MIP300
vegetative cell
A cell that has not formed spored or other resting stages
virulence factor
Ability to infect and cause disease
The exterior of the cells have what kind of charge; anionic or cationic?
Anionic
pili
Appendages that allow bacteria to attach to each other and to transfer DNA
What does a Gram stain tell me?
Reveals gram reaction of bacteria Gram positive (+) = PURPLE Gram negative (-) = PINK/RED Reveals morphology of bacteria Bacillus (rods), Cocci ( circular), or Coccobacillus Pairs, clusters, chains (GP pic)
lactose-fermenting bacteria
These bacteria grow pink colonies on MacConkey's agar. Examples include Citrobacter, Klebsiella, E. coli, Enterobacter, and Serratia. Lactose is KEE. Test with MacConKEE'S agar.
Why do you decolorize for 5 - 10 seconds only?
because too long would destroy the peptidoglycan layer in G+ cells and they may appear as G-
fimbrae
bristle like fibers on bacteria's surface. Help cells to cling together
Which layer of the endospore is resistant to antibacterials?
coat
smear
driec mixture of bactera and water on a slide
Bacillus subtilis
endospores were greeen
Bright field microsocpy
field is bright and specimen appears opaque
Dark field microscopy
field is dark and specimen appears bright
motility of bacteria
flagella axial filaments fimbrae/pili
Which gram-stained bacteria contain porin proteins in their cell walls?
gram-negative bacteria
Which gram-stained bacteria have a more permeable cell wall?
gram-positive bacteria
Which gram-stained bacteria have a thicker peptidoglycan layer?
gram-positive bacteria
Which gram-stained bacteria possess teichoic acids in their cell walls?
gram-positive bacteria
Gram negative cells peptidoglycan
have a thin layer
Storage granules that store carbon and energy.
inclusion bodies
Staphylococcus food poisoning
is a gastrointestinal illness caused by eating foods contaminated with toxins produced by Staphylococcus aureus
What is the purpose of iodine in gram staining
it is the mordant or fixative for the cv. it is insoluble
List 3 components that describe the chemical makeup of gram-negative cell walls.
lipopolysaccharide lipoprotein peptidoglycan
halotolerant
salt-tolerant Staphylococcus aureus
safranin
secondary stain which stains peptidoglycan pink for both gram negative and gram positive
MacConkey agar
selective medium which contains crystal violet and bile salts to inhibit the growth of gram-positive microorganisms while allowing most GRAM-NEGATIVE bacteria to grow *lactose-fermenting bacteria produce PINK to RED colonies; non-lactose fermenters remain colorless
Layer of glycocalyx that allows bacterial attachment to prosthetic plastic devices.
slime layer
Name the 2 main parts of the glycocalyx.
slime layer: poor organization, weak attachment to cell wall. capsule: organized, adheres to cell wall
steps of gram staining procedure in order
smear and heat fix 1. apply primary stain (crystal violet) 2. apply mordant (grams iodine) 3. decolorize with ethyl alcohol 4. counterstain with safranin
identify steps of acid fast staining procedure in order
smear and heat fix 1. carbolfuchsin 2. rinse h2o 3. decolorize acid alcohol 4. rinse h2o 5. counterstain methylene blue 6. rinse h2o
Micrococcus luteus
spheres
differential stain
stains specific morphological structures - cell wall and cell membrane
Serratia marcescens
*This microbe forms gram-negative short rods Gram-Negative Bacilli, Gram negative motile rod, lives in soil and water. commonly found in bathrooms and is pink and slimy in appearance. Often infects aids patients, burn victims, and is resistant to antibiotics.
Klebsiella pneumoniae
...
What stain is used for a negative stain?
...
How many major layers make up the cell walls of gram-positive bacteria? gram-negative bacteria?
