Term
Your studying a novel virus structure. What type of microscope will you be using? (Hint: you have not used this microscope in this lab) |
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Definition
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Term
The McFarland Scale is a scale numbered from 1 to 10 which represents? |
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Definition
specific concentration of [bacteria]/ml |
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Term
List five or more things that bacteria growth medium needs: |
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Definition
- Nitrogen
- Phosphorus
- carbon
- minerals
- proper pH and osmotic conditions
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Term
You've made a depression slide from a fresh culture of TSB and saw true motility in the slide. However, when the same culture was stabbed into a FTB tube, there was no motility throughtout the length of your tube (not counting the pink area). What can you concluce about your bacteria? |
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Definition
Likes oxygen, strict aerobe |
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Term
Which agar medium inhibits the growth of Gram positive bacteria? |
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Definition
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Term
You want to know if your new energy drink is a potential mutagen. How would you carry out the Amest Test? |
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Definition
- Spred auxotrophic S. typhimurium over agar
- make control plates
- place disk soaked with potential mutagen in the middle of the plate
- count the # of colonies
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Term
Benzne gave a positive Ames Test result and caused a tumor in mice. Based on these two results, you could determine that benzen is:
a. a mutagen
b. a carcinogen
c. Non-carcinogenic but only mutagenic
d. both a and b are correct
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Definition
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Term
What dye will be used to quantify biofilm formation?
a. Methylene blue
b. Safranin
c. Crystal Violet
d. Any dye can be used |
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Definition
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Term
_____ Salmonella typhimurium can grown in a medium that is NOT supplemented with amino acids because they can synthesize on their own. |
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Definition
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Term
Sessile bacteria can degrade the polysaccharide matrix using an enzyme called |
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Definition
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Term
Name two of the three mutations that the Ames strain (Salmonella typhimurium) has: |
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Definition
- Uvrb= cannot repair DNA mutation
- Rfa= cannot synthesize a complete cell wall
- His-= cannot synthesize histidine
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Term
Compare and contrast Biofilm and cellulose pellicle:
Compostion |
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Definition
Biofilm:
Polysaccharide
Cellulose pellicle:
Cellulose |
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Term
Compare and contrast Biofilm and cellulose pellicle:
Organism responisble for the bioflim/pellicle production |
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Definition
Bioflim:
S. aureus
Pellicle:
Acetobacter Acetti |
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Term
Compare and contrast Biofilm and cellulose pellicle:
Purpose or advantage of the biofilm/ pellicle production |
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Definition
Biofilm:
Due to close proximity increase frequency of lateral gene transfer thru conjugation thus they are more resistant to antibiotics.
Pellicle:
Access to O2
Protection from U.V. |
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Term
TRUE/ FALSE
An example of a "reversion/supressor/back mutation" is the mutation that reverts auxotrophic mutants back to prototrophic state. |
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Definition
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Term
In the correct order, name and describe stages in the lytic cycle of phage replication. |
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Definition
- Attachment (adsorption): virus become attach to host cell
- Penetration: virus injects its nucleic acid into the host cell
- Synthesis: take over host machinery and begins to replicate viral DNA
- Assembly: assembly and packaging of mature viral particles
- Lysis: release viral particles (the cell is killed in order to exit)
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Term
You are investigating the mechanisms of infection by bacteriophages and have obtained a suspension of the T4 bacteriophage of unknown concentration for use in your study. You perform a plaque count assay with 1:100 dilution of your phage suspension by plating 0.1 ml of phage and obtain the results below. Determine the original concentraion of phage in your suspension. Show all your work for full credit.
