This is where flagella grow from in Archaea.
What is the base?
Chloroplasts evolved from this ancestor.
What is cyanobacteria?
What is a bacteriophage?
The person who first discovered microorganims.
Who is Van Leeuwenhook?
Who is Robert Hooke?
Some Archaea have lipid monolayers due to this reason.
What is the 'lack of fluidity provides better structure'?
This environment and adaption was essential for the evolution of the complex eukaryotes.
What is oxygenic aka aerobic and cellular respiration?
The essential structures for a virus.
What is a nucleocapsid (genome & capsid)?
The person who debunked spontaneous generation.
Who is Louis Pastuer?
The discoverer of archaea.
Who is Karl Woese?
Peptidoglycan is not used in Archae but they still have cecll walls. Their cell wall can be instead constructed from these two things.
Mitochondria evolved from this ancestor.
What is proteobacteria?
Envelopes (a lipid bilayer) are most commonly found in this type of virus.
What is an animal virus?
The person who proved the germ theory of disease.
Who is Robert Koch?
The discoverer of the first virus.
Who is Ivanovski who discovered the tobacco mosaic virus?
Archaea PM differs quite a bit from bacterial or eukaryotic membranes. This is the type of bond and what makes up the polar head of archaea.
What is ether linkages and glycerol 1-phosphate?
What is microtubules, microfilaments and intermediate filaments?
What is helical and icosahedral?
The person who discovered penicillin?
Who is Alexander Flemming?
The creator of the first vaccine.
Who is Louis Pastuer?
This is the structural difference between bilayer and monolayer Archaea PMs.
What is the biphytanyl (mono) and phytanyl (bi)?
How the eukaryotic flagella is powered and moves.
What is dynein sliding along the microtubules via ATP hydrolysis?
The reason a viroid is not a virus.
What is 'it has no capsid'?
The person who discovered how prions work.
Who is Stanely Prusiner?
The person who created agar media and petridishes.
Who is Robert Koch?