1 2
with acid-fast staining, identify appearance of cell at each step based on cell wall type
1. acid fast red and non acid fast red 2. acid fast red and non acid fast colorless 3. acid fast red and non acid fast blue
with gram stain identify appearance of cell at each step based on cell-wall type
1. both purple 2. both purple 3 gram neg colorless, gram pos purple 4. gram neg pink or red an gram pos purple
purpose of each step in acid fast stain
1. carbolfuchsin penetrates cell wall 2. acid alcohol strips stain from all non acid fast bacteria 3. methylene blue stains non acid fast bacteria blue
identify steps of the spore staining procedure
1. papertowel on stain and place over steam 2. flood paper with malachite green 3. decolorize with distilled water 4 counterstain with safranin
with the spore staining, identify purpose of each step
1. papertowel reduces evaporation of smear 2. malachite green stains endspore 3. distilled water decolorizes 4 safranin colors resting cell
purpose of each step of gram staining
1.Primary stain (crystal violet) will stain all bacteria purple 2. Mordant (grams iodine) will combine inside cell with crystal violet and form insoluble crystal violet iodine complex in gram positive cells 3. decolorizing agent (ethyl alcohol) washes out primary stain of other bacteria except gram positive 4. counterstain (safranin) stains bacteria again. gram negative wll be pink or red and gram positive still purple
It is best to use cultures for Gram staining within what time period?
24 hours
What does Gm-/Gm+ do help us determine?
Appropriate antibiotic treatments
Which bacteria has a glycocalyx comprised of polypeptides?
Bacillus anthraces
Which 2 bacterial species produce endospores?
Bacillus spp. Clostridium spp.
Stalked
Bacterial strains of this shape can be engineered to efficiently take up toxins present at low concentrations in water sources and are being researched for bioremediation applications.
What kind of dye is Crystal Violet? Cationic or Anionic?
Cationic
Cocci
Cocci are also broken down into more descriptive terms - diplo (pairs), staphylo (clusters), and strepto (chains)
Sarcina
Coccus arrangement arising from division in four planes.
Diplococcus
Coccus arrangement arising from division in one plane.
Tetrad
Coccus arrangement arising from division in two planes.
What does CFU stand for and what does it mean?
Colony Forming Units; the number of colonies grown during incubation
What did we use as the primary stain?
Crystal Violet
Cell color results
Crystal Violet (primary stain) Gram's Iodine (mordant) Acetone-alcohol (decolorizer) Safranin (counterstain)
Name the four staining reagents.
Crystal Violet, Iodine, Ethanol, Safranin
serial dilution
Dilution of a substance several times by the same amount each time
Bacillus
Electron Micrograph
Diplococcus
Electron Micrograph
Spirochete
Electron Micrograph
Vibrio
Electron Micrograph
Highly dehydrated resting cells produced in environmental stress.
Endospores
What did we use as the decolorizing agent?
Ethanol
Food at risk for food poisoning by Staphlyococcus?
Foods at highest risk of contamination with Staphylococcus aureus and subsequent toxin production are those that are made by hand and require no cooking. Some examples of foods that have caused staphylococcal food poisoning are sliced meat, puddings, some pastries and sandwiches.
What does the Crystal Violet stain do within the cell wall?
Forms a purple complex
Gram stain for streptococcus pneumoniae would be
Gram +
Escherchia coli
Gram negative Pink Flagella Rods
Bacillus
Gram negative Pink rods
Staphylococcus epidermidis
Gram negative spheres
Neisseria sicca
Gram negative spheres or cocci
Bacillus cereus
Gram positive
Staphylococcus arrangement of cocci
Gram positive Purple spheres
Corynebacterium xerosis
Gram positive rods
What are the two groups of bacteria and their colors?
Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria; purple and pink, respectively
Why are gram-positive bacteria more susceptible to penicillin?
Gram-positive bacteria possess more target sites because over 90% of their tetrapeptides are cross-linked
Who invented the gram stain?
Hans Christian Gram
Why is gram staining important?
Identifies unknown bacteria
What did we use as the mordant?
Iodine
What is the purpose of the mordant?
Iodine complexes the crystal violet to the peptidoglycan layer
What is the purpose of the mordant, Iodine?
Keeps the Crystal Violet from being removed from the Gram-positive bacteria
What is the 3rd amino acid of the cell wall tetrapeptide for gram-positive bacteria? gram-negative bacteria?
L-Lysine meso Diaminopimetic acid
Gm- cell walls have a higher _____ content than Gm+ cell walls?
Lipid
Gram-positive cell walls contain only one...?
Membrane
Gram-negative cell walls contain two...? Which are? What's in the middle?
Membranes; inner and outer; peptidoglycan
What are the bacterial equivalents of histones?
Mg2+ polyamines
What 2 genera contain acid-fast bacteria?
Mycobacterium Nocardia
Name the 2 alternating polysaccharide chains that make up the cell wall.
NAG (N-acetylglucosamine) NAM (N-acetylmuramic acid)
What does the Decolorizing Solution, Ethanol, do to Gram-positive bacteria?
