Microbiology Chapter 5
The term "naked" used in describing viruses implies the lack of
a lipid envelope
The viral process of attaching to the host cell receptor for the virus is called
adsorption
List the correct order of viral life cycle phases, starting with the first at the top
adsorption, penetrating/uncoating, synthesis, assemby, release
Which of the following describes the various viral "parts" coming together to produce virus particles
assembly
Identify the commonalities between temperate phages and lytic phages
assembly, biosynthesis of viral components, release, adsorption, penetration
Any virus that specifically infects bacteria is called
bacteriophage
plaques are associated with which of the following
bacteriophage infection of bacteria
During the release stage of the viral multiplication cycle, enveloped viruses leave their host cells through __________, or exocytosis.
budding
viruses carrying oncogenes in a host cell can result in
cancer
At minimum, viruses are composed of nucleic acid and a __________ comprised of protein
capsid
The structure directly surrounding the viral nucleic acid is the __________, a coat of proteins.
capsid
which is closest in physical proximity to the nucleic acid of a virus
capsid
Which of the following is considered a monomer (a single unit) of a capsid
capsomer
A protein subunit that forms the viral capsid is called a
capsomere
mad cow disease can be transmitted to humans through __________ of infected beef
consumption
in the condition known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, what does "bovine" mean?
cow
most bacteriophages contain which type of nucleic acid
dsDNA
A single virus particle could contain a genome consisting of
either DNA or RNA but never both
which of these terms does not belong in this group
embryonic culture
Which term is used to describe the process in which a virus is engulfed by a cell and enclosed in a vacuole or vesicle
endocytosis
a virus that has a membranous layer external to the nucleocapsid is called an __________ virus
enveloped
True or false: the viral envelope and capsid are the same thing
false
true or false: the interior of eggs normally contains non-pathogenic bacterial cells but no viruses
false
comparing viral and bacterial genomes, viruses have __________ genes
fewer
Which of the following term describes the total nucleic content of a virus
genome
Which of the following is a term used to describe the different host cells which a virus can infect?
host range
A virus with a rod-shaped capsomer has a __________ capsid, while a virus with a capsid arranged as a multifaceted polygon has an __________ capsid
icosahedral
Masses of viruses or damaged organelles of a cell due to cytopathic effect of viral infection are called
inclusion
A segmented RNA genome is one in which
individual genes exist on separate pieces of RNA
a prophage is activated and enters the lytic cycle through the process called
induction
how does T-even bacteriophage nucleic acid enter the host cell?
injection
which of the following are in vivo methods for viral cultivation
inoculating chicken eggs with viruses; inoculation mice with viruses
identify all the components of the nucleocapsid
nucleic acid and capsid
At minimum, all viruses are composed of
nucleic acids and proteins
At minimum, all viruses are composed of:
nucleic acids and proteins
Viruses that lead to cancer in infected hosts are called
oncogenic
The term for a virus that can cause tumors is
oncovirus
Viruses have tropisms, that is they can infect
only cells of a certain tissue type
Infections in which cells harbor the virus but are not immediately lysed are called
persistent infections
which of the following describes the "clear" area where a virus-infected cell lysed and infected all the neighboring cells and lysed those too?
plaque
which of the following would you expect to see from bacteriophage propagation
plaques
single-stranded RNA genomes that are ready for immediate translation into proteins are called
positive-sense RNA
an infectious agent made up of only protein and associated with spongiform encephalopathies is a
prion
which agent is the cause if spongiform encephalopathy
prion
For the enveloped virus shown in the image, the arrow is pointing to to a
spike
a disease condition of the brain caused by an infection with prions is called bovine __________ encephalopathy or "mad cow disease"
spongiform
which of the following are cytopathic effects in virally infected animal cells
syncytia and inclusion bodies
Which of the following is a multinucleated mass of cells caused by viral infection
syncytium
unlike cellular organisms, viruses are unable to
synthesize their own proteins
Some deadly human pathogens such as diphtheria, cholera, and botulism are made more virulent by bacteriophages known as __________ phages, or prophages
temperate
What name is given to a phage "type" which can incorporate itself into the host genome as a lysogenic prophage?
