Ch 1
Ch 2
Ch 3
Ch 5
Ch 6
100

Which of the following are eukaryotic microbes?

A) Bacteria

B) Archaea

C) Fungi

D) Protozoa

C & D.) Fungi and Protozoa

100

Purpose of adhesions in microbes

to attach to host cells

100

What is the total magnification if the ocular lens is 10× and the objective is 40×?

total magnification = 400x

100

Name one key structural difference between Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.

Gram-positive = thick peptidoglycan, teichoic acids

Gram-negative = thin peptidoglycan + outer membrane with LPS

100

What type of cell division do bacteria use?

Binary fission

200

The theory that Louis Pasteur disproved with his swan-neck flask experiment

Spontaneous generation, which was the idea that living organisms can arise from non-living matter.

200

Name the 7 F’s of transmission.

Fingers, Flies, Food, Fluids, Fomites, Feces, Fornication

200

In Gram staining, why do Gram-positive cells remain purple while Gram-negative do not?

Gram-positive have thick peptidoglycan that retains the crystal violet stain ; Gram-negative have thin walls that lose it during decolorization

200

What is the function of pili in bacteria?

Attachment and DNA transfer (conjugation)

200

Blood agar is an example of what type of media?

complex media

300

The reason why viruses are considered noncellular

they cannot reproduce on their own

300

The difference between facultative anaerobes and aerotolerant anaerobes

facultative: prefers oxygen but can survive without it

aerotolerant: cannot use oxygen at all but can tolerate its presence.

300

Which type of microscopy relies on the scattering of light?

Darkfield microscopy



300

When Gram-negative bacteria lyse, this component of their outer membrane triggers a massive immune response, potentially causing fever, inflammation, and septic shock.

lipid A

300

A psychrophile that can grow in refrigerated food.

Listeria monocytogenes

400

Name 2 reasons why microbes are essential for life on Earth.

fix nitrogen into forms used by plants, produce vitamins humans consume, serve as primary producers in food webs, decompose organic matter

400

A graph shows two strains of bacteria: Strain A LD₅₀ = 10³, Strain B LD₅₀ = 10⁶. Which is more virulent and why?

Strain A, because a lower LD₅₀ means fewer organisms are needed to cause disease

400

Why doesn’t penicillin work against Mycoplasma?

Mycoplasma lack a cell wall, so penicillin (which targets peptidoglycan) is ineffective

400

Compare swimming and swarming motility in flagella

Swimming = flagella in liquid

Swarming = flagella in semi-solid/jelly surfaces

400

Culture A starts with 500 cells and doubles every 30 minutes. Culture B starts with 2,000 cells and doubles every 1 hour. After 3 hours, which culture has more cells, and how many does each have?

Culture A has more cells. It has 32,000 while culture B has 16,000.

500

Name a limitation of Koch's postulates

Certain pathogens only cause symptoms during some cases of infection (latent infections; ex. HIV)

Some pathogens only infect humans

There are pathogens which have progressive infections that are difficult to detect early

500

Name the stages of an acute infectious disease in order

incubation, prodromal, illness, decline, convalescence, long term

500

Put the 4 Gram stain steps in order and name the agents


Crystal violet (primary stain) → Iodine (mordant) → ethanol (decolorized) → Safranin (counterstain)

500

The sizes of prokaryotic ribosomal subunits compared to eukaryotic ribosomal subunits.

30S and 50S (70s) for prokaryotes

40S and 60S (80s) for eukaryotes

500

How does Helicobacter pylori survive in the acidic stomach if it is not an acidophile?

It produces urease, which breaks down urea to ammonia, neutralizing stomach acid around the bacterium

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