Nothing, because of the thick cell walls
The area in the prokaryote cytoplasm where DNA aggregates.
Nucleoid
Observe the Stained Smear
Observe morphology Rod, coccus, or coccobacillus Growth pattern (pairs, clusters, chains)
The bacterial cell wall is composed of what? Where is it located?
Peptidoglycan; on top of the plasma membrane
Circular extrachromosomal DNA that are self-replicating.
Plasmids
What did we use as the counter-stain?
Safranin
Stalked
Shape improves bacteria's ability to take up molecules from its environment.
What are the two staining techniques?
Simple and differential
Which bacteria possess endoflagella?
Spirochetes (Leptospira sp.)
Why are Staphylococcus toxic?
Staphylococcus is salt tolerant and can grow in salty foods like ham. As the germ multiplies in food, it produces toxins that can cause illness. Staphylococcal toxins are resistant to heat and cannot be destroyed by cooking.
Bacteria react different based on what on their cells?
Surface composition
What does it mean to aliquot something?
Take a smaller volume of a sample
Why Gram stain?
The Gram stain reaction and the bacterial morphology provide clues to the identity of the bacteria and are used to determine what tests are done to confirm this identity (GN pic)
What is the purpose of safrin in gram staining
The alcohol removes the cell membrane from gram negative so the safrinin dies it pink or red and the gram postive will remain puple.
Square
The bacteria are the most numerous type of cell found in salt lakes and are believed to be responsible for their characteristic red colour.
What happens to the cell wall if they are old or are stressed by heat or cold?
The cell walls become thin
Why do gram-negative bacteria stain red/pink?
The crystal violet and iodine sit on the surface of the cytoplasmic membrane. The decolorizer strips out the crystal violet-iodine complex because the peptidoglycan layer is so thin. The counter-stain can then sit on the cytoplasmic membrane. 7
Explain why gram-positive bacteria stain purple.
The crystal violet passes through the peptidoglycan layer because it is hydrated. It sits above the cytoplasmic membrane; it does not enter the internal contents of the cell. The iodine also passes through the peptidoglycan layer and forms a complex with the crystal violet. The organic solvent dehydrates the peptidoglycan, causing it to shrink and trap the crystal violet-iodine complex. The safrinin cannot pass through the peptidoglycan and does not reach the cytoplasmic membrane. 4
How is Staphylococcus food poisoning caused?
The most common way for food to be contaminated with Staphylococcus is through contact with food workers who carry the bacteria or through contaminated milk and cheeses.
Square
Though the discovery was made decades ago, scientists found it extremely difficult to grow these bacteria in a lab to be able to study them. In 2004 they succeeded!
What is the purpose of Safranin to Gram-negative bacteria?
Turns it pink/red
What does the Decolorizing Solution, Ethanol, do to Gram-negative bacteria? Why?
Washes out the purple complex. Cell walls are too thin
Endospore Stain
a dye is forced by heat into resistant survival cells called spores and endospores. it is designed to distinguish between spores and the cells that make them - the so called vegetative cells. -green
Staphylococcus
a usually pathogenic bacterium that occurs in grapelike clusters of cocci
motility
ability to move spontaneously
What is the purpose of a negative stain?
allows the shape or morphology to be seen because they appear white or clear with a dark background
Capsule stain
an example of a negative stain that colors the background, allowing the capsule to stand out as a halo around an organism
Extensive invaginations of cytoplasmic membrane in bacteria.
mesosomes
Which acids give acid-fast bacteria a waxy appearance?
mycolic acids
Name 3 of 5 components of the periplasmic space.
nutrient transport proteins nutrient acquisition enzymes (proteases) detoxifying enzymes (beta-lactamases) membrane derived oligosaccharides (MDO) osmoprotectants
What is the principle component of the cell wall?
peptidoglycan
Endoflagella are enclosed in the _____.
periplasmic space
What is the name of the space between the inner and outer membranes of a gram-negative bacteria cell wall?
periplasmic space
Mesosomes are mainly seen in gram-_____ bacteria.
positive
heat fixing
proceess of affixing bacteria in a smear to a glass slide in preparation for staining
what is the purpose of heat fixing a slide
to adhere the bacteria to the slide.
axial filaments
type of flagella that originate from both ends of the cell and wrap around the cell body
Bacterial cells capable of growth.
vegetative bacterial cells
Rhodospirillum rubeum
vibrio
can you tell e. coli from staph a.
yes, E. coli is G- and Staph a is G+