microbiology

  1. mircroorganisms
    an organism that is too small to be seen clearly  with the naked eye and is often unicellular, or if multicellular, does not exhibit a high degree of differentiation
  2. prokaryotic cells
    cells having a type of structure characterized by the lack of a true, membrane-enclosed nucleus. All known members of Archaea and most Bacteria exhibit this type of cell structure; some members of the bacterial phylum Planctomycetes  have a membrane surrounding their genetic material.
  3. Bacteria
    are usually single-celled organisms. most have cell walls that contain the structural molecule peptidoglycan . although most bacteria exhibit typical prokaryotic cell sturcture (i.e., they lack a membrane -bound nucleus), a few members of the unusual phylum Plactomycetes have their genetic materia surrounded by a membrane
  4. Archaea
    are distinguished  from bacteria by many features , most notably their distinctive rRNA sequences, lack f peptidoglycan in their cell walls and unique membrane lipids. some have unusual metabolic characteristics,such as  the methanogensm which generate methane  (natural) gas. Many archaea are found in extreme environments , including those with high temperatures ( theromphiles) and high concentrations of salt (extreme halopiles)
  5. Eukarya
    includes microoganisms classified as protists or fungi. animals and plants are also placed in this domain
  6. Protists
    Unicellular and sometimes colonial eukaryotic organism that lack cellular differentiation into tissues. Many chemoorganotrophic protists are referred to as protozoa; many phototrophic protists are referred to as algae
  7. Algea
    a common term for several unrelated groups of photosynthetic eukaryotic microorganisms lacking multicellular sex organs ( except for the charophytes) and conducting vessels. Most are now considered protists
  8. protozoa
    a common term for a group of related unicellular, chemoorganotrophic protists
  9. slime molds
    common term for the members of the protist taxa Myxogastris and  Dictostelia
  10. water molds
    a collective name for protists also known as oomycetes. formerly thought to be fungi
  11. fungi
    achlorophyllous, hetetrophic, spore-bearing eukaryotes which absorptive nutrition ans a walled thallus; sometimes called "true fungi" or Eumcycota
  12. viruses
    an infectious agent having a simple acellular organization with a protein coat and a nucleic acid genome, lacking independent metabolism and multiplying only within living host cells
  13. viroids
    an infectious agent that is a single stranded RNA not associated with any proteins; the RNA does not code for any protein and is not translated
  14. satellites
    subviral infectious agents composed only of DNA or RNA; they may encode some proteins and require a helper virus for their replication
  15. proions
    an infectious agent consisting only of protein' prions cause a variety of spongiform encephalopathies such as scrapie in sheep and goats
  16. enzymes
    a protein catalyst with specificity for the reaction catalyzed and its substrates
  17. ribozymes
    an RNA molecule with catalytic activity
  18. RNA world
    the theory that protists that the 1st self-replicating molecule was RNA and this led to the evolution of the 1st primitive cell
  19. universal phylogentic  tree
    a phylogentic tree that considers the evolutionary relationships among organism from all 3 domains of life: Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya
  20. endosymbiotic hypothesis
    the hypothesis that mitochondria, hydogenosones and chloroplasts arose from bacterial endosymbionts of ancestral eukaryotic cells
  21. hydrogen hypothesis
    a hypothesis that consider the origin of the eukaryotes through the development of the hydrogenosome. it suggest the organelle arose as the result of a endosymbiotic anaerobic bacterium that produced  COand Has the products of femantation
  22. species
    species of higher organisms are groups on interbreeding or potentially interbreeding natural population that are reproductively  isolated . Archaeal a d bacteria species are often defined as collections of strains that have many stable properties in common and differ significantly from other strains.however, there definition of archaeal and bacterial species
  23. strain
    a population of organisms that descends from a single organism or pure culture isolate
  24. microbiology
    the study of organism that are usually too small the be seen with the naked eye. special techniques are require to isolate and grow them
  25. spontaneous genneration
    an early belief that living organisms could develop from nonliving matter
  26. Koch's postulates
    criteria for proving the causal relationship between a microorganism and a specific disease
  27. genome
    the full set of genes present in a cell or virus; all the genetic material in an organism
  28. genomic analysis
    the study of the molecular organization of genomes, their information content and rthe gene products they encode
  29. bioinformatics
    the interdisciplinary field that  manages and analyzes large biologic data sets, including genome and protein sequences
  30. refractive index
    a measure of how much a substance deflects a light ray from a straight path as it passes from one medium (e.g., glass) to another (e.g., air). it is calculated as the ratio of the velocity  of light passing through the  1st medium to that of light passing trough the second medium
  31. objective lens
    the lens closest to the specimen
