Microbiology 2: Mycology, Mold and Yeasts
What does the growth on an overlaid agar look like for Malassezia furfur?
"Bowling pin" or "Pop bottle"
What are the characteristics of fungi?
- Eukaryotes; have nuclei - aerobes and live on dead, organic matter - Chitin in cell walls - Neutral pH - Examples are yeasts, molds, mushrooms
What are clinical specimens for fungal cultures?
- respiratory secretions - cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) - blood - eye (corneal scrapings) - hair, skin, and nail scrapings - vaginal - urine - tissue, bone marrow, and sterile body fluids
Explain the incubation requirements for fungal media:
- room temperature (30 C) - minimum of 21-30 days - humidity: 40%-50% - examined at least three times a week
What are common virulence factors of fungal infections?
- size of the organism - ability to grow at 37 degrees C at a neutral pH - conversion of mycelial form to yeast or spherule form - toxin production
Sparsely septate hyphae
AKA aseptate hyphae. Contain few separations
How should colony morphology be noted for fungal cultures?
Color and growth should be noted for front and reverse surfaces of the agar
Differentiate Endothrix and Ectothrix
Endothrix: hair shaft is filled with arthroconidia Ectothrix: spores are found around the hair shaft
Mycology is the study of:
Fungi
What is the most important any easiest test to perform for yeast?
Germ tube
What is Trichosporon spp. stained for?
Hyaline hyphae Numerous arthroconidia Few blastoconidia
Which Trichophyton does not invade the hair shaft and which one does? Trichophyton rubrum/ Trichophyton mentagrophytes
Invades hair shaft: Trichophyton mentagrophytes Does not invade hair shaft: Trichophyton rubrum
What does "lid lifter" associate with?
Mucorales
For Trichophytons, do infected hairs fluoresce under Wood's lamp (UV light)?
No, infected hairs do not fluoresce under Wood's lamp
What is the identification for Trichosporon spp.?
Urease positive and substrate utilization profile
Where are Mucorales distributed?
Worldwide
At what temperature is the mold phase of a dimorphism organism? a. 22-25 degrees C b. 4-10 degrees C c. 37 degrees C with increased CO2
a. 22-25 degrees C
Which of the following is associated with skin and nails? a. Epidermophyton b. Microsporum c. Trichophyton
a. Epidermophyton
What do you examine the skin scrapings with for Malassezia furfur? a. KOH b. India ink c. florescent light
a. KOH
Which of the following is associated with Ringworm of the Beard? a. Tinea barbae b. Tinea pedis c. Tinea capitis d. Tinea unguium
a. Tinea barbae
Which of the following is associated with Ringworm of the Scalp? a. Tinea capitis b. Tinea corporis c. Tinea cruris d. Tinea unguium
a. Tinea capitis
Which of the following occasionally reproduced asexually? a. anamorph b. teleomorph c. synanomorph
a. anamorph
What does verrucous mean? a. furrowed or convoluted b. slightly raised in the center c. furrows radiate out from the center (wrinkle)
a. furrowed or convoluted
How is velvety texture explained? (fungal) a. low aerial mycelium b. dense and powdery c. loose, high aerial mycelium d. high aerial mycelium that is slightly matted down
a. low aerial mycelium
Which of the following describes Zygospores? a. sexual phase of zygomycetes b. saclike structure containing sporagiospores only in zygomycetes c. formed directly from hyphae but are round d. structure that contains the conidia
a. sexual phase of zygomycetes
What specimen is used for Malassezia furfur? a. skin scrapings b. vaginal swab c. feces d. blood
a. skin scrapings
Which describes Ascospores? a. spores contained in the asci or sexual spores b. fragments of hyphae that form spores c. saclike structure containing sporagiospores only in zygomycetes d. large structure containing sexual spores
a. spores contained in the asci or sexual spores
Infections often involve the lungs but can disseminate to any organ: a. systemic mycoses b. oportunistic mycoses c. subcutaneous mycoses d. superficial cutaneous mycoses
a. systemic mycoses
Asexual reproduction: how are phialides described? a. vase-like structures b. ringed structures c. fruiting structures
a. vase-like structures
Which molds grow in agar? a. vegetative mycelium b. aerial mycelium c. Zygomycota d. Ascomycota
a. vegatative mycelium
What is the color of the reverse side of Trichophyton rubrum? a. wine-red b. blue-green c. rose-brown d. creamy white
a. wine-red
What is dimorphism?
ability to exist in two forms based on growth conditions
What media is preferred over screw-capped agar for fungal cultures?
agar plants
How do Dermatophytes utilize keratin?
as nitrogen source
How do ascomycota reproduce sexually?
