FSE 120 - midterm
micro
"extremely small"
bio
"life"
staphyl
"spherical or ball shape
what is a prokaryote
- do not have a membrane bound nucleus - DNA is localized to nucleoid and is attached to plasma membrane - cell wall is composed of peptidoglycan
what is a eukaryote
- have membrane bound organelles - DNA is held within the nucleus - 10x larger than prokaryote cells - more complex DNA
5 factors that influence effectiveness of chemical agents
1) population size- larger = longer to kill 2) types of species present - multiple species are harder to kill 3) state of development of cell matter 4)temperature of disinfectant during exposure 5) environmental factors - PH, viscosity
describe the process of binary fission
1)Chromosome attaches to special plasma membrane site 2)Cell wall, plasma membrane, and overall volume of cell enlarges 3)DNA replicates into two identical chromosomes and the cell wall/ plasma membrane begin to grow inward or pinch together 4)The cells continues to pinch together and elongate while the chromosomes are pulled apart and the cytoplasm is distributed evenly throughout the two sides of the cell 5)A new cell wall and plasma membrane has been formed between the two cells, dividing into a daughter cell
what percentage of water is the human body
60% water
hypertonic solution
A solution in which the concentration of solutes is greater than that of the cell that resides in the solution
Who discovered penicillin?
Alexander Fleming
Saprophyte
An organism that feeds on dead matter
Which bacterium has an optimum pH at pH 1 and where is it located in the human body
Helicobacter pylori is located in the stomach
obligate anaerobe
MUST NOT have oxygen to survive
hypotonic solution
Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water
Sterilization
The process that completely destroys all microbial life, including spores.
thermophile
a bacterium or other microorganism that grows best at higher than normal temperatures.
endospore
a bacterium surrounded by a thick, protective membrane
isotonic solution
a solution whose solute concentration is equal to the solute concentration inside a cell
facultative
able to adapt to different conditions; able to grow in environments either with or without oxygen
what is the purpose of a capsule on a bacterium
allows the cell to avoid the immune system and stick to surfaces
surfactant
alters surface tension of cell membranes causing cell content to leak killing the cell
vector
anthropod - organism that spreads infections
binary fission
asexual reproduction in which a cell divides into two equal parts
psychrophile
bacteria that prefer cold, thriving at temperatures between 0 C and 25 C.
mesophile
bacteria that prefers moderate temperature between 25 C and 40 C
vegetative cell
bacterium cell that became an endospore changes back into the fully developed bacterium from which it came
selectively permeable
cell membrane is one that allows certain molecules or ions to pass through it by means of active or passive transport.
strepto
chain
Halogens
chemical disinfectant that oxidizes components of the microbial cells
Quats (Quaternary Ammonium Compounds)
chemical disinfectants that damage cell membranes and denature proteins
iodophore
compound of iodine and surfactant used as a chemical disinfectant
what disease gave milkmaids immunity to smallpox
cowpox
Agonal Algor
decrease in body temperature immediately before death
alcohols
denature proteins and dissolve lipids
Phenol
denatures proteins and disrupts cell membranes; does not kill endospores
antibiotic
destroys microorganism
Disinfection
destruction of pathogenic agents by disinfections inanimate objects
two aspects of the embalming process
disinfection, preservation
name the levels of classification in order
domain, kingdom, division, class, order, family, genus, species
protozoa
eukaryotes with no cell wall and do not cause disease
mycoses
fungal infection
chlorine
gas which is often combine with water
slime layer
glycocalyx is unorganized and loosely attached to the cell wall
agonal fever
increase in body temp immediately before death
aerotolerant
indifferent to oxygen
virus
intracellular infectious parasite that contain one type of nucleic acid (RNA or DNA) and must feast on host cells to reproduce
germicide
kill many microbes but not endospores
bactericide
kills bacteria but not endospores
fungicide
kills fungi and their spores
insecticide
kills insects
viricide
kills viruses
thermal death point
lowest temp at which all microbes are killed in 10 minutes
Placing remains in a refrigerated unit slows the growth of which type of bacteria
mesophyllic bacteria
obligate
microorganism MUST have a certain condition to survive
What is the germ theory of disease?
microorganisms cause disease
pathogen
microorganisms that cause disease in humans
thermal death time
minimum times it takes to kill all microbes present
4 types of flagella
monotrichous - one whiplike appendage amphitrichous - one flagellum at with end of cell lophotrichous - two or more flagella at either end peritrichous- flagella distributed all over the cell
obligate aerobe
must have oxygen to survive
what bacterium do not have cell wall
mycoplasmas
viroid
only contains RNA with no protein coat
iodine
oxidizes certain molecules within microbial cells
what are 3 basic arrangements of bacteria
pairs, chains, clusters
scrubbing
physical method of controlling microbial growth (physicalling scrubbing inanimate objects)
what is the structure of a virus
piece of genetic material wrapping in protein, containing one nucleic acid (DNA or RNA)
cyanobacteria
produces 20% of the earth's oxygen
what are the four kingdoms
protista (single cell organisms) fungi (yeasts, molds) plantae (photosynthetic) animalia (animals)
What genus of bacteria is commonly associated with secondary infections in burn patient
pseudomonas
aldehydes
react with proteins and alter their chemical structure
Heterotrophic
require complex organic food from a carbon source to grow and develop
microaerophilic
requires only a small amount of oxygen
antisepsis
sanitation that reduces microbial growth on living tissue
Autotrophic
self nourishing bacteria that obtain nutrients from the carbon in carbon dioxide
fimbriae
short flat straight appendage used for attaching to surfaces in bacteria cells
plasmid
small circle of DNA inside the cytoplasm but separate from the main chromosome
prion
small proteinaceous infectious particles that cause spongiform encephalopathy diseases
tincture
solution of iodine and alcohol used as a chemical disinfectant
what are 3 basic shapes of bacteria
spheres (coccus) rods (bacillus) serial/helical (spirilla)
what can kill endospores
sterilization but not disinfection
three levels of controlling microbial growth
sterilization, disinfection, antisepsis
glycocalyx
sticky gelatinous coating that surrounds cell wall
name the 3 categories of heterotrophic bacteria
strict saprophytes - only survive on dead/decaying matter strict parasites - completely dependent on a living host facultative- bacteria that can adapt to different sources of nutrition
bacteriology
study of bacteria
morphology
study of different shapes, sizes, arrangements of bacteria
rickettsiology
study of rickettsia
Virology
study of viruses
mycology
study or fungi
name 3 types ofmycoses
superficial - occur in outermost layer of skin cutaneous - infections of hair, skin, nails caused by dermatophytes subcutaneous - occurs deep in the skin and tissues
what is the purpose of the cell wall
support and protection from rupturing with changes in osmotic pressure
mutualism
symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit from the relationship
commensalism
symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed
antagonism
symbiotic relationship where one organisms inhibits the growth or the other
synergism
symbiotic relationship with two or more organisms produce an effect neither could produce alone
sporulation
the process of forming an endospore
Microbiology
the study of microorganisms and their effects on living things
decimal reduction time
time in minutes it takes to kill 90% of present microbes
symbiosis
two or more species live together in a close, long-term association
capsule
type of outer coating around cell wall that is organized and firmly attached externally to cell wall
bacteriophage
virus that infects bacteria
name 3 categories of fungi
yeast, mold, dimorphic fungi