Microbe Structure
Classes and Clades
Genetics
Microbial Metabolism
Viruses
100

What are three things that all cells have

DNA, Cell membrane, Ribosomes

100

How do you correctly display the scientific name of a micricrobe?

First letter capitalized, all in italics or underlined

100

What are the nucleotides talked about in class, and where are they found? (just letters are fine)

Thymine (T, DNA only), Adenine (A, RNA+DNA), Cytosine (C, DNA+RNA), Guanine (G, DNA+RNA), and Uracil (U, RNA only)

100

What is the primary molecule used to do work within the cell?

ATP

100

Why aren't viruses considered to be living organisms?

Simply put, they are too simple. (no homeostasis, no growth, no metabolism)

200

What is the purpose of the cell membrane?

Protects the cell as a "final barrier" for entry into the cytoplasm

200

What is the difference between a STRAIN and a SPECIES?

Strains are small differences within a species that are not big enough to differentiate the two in a major way.

200

What is the term for information going from DNA to RNA?

Transcription

200

What are the 4 possible stages of cellular respiration?

Glycolysis, fermentation, Krebs cycle/Citric acid cycle, and electron transport chain

200

What are the different components of viruses?

A protein sheath/coat and genetic material

300

What differentiates Gram+ bacteria from Gram- bacteria?

The thickness of the peptidoglycan.

300

What is the term for an organism that does not require oxygen, but will utilize it if it is available?

Facultative Anaerobe.

300

What is the codon and requisite amino acid that indicates the start of the translation process?

Methionine, AUG

300

Where do all stages of cellular respiration take place? (include distinctions for prokaryotes vs eukaryotes)

Glycolysis: cytoplasm for both

Fermentation: cytoplasm for both

Krebs cycle: mitochondria for eukaryotes, cytoplasm for prokaryotes

ETC: inner mitochondrial membrane for eukaryotes, cell membrane for prokaryotes

300

What are the three categories (morphologies) of viruses?

Isometric (polyhedral), Filamentous, and complex.

400

What is Chitin and where is it found in relation to this class?

This organic compound is integrated into the cell walls of Fungi

400

You are studying a species to see what its optimum growth temperatures are. After performing your tests, the species growth rate was found to be around 10 degrees Celsius. What kind of species is it?

Psychrophile (<15 C)

400

Which direction does replication follow along the DNA?

5' to 3' direction

400

What kind of concentration gradient does the ETC create?

A proton gradient (with H+ ions, specifically)

400

What is it called when a bacteriophages' genome is incorporated into the bacteria's genome?

Lysogeny

500

What is a Biofilm? 

A system that results in bacteria secreting a substance that protects the colony from exterior threats

500

Bacterium related to Tuberculosis are not stained by Crystal Violet or Safranin. What technique do you need to use to properly stain these bacteria?

Acid-fast stain (you don't do this in lab, but it is talked about)

500

What are the names and functions of all the enzymes that make up the replisome?

Helicase: unwinds helix and separates strands

Gyrase: prevents supercoiling

RNA primase: attaches primer to DNA, allows DNA polymerase to attach

DNA polymerase III: main copying enzyme

DNA polymerase I: Removes primers and replaces them with DNA

Ligase: seals gaps in Okazaki fragments, completing lagging strand synthesis


500

If the second protein in the ETC suddenly stops working, what happens to the rest of the chain?

The cycle stops. No more protons can be pumped through the membrane, and the enzymes further along will not get the resources they need to do their job.

500

What are the 5 steps a virus takes to infect a cell and replicate?

Adsorption (binding), Entry (genome enters cell), Uncoating (releasing the nucleic acid), Synthesis (viral components produced), Assembly (viral genome is surrounded by capsid), and Release.

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