Biotechnology
Adaptations
Metabolism
Environments
People and Places
Potpourri
200

An enzyme from this thermophilic bacterium revolutionized molecular biology by enabling the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) to withstand high temperatures.

What is Thermus aquaticus?

200

This type of protein helps extremophiles to maintain their structure and function at high temperatures.

What are heat shock proteins?  (Also acceptable: chaperonins)

200

This process allows organisms to produce organic matter using energy derived from the oxidation of inorganic molecules like hydrogen sulfide, instead of sunlight.

What is chemosynthesis?

200

Xerophiles survive in these extreme environments.

What are deserts? (Also acceptable: extremely dry, or low moisture)

200
Deep-sea hydrothermal vents are thought to be analogs of potential habitats for life beneath the icy surface of this Jovian moon.

What is Europa?

200

Acidophiles maintain internal pH by actively exporting these ions.

What are protons or hydrogen ions (H+)?

400

Two reasons halophiles are advantageous in PHA production.

What are a reduced risk of contamination and utilization of waste and industrial byproducts?  (also acceptable: cost efficiency)

400

Psychrophilic organisms adapt to cold environments by increasing the proportion of these types of fatty acids in their membranes to maintain fluidity.

What are unsaturated fatty acids?

400

This metabolic process involves microorganisms producing methane by reducing carbon dioxide with hydrogen gas under anaerobic conditions.

What is methanogenesis?

400

The gut of these organisms can have a pH>11

What are soil-feeding termites?

400

This river in Spain is known for its extreme acidity and high iron content, providing a terrestrial analog for Martian environments.

What is the Rio Tinto?

400

This process describes the production of ATP without the presence oxygen.

What is anaerobic respiration? (also acceptable: Fermentation)

600

These proteinaceous antimicrobial substances are secreted by halophilic Archaea.

What are halocins?

600

This ion is used to power flagella in alkaliphilic microorganisms.

What are sodium ions?

600

Some bacteria utilize a metabolic strategy to gain energy by oxidizing this compound to sulfate in oxygen-poor environments.

What is sulfide?  Also acceptable: thiosulfate or S0

600

This desert on Earth is used as a Mars analog due to its extreme aridity and high UV radiation, aiding in the development of life-detection instruments.

What is the Atacama Desert?

600

This is one of 4 properties of Prof Tor's favorite extremophile (Ferroglobus placidus).

What is hyperthermophilic? OR Fe(III) reducer OR oxidizes all major macromolecules and aromatic compounds OR is an electrogen

600

Halophiles maintain protein functionality in high-salt environments by having an excess of these amino acids on their protein surfaces.

What are acidic amino acids (e.g. aspartic and glutamic acid)?

800

This acidophilic archaeon is utilized in bioleaching to extract metals like gold and copper from ores through oxidation processes.

What is Sulfolobus acidocaldarius?

800

Some extremophiles possess membranes composed of this lipid, forming a monolayer that enhances membrane stability in extreme conditions.

What are tetraether lipids?

800

Certain extremophiles perform this anoxygenic photosynthesis using this trans-membrane protein instead of chlorophyll to harvest light energy.

What is bacteriorhodopsin?

800

Organisms such as giant tube worms and vent mussels survive without digestive systems by hosting chemosynthetic bacteria within their bodies—a prime example of this close biological interaction essential for nutrient exchange in extreme environments.

What is symbiosis?

800

This microbiology professor, along with an undergraduate researcher discovered Thermus aquaticus in a hot spring in Yellowstone National Park.  (Double points: name of the spring)

Who is Thomas Brock (and Hudson Freeze)?  (Mushroom spring)

800

In the anaerobic respiration of extremophiles, molecules like sulfate, nitrate, or carbon dioxide perform this critical role enabling energy production in the absence of oxygen.

What is a terminal electron acceptor?

1000

This class of enzymes, obtained from extremophiles, are used in detergents to remove stains from clothes.

What are proteases?  (also acceptable: cellulase or lipase)

1000

Hyperthermophilic archaea stabilize their DNA at high temperatures by introducing positive supercoils using this unique enzyme.

What is reverse gyrase?

1000

This compound is used to store excess carbon and energy and is often seen as granules in microscopic images.

What are polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs)?

1000

This geological process involves the hydrothermal alteration of ultramafic rocks in the Earth's mantle, producing hydrogen and methane that fuel chemosynthetic microbial communities in some deep-sea environments.

What is serpentinization?

1000

The author of this phrase: "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."

Who is Carl Sagan?

1000

The four characteristics of thermophilic proteins when compared to mesophiles.

What are (1) more ion pairs, (2) greater hydrophobicity of interior, (3) more disulfide bonds, and (4) more hydrogen bonds.

M
e
n
u