  32. bright-field microscopy
    a microscope that illuminates that specimen directly with bright light and forms a dark image on a darker background
  33. substage condenser
    or simply condenser is mounted within or beneath the stage and focuses a cone of light on the slide
  34. ocular lens
    also know as the eyepieces
  35. parafocal
    a microscope that retains proper focus when the objectives are changed
  36. resolution
    the ability of a microscope to separate or distinguish between small objects that are close together
  37. numerical aperture
    the property of a microscope lens that determines how much light can enter and how great resolution the lens can provide
  38. dark-field microscope
    microscopy in which the specimen is brightly illuminated while the background is dark
  39. phase-contrast microscope
    a microscope that converts slight differences in refractive index and cell density into easily observed differences in light intentsiy
  40. differential interference contrast (DIC) microscope
    a light microscope that employs 2 beams of plane polarized light. the beams are combined after passing through the specimen and their interference is used to create the image
  41. fluorescent light
    the light emitted by a substance when it is irradiated with light of a shorter wavelenght
  42. fluorescence microscope
    a microscope that exposes a specimen to light of a specific wavelength and then forms an image from the fluorescent light produced
  43. fluorochromes
    a fluorescent dye
  44. fixation
    the process which the internal and external structures of cells and organisms are preserved and fixed in position. 2 methods are commonly used: heat fixation and chemical fixation
  45. heat fixation
    same as fixation
  46. chemical fixation
    same as fixation
  47. chromophore groups
    a chemical group with double bonds that absorbs visible light and gives a dye its color
  48. simple staining
    a staining procedure that requires only a single dye
  49. Gram stain
    a differential staining procedure that divides bacteria into Gram-positive and Gram-negative groups based on their ability to retain crystal violet when decolorized with an organic solvent such as enthanol
  50. differential staining
    staining procedures that divide bacteria into separate groups based on  staining properties
  51. mordant
    a substance that helps fix dye on or in a cell
  52. acid-fast staining
    a staining procedure that differentiates between bacteria based on their ability to retain dye when washed with an acid alcohol solution
  53. endospore staining
    like acid-fast staining, it requires heat to drive the dye into a target, in this case the endospore
  54. capsule staining
    a technique that reveals the presence of capsules, a network usually made of polysaccharides that surrounds many bacteria and some fungi
  55. flagella staining
    provides taxonomically valuable information about the presence and distribution pattern of flagella on the bacterial and archaeal cells
  56. transmission electron microscope
    a microscope in which an image is formed by passing an electron beam through a specimen and focusing the scattered electrons with magnetic lenses
  57. scanning electron microscope (SEM)
    an electron microscope that scans a beam of electrons over the surface of a specimen and forms an image of the surface from the electrons that are emitted by it
  58. electron cryotomography
    a specialized electron microscopy procedure that involves rapid freezing on intact specimens, maintenance of the specimen in a frozen state while being examined and imaging from different angles. the information from each angle is used to create a three-dimensional reconstruction
  59. scanning probe microscope
    a microscope used to study surface features by moving a sharp probe over the object's surface(e.g., atomic force and scanning tunneling microscopes)
  60. scanning tunneling microscope
    same as scanning probe microscope
  61. atomic force microscrope
    same as scanning probe microscope
  62. Diplococcus
    a pair of cocci
  63. bacilli
    a rod-shaped bacterium or archaeon
  64. vibrios
    a rod-shaped bacterial cell that is curved to forma commalike shape or an incomplete spiral
  65. spirilla
    a rigid, spiral-shaped bacterium
  66. spirochetes
    a flexible, spiral-shaped bacterium with periplasmic flagella
  67. pleomorphic
    refers to cells or viruses that are variable in shape and lack a single, characteristic form
  68. mycelium
    a mass of branching hyphae found in fungi and some bactera
  69. cell envelope
    the plasma membrane plus all other external layers
  70. plasma membrane
    the selectively permeable membrane surrounding  the cell's cytoplasm; also called the cell membrane, plasmalemma, or cytoplasmic membrane. for most cells it is lipid bilayer ( some archaea have a lipid monolayer) with proteins embedded in it (integral proteins) and associated with the surface (peripheral proteins)
  71. fluid mosaic model
    the model of cell membranes in which the membrane is a lipid bilayer with intregral proteins buried in the lipid and peripheral proteins more loosely attached to the membrane surface
  72. amphipathic
    term describing a molecule that has both hydrophohilic and hydrophobic regions (e.g., phospholipids
  73. hydrophilic
    polar substance that has a strong affinity of water ( or is readily soluble in water)
  74. hydrophobic
    a nonpolar substance lacking affinity for water  ( or which is not readily soluble in water)
  75. peripheral membrane proteins
