Introduction to Microbes
Prokaryotes: Bacteria & Archaea
Eukaryotic Cells & Microorganisms
Viruses
Microbial Techniques & Non-cellular Agents
100

This specialized area of biology deals with living things that are extremely small to be seen without magnification.

What is microbiology?

100

This term describes the variation in size and shape of cells of a single species due to nutritional and genetic differences.

What is pleomorphism?

100

These single-celled eukaryotic organisms are often called "first animals" and mostly live harmlessly in water or soil.

What are protozoa?

100

Viruses are considered these types of parasites because they cannot multiply unless they invade a specific host cell.

What are obligate intracellular parasites?

100

This in vitro method of viral cultivation involves growing cells in sterile chambers with special nutrient media.

What is cell tissue culture?

200

These three domains make up the classification of all living organisms.

What are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya?

200

This structure, made of carbohydrates or glycoproteins, provides protection from the environment and allows attachment to surfaces.

What is the glycocalyx?

200

This theory explains the origin of eukaryotic organelles as primitive cells that became trapped in larger cells.

What is the endosymbiotic theory?

200

This term describes the protein shell surrounding the nucleic acid in a virus.

What is a capsid?

200

These clear patches in a cell culture sheet indicate areas where virus-infected cells have been destroyed.

What are plaques?

300

This historical belief suggested that invisible life forces present in matter led to the creation of life.

What is spontaneous generation?

300

This component of the bacterial cell wall is targeted by penicillin and ampicillin antibiotics.

What is peptidoglycan?

300

These two forms of microscopic fungi can sometimes be exhibited by the same species in a phenomenon called dimorphism.

What are molds and yeasts?

300

This type of virus cycle involves the viral DNA entering an inactive state and inserting into the bacterial chromosome.

What is the lysogenic cycle?

300

This virus-like agent that parasitizes plants is composed of naked strands of RNA without a capsid or other coating.

What are viroids?

400

This scientist invented pasteurization and developed the germ theory of disease.

Who is Louis Pasteur?

400

This process, occurring in some Gram-positive bacteria, forms dormant bodies resistant to heat, pressure, and chemicals.

What is sporulation?

400

This structure in eukaryotic cells, used for movement, has a characteristic 9+2 arrangement of microtubules.

What are flagella or cilia?

400

These are compacted masses of viruses or damaged organelles in the nucleus or cytoplasm of an infected cell.

What are inclusion bodies?

400

This antiviral approach causes virus-infected cells to trigger their own death.

What is DRACO (Double-stranded RNA Activated Caspase Oligomerizer)?

500

These are the four steps of Koch's postulates used to establish whether an organism is pathogenic.

What are: 

1) Obtain sample 

2) Grow the agent in lab and inoculate a healthy individual 

3) Observe signs of disease

4) Re-isolate the agent and confirm it's the same as the initial inoculation?

500

This acid-fast staining technique is used for bacteria with waxy cell walls containing 60% mycolic acid, such as Mycobacterium.

What is the Ziehl-Neelsen stain?

500

These macroscopic, multicellular eukaryotic parasites include tapeworms, flukes, and roundworms.

What are helminths?

500

This non-cellular infectious agent, composed of misfolded proteins, is responsible for spongiform encephalopathies.

What are prions?

500

This type of virus depends on other viruses for replication and includes the adeno-associated virus (AAV).

What are satellite viruses?

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