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Stains
Enzymes
Microscopy
Metabolism
100
Why do we stain samples, what does it help with?
What is It increases contrast and resolution
100
A type of energy that decreases with the presence of an enzyme.
What is Activation Energy
100
The space between the lens of a microscope and the specimen.
What is the working distance
100
A process your body uses to break down glucose that results in water and carbon dioxide.
What is Cellular Respiration
200
In a gram stain a gram positive cell will be _____ and a gram negative cell will be_____.
What is Purple, pink
200
The molecule upon which an enzyme acts.
What is Substrate
200
Type of microscope used to examine living microorganisms or fragile specimens.
What is a phase microscope
200
Energy is stored in the chemical bonds of which molecule?
What is ATP
300
What type of special stain is repulsed by the negative charge of the cell but instead stains the background and leaves the cell colorless?
What is A Negative (Capsule) Stain
300
The protein portion of protein enzymes that is inactive unless bound to one or more cofactors.
What is Apoenzyme
300
Microscope that produces monotone, two-dimensional, highly magnified images.
What is a Transmission electron microscope
300
The three stages of glucose breakdown in the body are glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and which process?
What is Electron transport chain
400
What special stain is used to see the flagellum on a cell?
What is Flagellar Stain
400
An enzyme that is neither catabolic nor anabolic.
What is Isomerase
400
A staining technique that uses heat to drive a primary stain into an endospore.
What is a Schaeffer-Fulton endospore stain
400
Three important electron carrier molecules are FAD, NADP+, and which molecule?
What is NAD+