    the selectively permeable membrane surrounding  the cell's cytoplasm; also called the cell membrane, plasmalemma, or cytoplasmic membrane. for most cells it is lipid bilayer ( some archaea have a lipid monolayer) with proteins embedded in it (integral proteins) and associated with the surface (peripheral proteins)
  76. integral membrane proteins
    same as plasma membrane
  77. hopaniods
    lipids found in bacterial membranes that are similar in structure and function to the sterols found in eukaroytic membranes
  78. macroelements
    a nutrient that is required in relatively large amounts (e.g., carbon and nitrogen)
  79. micronutrients
    nutrients such as zine , manganese and copper that are required in very small quantities for growth and reproduction also called trace elements
  80. trace elements
    same as micronutrients
  81. growth factors
    organic compounds that must be supplied in the diet for growth because they are essential cell components or precursors of such components and cannot be synthesized by the organism
  82. passive diffusion
    the process in which molecules move from a region of higher concentration to one of lower consentration as a result of random thermal agitation
  83. facilitated diffusion
    diffusion across the plasma membrane that is aided by a channel protein or carrier protein
  84. active transport
    the transport of  solute molecules across a membrane against a gradient; it requires a carrier protein and the input of energy.3 major types are primary active transport, which uses hydrolysis of ATP to power transport; secondary active transport, which uses ion gradients across a membrane to power active transport; and group translocation
  85. primary active transport
    same as active transport
  86. uniporters
    carrier proteins that move a single solute across a membrane
  87. ATP-binding cassette transporters (ABC transporters)
    transport system that uses ATP hydrolysis to drive translocation across the plasma membrane , can be used for nutrient uptake  (ABC importer) or export of substance  (ABC exporter ) including protein secretion
  88. secondary active transport
    same as active transport
  89. symport
    linked transport of 2 substances in the same direction
  90. antiport
    coupled transport of 2 molecules in which 1 molecule enters the cell as the other leaves the cell
  91. group translocation
    a transport process in which a molecule is moved across a membrane by carrier proteins while being chemically altered at the same time (e.g., phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system)
  92. phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS)
    an import group translocation system used by many bacteria. as a sugar is transported into the cell, hydrolysis of a high-energy phosphate bond fuels it import, and sugar is modified by the covalent attachment of the phosphoryl group
  93. phosphorelay system
    a set of proteins involved in the transfer of phosphate from one protein in the set to another. it is often used to regulate protein activity or transcription
  94. siderophores
    a small molecule that complexes with ferric iorn and supplies it to the cell by aiding in it transport across the plasma membrane
  95. peptidoglycan (murein)
    a large polymer composed of long chains of altering N-acetlyglucosamine and N-acetymuramic acid residues. the polysaccharide chains are linked to each other through connection between tetrapeptide chains attached to the N-acetymuramic  acids. it provides much of the strength and rigidity possessed by bacterial cell walls; also called murein
  96. outer membrane
    a membrane located outside the peptidoglycan layer in the cell walls of typical Gram-negative bacteria
  97. periplasmic space
    the space between the plasma membrane and the outer membrane in typical Gram-negative bacteria, and  between the plasma membrane and the cell wall in typical Gram-positive bacteria. a similar space is sometimes observed between the plasma membrane and the cell wall of some bacteria
  98. peptide interbridge
    a peptide chain that connects the tetrapeptide chains in the peptidoglycan of some bacteria
  99. teichoic acids
    polymer of glycerol  or ribitol joined by phosphates; they are found in the cell walls of typical Gram-positive bacteria
  100. lipopolysaccharides (LPSs)
    a molecule containing both lipid and polysaccharide, which is important in the outer membrane of the typical Gram-negative cell wall. in many bacteria ,it consists of 3 components: lipid A, core polysacchride and o antigen
  101. lipid A
  102. core polysaccharide
  103. O antigen
  104. porin proteins
  105. lysis
  106. plasmolysis
  107. lysozyme
  108. sheroplasts
  109. capsules
  110. slime layer
  111. glycocalyx
  112. S-layer
  113. protoplast
  114. cytoplasm
  115. inclusions
  116. poly-β-hyroxybutyrate
  117. polyphosphate granules
  118. carboxysomes
  119. gas vacule
  120. gas vesicles
  121. magnetosomes
  122. ribosomes
  123. Svedberg unit
  124. nucleoid
  125. deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
  126. plasmids
  127. episomes
  128. curing
  129. fimbriae
  130. pilus
  131. sex pili
  132. flagella
  133. monotrichous
  134. polar flagella
  135. amphitrichous
  136. lopotrichous
  137. peritrichous
  138. filament
  139. basal body
  140. hook
  141. flagellin
  142. run
  143. twitching motility
  144. gliding motility
  145. chemtaxis
  146. chemoreceptors
  147. endospores
Author
amauerba
ID
322880
Card Set
microbiology
Description
chapters 1-5
Updated