PowerPoints 16 & 17

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Alteration

What is the process where added genetic information provided by the DNA of a prophage may enable a bacterium to possess new genetic traits?

Selective toxicity

What is the process where the chemical being used should inhibit or kill the intended pathogen without seriously harming the host?

Replication

What is the stage in the lytic life cycle where the phage copies its genome and uses the bacterium's metabolic machinery to synthesize phage enzymes and phage structural components?

Maturation

What is the stage in thr lytic life cycle where phage parts assemble around the genomes?

Release

What is the stage where a bacteriophage-coded enzyme breaks down the peptidohlycan in the bacterial cell wall causing osmotic lysozyme?

A phage-coded lysozyme

What usually breaks down the bacterial peptidoglycan causing osmotic lysozyme and release of the intact bacteriophages?

What genetic change happens by lyse exiting out?

Lysogenic conversion by prophages.

Cidal agent

What is the name of an agent that kills the organism?

Clostridium botulinum

What is the neurotoxin produced by?

What is a prophage?

A host cell not shut down by the phage, and the phage's DNA is inserted or integrated into the host bacterium's DNA

Interference with this process results in a weak cell wall and osmotic lysis of the bacterium, examples include:

penicillins, cephalosporins, carbapenems, monobactems, carbacephems, glycopeptides

Corynebacterium diptheria

what is the diptheria exotoxin produced by?

Topoisomerase IV

In gram-negative bacteria, what is the primary target for fluoroquinolones?

DNA gyrase (topoisomerase II)

In gram-positive bacteria, what is the main target for fluoroquinolones?

Does the phage shut down the host cell?

No it doesnt, instead, the phage DNA inserts or integrates into the host bacterium's DNA

Lytic life cycle

Phage genes are activated and new phages are produced by what?

How does the lysogenic cycle begin?

The cycle begins by the phage absorbing to the host bacterium or lysogen and injecting its genome as in the lytic life cycle.

What do many antibiotics do to bacteria?

They inhibit normal synthesis of peptidoglycan by bacteria and cause osmotic lysis

Spontaneous induction

This is the process in which if the repressor proteins are no longer made, the phage genome is excised from the bacterial nucleiod.

Polymixins and colistins

What antibiotics act as detergents and alter membrane permeability in gram-negative bacteria?

Synthetic drugs

What are antimicrobial drugs synthesized by chemical procedures in the laboratory?

Antibiotics

What are metabolic products of one microorganism that inhibit or kill other microorganisms

Alcohol, zephiran, and chlorhexidine

What are some antibiotics that can alter the microbial cytoplasmic membranes and cause leakage of cellular needs?

Either replicate by means of the lytic life cycle and cause lysozyme of the host bacterium Or it can incorporate its DNA into the bacterium's DNA and become a noninfectious prophage

What are two things that can happen when a temperate phage infects a bacteria and what can it cause?

INH (isoniazid)

What blocks the incorporation of mycolic acid into acid-fast cell walls?

Some antimicrobials

What can inhibit normal nucleic acid replication in bacteria?

Fluoroquinolones

What control agent works by inhibiting one or more of a group of enzymes called topoisomerase?

Sulfonamides and diaminopyrimidines

What control agents block enzymes in the bacteria pathway required for the synthesis of tetrahydrofolic acid, which is a cofactor needed for bacteria to make the nucleotide bases thymine, guanine, uracil, and adenine?

Coding of protein exotoxin or other virulence factors

What does the added genetic information of the prophage allow?

Ethambutol

What interferes with the incorporation of arabinoglactan?

Exotoxin

What is a soluble protein toxin that is usually secreted from a living bacterium?

Narrow spectrum

What is the agent that generally works against just gram-positives, gram-negatives, or only a few bacteria?

Broad spectrum

What is the agent that is generally effective against a variety of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria?

Static agent

What is the name of an agent that inhibits the the organism's growth long enough for body defenses to remove it?

Temperate phages

What is the name of bacteriophages that are capable of a lysogenic life style?

Spontaneous induction

What is the process that occurs in about one out of every million to one out of every billion bacteria containing a prophage?

From 50 to 200

What is the range of phages that may be produced per infected bacteriums?

Maturation

What is the stage called when the bacteriophage components get assembled


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