(There are 13 PFU's) |
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Definition
13 PFU's x 100= 1.3 x 104 PFU/ml
0.1 ml |
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Term
what is the equation used to calculate the original concentration from PFU's? |
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Definition
# PFU's x D.F.= [orginal]
Volume plated |
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Term
what is the disadvantage of kirby bauer test? |
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Definition
It cannot be used for slow growing bacteria |
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Term
Which antibiotic inhibits the formation of cross-linkeds in the peptidoglycan layer? (Hint: there were two that were used in lab) |
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Definition
- Penicillin [ in lab]
- Ampicillin [in lab]
- Cephalosporin
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Term
True/False
An example of a "Reversion mutation" is the mutation that reverts auxotrophic mutants (eg. his-mutants) back to wild type by restoring the original DNA sequence. |
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Definition
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Term
True/ False
A supressor mutation rescues the phenotpe or a prevous mutation and results in a WT genotype |
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Definition
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Term
True/ False
A PFU, or Plaque forming unit, is a colony of bacteria infected with a bacteriophage. |
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Definition
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Term
The ames test involves spreading a mutated form of a bacterium in soft agar over a layer of minimal media. We then put a disk containing our chemical on the plate. We allow the plate to incubate and then observe the plate for growth and notice 6 small colonies aroudn the filter disk. Your positive control has numerous colonies on its plate and the negative control only has 2 CFU's on the plate. Answer the following:
1. Why is there growth on the negative control plate? Does the growth on your negative control plate mean that your negative control is a mutagen, explain? |
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Definition
There is growth because some bacteria were able to revert back to prototrophy, due to spontaneous mutation. This allowed them to synthesis the 3 mutations that they would not normally synthesize. |
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Term
The ames test involves spreading a mutated form of a bacterium in soft agar over a layer of minimal media. We then put a disk containing our chemical on the plate. We allow the plate to incubate and then observe the plate for growth and notice 6 small colonies aroudn the filter disk. Your positive control has numerous colonies on its plate and the negative control only has 2 CFU's on the plate. Answer the following:
2. What do these results tell you about your test substance, how did you come up with this conclusion? |
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Definition
The tested substance is a mutagenic because the bacteria was able to revert back mutation |
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Term
True/ False
The rfa mutation in the bacteria used in the Amest test prevents the cells from synthesizing a complete cell wall. |
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Definition
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Term
True / False
The bacteria carrying the mutations necessary for the Ames test is Salmonella sanguis. |
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Definition
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Term
What is the kirby bauer test? |
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Definition
is used to test antibiotic susceptibility on bacterial species |
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Term
What are the disadvantages of the kirby bauer test?
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Definition
this test does not work well on bacteria tha are slow growing. |
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Term
what is the advantage of the kirby bauer test? |
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Definition
we can test different chemicals on the same plate to which one will inhibit the bacterium. |
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Term
Describe any 2 methods that can be used to determine the viability of the given culture? |
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Definition
Plate count and filtration |
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Term
Gram stain differentiates bacteria on the basis of their |
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Definition
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Term
___ are stains that are cationic and hence dye the bacterial surface whereas ____ ar stains that are repelled by bacteria and therefore stain the background. |
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Definition
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Term
which media do we generally use and why? |
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Definition
We use TSB because the bacteria that are commonly used grow on this bacteria and this media has been made with the right amount of nutrients that the cell need to divide. |
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Term
True/ False
A working culture is a culture that is store at a temperature that prevents microbial growth |
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Definition
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Term
True / False
Klebisella has two membranes and a thin peptidoglycan layer, thus it is a gram + bacteria |
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Definition
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Term
True/ False
Aseptic techniques are important for preventing contamination of pure bacterial cultures |
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Definition
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Term
Name two stains that you used in capsule staining and also mention what exactly do they stain. |
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Definition
- Methylene blue- staind bacteria
- Nigrosine- stains background
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Term
what is PCR? write the various steps involved |
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Definition
- Denaturing: ~95 °C: H-bonds break
- Anneling: ~64 °C:allow annealing of primers
- Elongation: ~74 °C: TAQ polymerase binds and extends DNA
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Term
___ enzyme breaks down hydrogen peroxide into ___ and ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Amylase is secreted outside the cell and hence is an ____. It breaks down ___ . |
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Definition
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Term
Citrate ultilizing organisms break down citrate to ammonia and change the color of the media from green to _____. |
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Definition
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Term
____ is the organism that is MR positvie, VP negative and gives green metallic sheen on EMB media. |
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Definition
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Term
Durhams's tube helps detect ____ production in sugar fermentation test. |
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Definition
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Term
Red slant and yellow butt in TSI test indicated fermentation of _____ sugar only. |
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Definition
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Term
Production of hydrogen sulphid in SIM and TSI is indicated by formation of ____ precipitate in the media. |
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Definition
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Term
Describe two staining procedure that can be used to determine the morphology of the given culture. |
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Definition
- Differential staining: uses safranin, crystal violet, iodine,a nd alcohol to dye cells. Depending on cell composition, the dyes will stain the sample a different color. Gram +: purple, and gram -: pink. Size and shape can also be determined.
