various levels of ______ against a bright background |
"darks" |
Fluorescent microscopy uses fluorescent ______ that emit light when illuminated with _____________ light |
dye ultraviolet
|
A mixed culture contains: |
two or more species |
A pure culture contains: |
only a single species |
The purpose of streaking bacteria on a plate is to: |
isolate an individual species from a mixed sample |
Individual cells grow into: |
colonies |
CFU stands for: |
colony-forming unit |
A CFU consists of: |
individual cells or pairs, chains, or clusters of cells |
Ubiquitous: |
Organism can be found everywhere, could be isolated from soil, water, plants, and animals |
Define pathogenic: |
capable of causing disease |
Define opportunistic pathogen |
capable of causing disease if introduced into a suitable part of the body |
define reservoir: |
any area where a microbe resides and serves as a potential source of infection |
Pellicle |
organisms float on top and produce a surface membrane |
sediment |
organisms sink to bottom |
turbidity |
evenly distributed throughout |
flocculent |
suspended chunks |
Organisms that can infect us: |
Amoeba (Entamoeba histolytica causes dysnetery) Nematodes (Enterobius vermicularis - pinworm - intestines Ascaris lumbricoides - intestines Necator americanus - intestines Trichinella spirallis - muscles) Ciliates (Balantidium coli - intestines)
|
Organisms that may transmit disease |
arthropods |
most commonly used staining method |
gram staining |
gram staining - which stain is applied first? |
crystal violet |
gram staining
what forms inside the cell after you add iodine?
|
crystal violet-iodine complex |
gram staining
what type of cell is decolorized? |
gram negative |
gram staining
Name the counterstain |
safranin |
what effect does alcohol have on the gram-negative cell wall? |
the alcohol extracts the lipid, making the gram negative cell wall more porus and unable to retain the crystal-iodine complex, decolorizing it |
Explain why gram-positive cells are not decolorized |
the thicker peptidoglycan traps the crystal violet-iodine complex more effectively, making them less susceptible to decolorization |
What color will gram-positive cells be if the decolorizer is left on too long? |
reddish |
Describe the appearance of a good emulsion |
dries to a faint haze on the slide |
what happens to older gram-positive cultures? |
may decolorize and give a gram negative result |
In the negative staining technique a chromogen (dye) has a ____________ charge. |
negative |
The pH of negative stains is_____________ |
acidic |
Negative stains do not enter bacterial cells because the charges ____________ each other. |
repel |
Negative staining is commonly employed for bacteria that are: |
too delicate to withstand heat-fixing |
Acid-fast bacteria have ____________ in their cell walls |
mycolic acid |
Acid-fast organisms resist _________ by _________ alcohol. |
decolorization, acid |
The names of the 2 acid-fast staining procedures are: |
Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) Kinyoun (K) |
When preparing an acid-fast smear, a drop of __________ is used to help the ____________ organisms adhere to the slide |
serum, slippery |
The primary stain in the ZN method is _________ because it is soluble in _____________ |
carbolfuchsin, lipid |
Heating causes acid-fast cell walls to _________ |
melt |
the counterstain in an acid-fast stain is |
methylene blue |
Acid fast cells are colored |
reddish purple |
Non acid-fast cells are |
blue |
Capsules are made of __________ or _________ |
mucoid polysaccharides, polypeptides |
(Capsule stain) Two examples of netgaive stains are: |
Congo red, nigrosin |
(Capsule stain) Negative stain pH is ___________ and they stain the background |
acidic |
(Capsule stain) A basic stain is used to stain _________ |
the cell |
(Capsule stain) We do not heat fix because: |
it causes the cells to shrink, leaving an artifactual white halo that may be interpreted as a capsure |
Cells stick to the slide by adding a drop of ___________ |
serum |
An endospore is: |
A dormant form of the bacteria that allows it to survive poor environmental conditions |
Endospores are covered with a protein called: |
keratin |
(endospore stain) The primary stain is called: |
malachite green |
(endospore stain) The decolorizer is: |
water |
(endospore stain) The cells that are counterstained with safranin are ______________ and _____________ |
vegetative cells, spore mother cells |
Location of endospore: central |