ascospores
What Candida spp. is prevalent in patients with hematological malignancies? a. C. krusei b. C. tropicalis c. C. parasilosis
b. C. tropicalis
What is the most premier cause of yeast infections in the world? a. blastschizomyces b. Candida albicans c. Candida glabrata
b. Candida albicans
What yeast tends to be aggressive and difficult to treat with traditional anti fungal therapy? a. Candida albicans b. Candida glabrata c.Cryptococcus neoformans
b. Candida glabrata
What yeast is the India ink test used for? a. Candida albicans b. Cryptococcus neoformans c. Malassezia furfur
b. Cryptococcus neoformans
What is the most commonly used detection method for molds? a. potassium hydroxide (KOH) preparation b. Lactophenol cotton blue mounts c. India ink stain d. Calcofluor white stain
b. Lactophenol cotton blue mounts
Which of the following is associated with hair and skin? a. Epidermophyton b. Microsporum c. Trichophyton
b. Microsporum
Which of the following is associated with Ringworm of the Body? a. Tinea capitis b. Tinea corporis c. Tinea cruris d. Tinea unguium
b. Tinea corporis
Which of the following is associated with Ringworm of the Feet? a. Tinea barbae b. Tinea pedis c. Tinea capitis d. Tinea unguium
b. Tinea pedis
Which molds grow "upward and outward" on a plate? a. vegetative mycelium b. aerial mycelium c. Zygomycota d. Ascomycota
b. aerial mycelium
How is granular texture explained? (fungal) a. low aerial mycelium b. dense and powdery c. loose, high aerial mycelium d. high aerial mycelium that is slightly matted down
b. dense and powdery
Which is associated with Asocarp? a. asexual reproduction cycle b. large structure containing sexual spores c. fragments of hyphae that form spores d. formed directly from hyphae but are round
b. large structure containing sexual spores
What is overlaid on a blood culture for Malassezia furfur? a. E. coli b. olive oil c. antibiotics
b. olive oil
Infections occur in patients who are immunocompromised: a. systemic mycoses b. oportunistic mycoses c. subcutaneous mycoses d. superficial cutaneous mycoses
b. opportunistic mycoses
Asexual reproduction: how are annelides described? a. vase-like structures b. ringed structures c. fruiting structures
b. ringed structures
Which of the following describe Sporangium? a. sexual phase of zygomycetes b. saclike structure containing sporagiospores only in zygomycetes c. formed directly from hyphae but are round d. structure that contains the conidia
b. saclike structure containing sporagiospores only in zygomycetes
What does umbonate mean? a. furrowed or convoluted b. slightly raised in the center c. furrows radiate out from the center (wrinkle)
b. slightly raised in the center
Which describes conidiophores? a. spores contained in the asci or sexual spores b. Structure that contains the conidia c. fragments of hyphae that form spores d. sexual phase of zygomycetes
b. structure that contains the conidia
Which of the following has "perfect sexual reproduction"? a. anamorph b. teleomorph c. synanomorph
b. teleomorph
What is Candida albicans associated with? a. scarlet fever b. thrush c. "flu" d. diarrhea
b. thrush
Cryptococcus neoformans can be presumptively identified by what rapid test? a. citrate b. urease c. MR-VP
b. urease
What might Trichosporon spp. cause in immunocompromised patients? a. thrush b. white piedra c. leukemia
b. white piedra
How do basidiomycota reproduce sexually?
basidiospores
How would yeasts be described? biochemical or filamentous?
biochemical
How do yeasts replicate?