- Capsule staining: [ uses a simple ( stains bacteria) and neg. stain(stains background) ] uses methylene blue and negrosine black dyes. The background is negative stain this shows the overall morphoplogy of the bacteria. This is used on delicate cells,such as spirochettes and capsule.
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Term
You have a lytic bacteriophage sample and you want to know the concentration of the phages in the given sample. You perform a plaque count assay with 3 separate dilutions of your phage suspension, 1:10, 1:100, 1:1000 and obtain 250, 35, and 3 plaques respectively. Determine the average concentration of phage in your suspension. |
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Definition
250 x 10= 25000 cells/ml
0.1 ml
35 x 100= 35000 cells/ml
0.1 ml
3 x 1000= 30000 cells/ml
0.1 ml
25000+35000+30000=30000 cells/ml
3 |
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Term
You want to investigate the effect of higher pH on bacterial gene expression. You have obtained a pre-labels microarray chip containing complementary sequences to each of the genes in the bacterial cell that you are using. You have designed your experiment as follows:
You have two cell cultures:
A has cells at pH 7 (optimum temperature) and B has cells at pH 9. You allow the cultures to incubate long enough to observe different gene expression. You then extract the mRNA from the cells in both cultures and prepare cDNA ( DNA strands that are complementary to the mRNA strands that were present in the cell). These cDNA strands are fluroescently labeled; cDNA from cells in culture A are red while cDNA from cells in culture B are green. You allow the cDNA to hybridize with the sequences on the microarray chip and look at the chip with a fluorescent microscope.
a. What does a red spot indicate on the plate?
b. What does the green spot indicate on the plate?
c. What does the yellow spot indicate on the plate? |
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Definition
a. What does a red spot indicate on the plate? The red spot indicates that the expression of A cells were significantly higher than B cells.
b. What does the green spot indicate on the plate? The green spot indicates that the expression of B cells were significantly higher than A cells.
c. What does the yellow spot indicate on the plate?
The yellow spot indicates that the expression of A and B cells are equally expressed.
- By saying significantly higher I mean that it is more than double the expression. Remember when we had that microarray assignment, they had numbers indicating the expression levels and if they were not double the expression they were considered either "red-yellow or green-yellow". Since this question says red or green then you say expression of A or B cells; also, I think you would say gene expression. |
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Term
The biofilm formation requires four steps:
In step one ____ bacteria approach a solid surface taht is accessible to bacteria and maintains the minimm amount of nutrients needed for survival.
In step two bacteria become loosely associated with the surface forming an attached cell.
In step three cells form aggregates and a stable attachment to the surface forming a ______.
In step four, a _____ matrix is excreted by the bacteria encasing the biofilm.
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Definition
- Planktonic
- Micro-colony
- Polysaccharide
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Term
What is the role of 95% ethanol in quantification of biofilms? |
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Definition
Its role is to detach the biofilm from its surface so that it gets suspended in the liquid so that you can take the od reading. |
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Term
Will you be able to obtain data point(s) corresponding to the death phase of the bacterial growth curve by using the techniques performed in the lab (measuring the optical density or absorbance at 30 min time intervals) explain?
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Definition
Death phase cannot be measured with turbidimetry, because turbidimetry cannot distinguish between dead or alive cells. |
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Term
what is the generation time of bacterial population that increases from 100,000 cells to 10,000,000 cells in 5 hours? |
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Definition
gen. time= time = Tf - Ti =
# of gen 3.3 log nf
ni
10000000-100000 = 4.3 x 10 6
3.3 log 5 |
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Term
Bacteria that can respond by focusing their direction of travel toward or away from a chemical stimulus exhibit:
a. Brownian Motion
b. Chemotaxis
c. Motility
d. Have many cilia |
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Definition
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Term
Please explain how the STYO9 green fluroescent dye and the propidum idoide work together to stain a bacterial culture live and dead. Make sure to also include which dye lables live and dead cells the resulting color.