In the middle of the cell |
Location of endospore: terminal |
at the end of the cell |
location of endospore: subterminal |
between the end and the middle |
Two spore shapres are: |
spherical, elliptical (oval) |
some spores are large and make the cell look: |
swollen |
Why can't we view flagella using an unstained preperation? |
flagella are too thin to be observed with light microscope and ordinary stains |
flagella - monotrichous |
one flagellum at one end |
flagella - amphitrichous |
flagella at both ends |
lophotrichous |
tufts of flagella at one end |
peritrichous |
flagella all over the cell |
Why does light of a shorter wavelength produce a clearer image than light of longer wavelengths? |
As wavelength gets smaller, resolution gets smaller because wavelength is on the top of the equation |
Colony morphology includes: |
colony size, color, shape, margin, elevation, texture |
colony morphology - shape |
round, irregular, punctiform |
colony morphology - margin |
entire, undulate, lobate, filmentous, rhizoid |
colony morphology - elevation |
flat, raised, convex, pulvinate (very convex), umbonate (raised in center) |
colony morphology - texture |
moist, mucoid, dry |
colony morphology - color |
opaque, translucent, shiny, dull |
colony morphology - other factors |
length of incubation, temperature of incubation, type of medium grown on, oxygen concentration during incubation |
Why are microorganisms located on the desks not sterilized as extremely as the plates? |
Bugs that grow on desks at 25 degree C are probably not human pathogens. Plates have many more bugs on them as well. |
What is significant about organisms that grow well at 37 degrees C? |
They probably came from humans. |
Capsule stain - why must the sample be emulsified in serum? |
To help them stick to the slide because they are slippery. |
Why do oral bacteria produce a capsule? |
protection against phagocytocis and to stick to surfaces and each other forming a biofilm |
Why was an older culture of Bacillus used to demonstrate endospores? |
Spores are formed in response to nutrient depletion, so the |
Why can't flagella be observed in action? |
Because they are too thin to be seen with regular stain. A mordant must be used to encrust the flagella so it is thick enough to be seen. |
Type of microscopy: |
bright field microscopy |
Type of microscopy:
|
dark field microscopy |
type of microscopy: |
fluorescence microscopy |
type of microscopy:
|
phase contrast microscopy |
bacterial morphology:
|
gram positive cocci |
bacterial morphology
|
ovoid coccus (Lactococcus lactis) |
bacterial morphology
|
gram positive bacilli (Bacillus) |
bacterial morphology
|
gram positive staphylococci |
bacterial morphology: |
gram positive streptobaccillus |
bacterial morphology: |
gram positive spirilla |
bacterial morphology: |
spirochetes |
bacterial morphology: |
gram negative vibrio (Vibrio cholera) |
bacterial morphology: |
gram negative diplococci (Nesseria gonorrhea) |
bacterial morphology: |
tetrads (Micrococcus roseus) |
bacterial morphology: |
gram positive streptococci (Streptococcus pyogenes) |
bacterial morphology |
gram positive bacilli, palisades arrangement (Corynebacterium) |
How to do a plate streak: |
Broth growth:
|
1- obligate aerobes (need oxygen) - growth at top 2 - faculative anaerobes - growth throughout, but more growth at top 3- microaerophiles 4 - anaerobes - growth at bottom, no growth at top where oxygen is present |
Gram stain procedure |
1 - heat fix emulsion 2 - cover smear with crystal violet stain for 30-60 sec 3 - rinse with distilled water 4 - cover smear with iodine for 30 - 60 sec 5 - rinse with distilled water 6 - decolorize with alcohol 7 - counterstain with safranin for 30 - 60 sec 8 - rinse with distilled water 9 - blot dry with bibulous paper |
gram positive vs gram negative results: |
gram positive - dark purple gram negative - pinkish red |
Negative stain: |
Bacteria are unstained against dark background |
acid-fast stain (ZN) |
in ZN stain, acid fast cells are reddish-purple (non acid fast cells are blue) |
acid fast stain (K) |
acid fast cells are reddish purple (non acid fast cells are blue) |
capsule stain: |
acidic stain colorizes the background while the basic stain colorizes the cell, leaving the capsules as unstained white clearings around the cell |
Flagella stain: |
peritrichous flagella |
flagella: |
monotrichous |
flagella: |
amphitrichous |
flagella: |
lophotrichous |
Endospores: |
terminal swollen |
endospores |
central |