temperate
a bacteriophage that does not immediately lyse or change the appearance of host cells is called a __________ phage
temperate
which type of phage generally can increase the pathogenicity of a bacterium
temperate phage
__________ phages enter the prophage state, while __________ phages burst the host cell
temperate; lytic
the uncoating step in a viral life cycle, where the genome is released from the capsid, is not required in a bacteriophage because __________
the phage genome is directly injected into the cell cytoplasm
two terms that have the same meaning are cell culture and __________ culture
tissue
list 3 purposes of viral cultivation
to prepare vaccines; identify viruses in clinical specimens; study effects on host cells
Which term describes the effect of an oncogenic virus on host cells
transformation
True or false: bacteriophages can increase the pathogenicity of their bacterial host
true
True or false: viral nucleic acid may be single-stranded or double-stranded DNA or RNA
true
true or false: bacteriophages can contain double-stranded DNA or single-stranded DNA or RNA
true
Which term describes the process of a virus losing its capsid (and envelope, if it has one) and exposing viral nucleic acids to the immediate environment?
uncoating
virus cultivation is an important activity because viral stocks are needed for the preparation of some
vaccines
the viral envelope differs from the host cell membrane because
viral proteins replace host proteins
Change in a cell line monolayer is indicative of which of the following?
virally infected cells
A type of virus that parasitizes other other viruses infecting the same host cell is called a
virophage
Which of the following is true regarding viruses
viruses are not cellular
Is it possible for a bacterial cell infected with a temperate phage to replicate
yes
Which of the following statements regarding protein synthesis is true
All viruses lack the machinery to to synthesize proteins
In viral multiplication, capsids and genetic material are packaged into virus particles during the __________ step.
Assembly
the initials used for cytopathic effects are
CPE
A __________ virus does not have an envelope surrounding its capsid
naked
an RNA genome that is not in a form ready for translation is called __________-sense RNA
negative
Lysogeny is best described as
integration of the viral genome into the host chromosome
viruses can cause cancer by
introducing oncogenes to a host cell and causing a loss of growth regulation
a bird egg containing an embryo is useful for cultivation of animal viruses because it
is a sterile environment and contains tissues that support viral multiplication
The term used to describe the physical rupture of a cell is
lysis
When a bacterium acquires a new trait from its temperate phage it is called
lysogenic conversion
when bacteriophages infect pathogenic bacteria resulting in a new pathogenic trait its called
lysogenic conversion
which of the following describes a process of bacteriophage infection which could result in a new disease trait (such as a toxin) in the infected bacterium
lysogenic conversion
The condition in which the bacterial host chromosome carries bacteriophage DNA is called
lysogeny
Which term refers to the persistence of bacteriophages within host cells
lysogeny
cultured cells grow in the form of a __________, a single, confluent sheet of cells that supports viral multiplication
monolayer
Which of the following is used to describe the phage DNA that is latently incorporated into the bacterial host genome?
prophage
toxins of the bacteria are responsible for diphtheria, cholera, and botulism are actually produced by
prophages
prions are composed entirely of what molecule
protein
Which macromolecule composes capsomers
proteins
Which of the following is the term for an animal virus that has integrated its DNA into the DNA of a host cell
provirus
which factor enables certain laboratory animals to propagate viruses more readily than others
receptor specificity between virus and particular animal hosts
In which stage of viral multiplication would you expect to see "budding" occur?
release
Because it synthesizes DNA directly from RNA using reverse transcriptase, HIV is described as a
retrovirus
in some viruses, including HIV, the enzyme ___________ ___________ transcribes RNA into DNA
reverse transcriptase