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Definition
First you use the STYO9 green fluorescent to stain all of the cells. Then you use the propidum to stain all of the cells that have broken membranes. The propidum will stain the dead cells red. Therefore, the green ones are alive. |
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Term
When using the hanging drop slide for bacterial motility, for best results it is important that you have _____ amount of light pass through the specimen. |
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Definition
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Term
You have a culture of E. coli at 2.4 x 10 3 org/ml. How many CFUs do you expect to see on your spread plate if you plate 0.2 ml of the culture? |
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Definition
# of CFUs = [ conc. of last dilution]
Vol. plated
# of CFUs =2.4 x 10 3 org/ml
0.2 ml
480 CFUs/ ml |
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Term
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Definition
aggregates of bacteria attached to a surface encasd in a structured (3-D) polysaccharide matrix |
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Term
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Definition
any surface that is accessible to bacteria and maintains the minimum nutrients needed for survival
- rocks in streams
- teeth (plaque)
- catheter/IV in a patient's arm
- water pipes
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Term
what are the four steps involved in biofilm formation? |
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Definition
- Planktonic (free swimming)
- Bacteria become attach to surface
- micro-colony is formed
- polysaccharide matris is secreted, encasing the bacteria
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Term
Microarray procedure uses ____ enzyme to make DNA from RNA |
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Definition
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Term
To measure antibiotic susceptibility ____ technique is used. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
True/ False
A viral infection can be treatd with an antibiotic |
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Definition
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Term
____ are clear areas on a lawn of host cells that represent the point at which a single infectious virus particle was depostited. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Give one advantage that bacteria have as they experience an increased frequency of conjugation when living in a biofilm? |
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Definition
- more readily acquire transmissible, genetic elements (increase frequency of conjugation= increased rates of evolution)
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
free swimming between exopolysaccharide matrix pillars |
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Term
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Definition
Bacteria trapped in a biofilm exopolysaccharide matrix |
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Term
how many words are in a abstract? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Lysogenic: integrate gene
- last longer
Lytic: host cell is lysis and releases new phage particles and repeats |
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Term
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Definition
Supressor:a second mutation that restores the function lost by a primary function.
Revergent: a mutation that precisely restores a mutant DNA sequence to a WT DNA sequence |
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Term
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Definition
chemical substance that causes "induced mutations" |
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Term
stock vs. working cultures |
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Definition
Stock:
Culture is innoculated and grown and stored at a low temperature that prevents growth.
Ex. plate, tubes and slants
Working :
is a slant that is maintained to innoculate media and to make smears for stains.
A new working culture should be created every time it is used.
[ a fresh culture]
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Term
Disadvantage of tubimetry? |
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Definition
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Term
True/ false
Is 95% ethanol used to kill? |
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Definition
False, used to dissolve biofilm |
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Term
True/ False
Virus are non cellular |
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Definition
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Term
True/ False
Microarray chip- single genes |
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Definition
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Term
What is the purpose of PCR? |
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Definition
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Term
You can see three different hemolytic patterns on a blood ager. Name all three patterns and explain what each pattern means. |
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Definition
α- hemolysis: partial digestion
β- hemolysis: complete digestion
Υ- hemolysis: no digestion |
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Term
Reverse transcriptase mRNA |
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Definition
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Term
A bacteria that is ____ to antibiotic will show no growth |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Primary: articles [ the original source]
Secondary: books, journal reviews [not the original source] |
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Term
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Definition
Media composed of designated amounts of specific compounds and exact contents are known.
Ex. minimal media: provides only nutrients necessary for growth of the microbe
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Term
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Definition
Contains nutrient rich substances such as yeast extract, peptone, tryptone exact constituent are unknown .
Ex. TSA |
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Term
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Definition
Allows growth of one group of bacteria while inhibiting some other group
Ex. MSA |
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Term
What type of bacteria is mainly used to isolate on selective medias? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A certain chemical in the medium cause change in the medium after the bacteria growth
Ex. EMB differentiates between lactose and non-lactose. |
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Term
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Definition
Supports the growth of fastidous bacteria by providing specific nutrients
Ex. Blood agar |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Has no nutrients = no bacterial growth |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
CSM(Cellulose supporting medium) |
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Definition
contains yeast extract, peptone, mannitol
Acetobacter→ Acetti→ produce ~2um of cellulose strand/min
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Term
What is the main function of cellulose production? |
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Definition
1. Cellulose traps aerobic bacteria and provide access to oxygen
2. Protection from UV→ less mutations and increse in survival |
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Term
Be able to draw a growth curve |
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Definition
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Term
yeast extract is what type of media |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
3 Dimensional image of the specimen |
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Term
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Definition
Exposes the subcellular level |
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Term
decontamination of plastic |
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Definition
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Term
do we heat fix on capsule staining? |
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Definition
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