budding or fission
At what temperature is the yeast phase of a dimorphism organism? a. 22-25 degrees C b. 4-10 degrees C c. 37 degrees C with increased CO2
c. 37 degrees C with increased CO2
Which Candida spp is the primary cause of fungemia in the NICU? a. C. krusei b. C. tropicalis c. C. parasilosis
c. C. parasilosis
What causes brownish scaly lesions on light-skinned individuals (tinea versicolor)? a. Candida albicans b. Cryptococcus neoformans c. Malassezia furfur
c. Malassezia furfur
What has a hyphal arrangement that looks like "spaghetti and meatballs"? a. Candida albicans b. Cryptococcus neoformans c. Malassezia furfur
c. Malassezia furfur
Which of the following is associated with Ringworm of the Groin? a. Tinea capitis b. Tinea corporis c. Tinea cruris d. Tinea unguium
c. Tinea cruris
Which of the following is associated with hair, skin, and nails? a. Epidermophyton b. Microsporum c. Trichophyton
c. Trichophyton
Which mold looks like "birds on a fence"? a. Microsporum gypseum b. Epidermophyton floccosum c. Trichophyton rubrum d. Aspergillus niger
c. Trichophyton rubrum
Which of the following describes Chlamydoconidia? a. sexual phase of zygomycetes b. saclike structure containing sporagiospores only in zygomycetes c. formed directly from hyphae but are round d. structure that contains the conidia
c. formed directly from hyphae but are round
Which describes Arhroconidia? a. spores contained in the asci or sexual spores b. Structure that contains the conidia c. fragments of hyphae that form spores d. sexual phase of zygomycetes
c. fragments of hyphae that form spores
Asexual reproduction: how are conidia described? a. vase-like structures b. ringed structures c. fruiting structures
c. fruiting structures
What does rugose mean? a. furrowed or convoluted b. slightly raised in the center c. furrows radiate out from the center (wrinkle)
c. furrows radiate out from the center (wrinkle)
How is cottony texture explained? (fungal) a. low aerial mycelium b. dense and powdery c. loose, high aerial mycelium d. high aerial mycelium that is slightly matted down
c. loose, high aerial mycelium
Which of the following is NOT associated with Mucorales? a. diabetes mellitus b. prolonged drug therapy c. pernicious anemia d. dead tissue e. lung infections, GI problems f. all of the above
c. pernicious anemia
Infections confined to subcutaneous tissue without dissemination: a. systemic mycoses b. oportunistic mycoses c. subcutaneous mycoses d. superficial cutaneous mycoses
c. subcutaneous mycoses
Which of the following has different asexual forms in the same fungus? a. anamorph b. teleomorph c. synanomorph
c. synanomorph
How do Deuteromycota reproduce asexually?
conidia
How do ascomycota reproduce asexually?
conidia
What yeast produces a pigment on niger seed agar? a. a. C. krusei b. C. tropicalis c. C. parasilosis d. C. neoformans
d. Cryptococcus neoformans
Which of the following is associated with Ringworm of the Nail? a. Tinea barbae b. Tinea pedis c. Tinea capitis d. Tinea unguium
d. Tinea unguium
What media is used for fungal cultures? a. With & without cyclohexamide b. Saboraud's agar with and without antibacterial agent c. brain heart infusion (BHI) d. all of the above e. b and c only
d. all of the above
On what are Mucorales found? a. decaying vegetable matter b. bread c. in the soil d. all of the above
d. all of the above - decaying in vegetable matter - bread - in soil
How are Mucorales infections acquired? a. inhalation b. percutaneous routes c. ingestion of spores d. all of the above
d. all of the above - inhalation - percutaneous routes - ingestion of spores
How is wooly texture explained? (fungal) a. low aerial mycelium b. dense and powdery c. loose, high aerial mycelium d. high aerial mycelium that is slightly matted down
d. high aerial mycelium that is slightly matted down
Blastoshizomyces app is an emerging pathogen found in primary _______ patients? a. young b. adult c. obese d. immunocompromised
d. immunocompromised
Infections that involve the hair, skin, or nails without direct invasion of deep tissue: a. systemic mycoses b. oportunistic mycoses c. subcutaneous mycoses d. superficial cutaneous mycoses
d. superficial cutaneous mycoses
Cryptococcus neoformans can cause what? a. Meningitis b. Pneumonia c. Septicemia d. Hepatitis e. A, B, and C only f. A, B, and D only
e. a, b, and c only
Which of the following are considered vegetative mycelium? a. Arthrospores b. Chlamydospores c. Conidia d. Blastosphores e. Sproangia f. A, B, D only g. C & E only h. all of the above
f. A, B, D only
Cornmeal agar determines if the yeast produces: a. Blastoconidia b. Arthroconidia c. Pseudohyphae d. True hyphae e. Chlamydoconidia f. All of the above
f. all of the above
How would molds be described? biochemical or filamentous?
filamentous
How are arthroconidia formed?
fragmentation of fertile hyphae
Which of the following are considered Aerial mycelium? a. Arthrospores b. Chlamydospores c. Conidia d. Blastosphores e. Sproangia f. A, B, D only g. C & E only h. all of the above
g. C & E only
Blastoschizomyces spp. is isolated from patients with debilitating diseases, such as: a.Leukemia b.Renal Transplants c.Ambulatroy dialysis d.Spondyciscitis e. Osteomyelitits f. A and C only g. all the above
g. all the above
For what specimen is the Potassium hydroxide (KOH) preparation used?
hair and skin
septate hyphae:
hyphae with cross walls
What do dermatophytes require for growth?
keratin
What conidia does this explain: smooth, club-shaped and thin walled macroconidia or microconidia
macroconidia
What conidia does this explain: sperhical, pyriform, or clavate macroconidia or microconidia
microconidia
What do yeast colonies look like?
small, smooth, creamy, moist
How do zygomycota reproduce asexually?
sporangiospores
What is polymorphism?
the ability to form yeast and mold in the same culture
How do zygomycota reproduce sexually?
zygospores