Test Review

  1. Virology treatments
    • Vaccine
    • Antiviral drugs
  2. Superficial or cutaneous mycoses
    grow on keratinized tissue (hair, nails, stratum corneum)

    Examples: athletes foot, ringworm
  3. Subcutaneous mycoses
    penetrate below the skin to involve the subcutaneous muscle or lymphatic tissues
  4. Systemic or deep mycoses
    Able to infect internal organs and become widely disseminated throughout the body. This type is often fatal.

    Example: Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CPA) A slowly progressive destructive disease of the lung.
  5. Endoparasites
    • Malaria
    • Leishmaniasis
    • Entamoeba & Giardia
    • Intestinal Worms
  6. Ectoparasites
    Ticks, scabies (mite), lice
  7. Prokaryotic characteristics:
    Cell wall and no membrane-bound organelles.
  8. Bacterial classification: Morphology

    1. Cocci
    Cocci: Spherically shaped bacteria with rigid cell walls
  9. Bacterial classification: Morphology

    2. Bacilli
    Bacilli: Rod-shaped bacteria with rigid cell walls
  10. Bacterial classification: Morphology

    3. Spirillum
    elongated, helical bacteria with one or more twists
  11. Bacterial classification: Morphology

    4. Pleomorphic
    without shape, can stretch and contort similar to an ameba
  12. Strepto
    bacteria arrange themselves in single file
  13. Staphylo
    Bacteria tend to clump together
  14. Difference between gram-positive and gram-negative
    Gram-positive has more layers of peptidoglycan in their cell walls
  15. Positive bacteria stain purple because...
    They contain up to twenty times more peptidoglycan than gram-negative bacteria
  16. 6 Gram-positive bacteria that infect humans and their shapes
    • Streptococcus (cocci)
    • Staphylococcus (cocci)
    • Bacillus (bacilli)
    • Clostridium (bacilli, protective spore)
    • Corynebacterium (bacilli, no protective spore)
    • Listeria (bacilli, no protective spore)
  17. Gram-negative bacteria have...
    • A unique outer membrane
    • Thinner layer of peptidoglycan
    • Space between the cell wall and the membrane
    • Resistant to lysozyme and penicillin attack
  18. Spirochetes and Neisseria are examples of...
    Gram-Negative bacteria
  19. What inhibits bacterial growth
    Penicillium
  20. When pathogenic bacteria overwhelm the immune system, we use antibiotics to...
    decrease the bacterial population to a level the immune system can handle
  21. Why are antibiotics not effective against viruses?
    Viruses are not living and can only reproduce when they are inside other living cells
  22. How does penicillin inhibit bacterial growth?
    Penicillin targets peptidoglycan (gram-positive bacteria) chains in the cell walls of bacteria
  23. How do bacteria become resistant?
    1. A mutation creates a resistance gene in one bacterium.

    2. The patient takes an antibiotic, killing first the weak bacteria, then the stronger bacteria, none of whom have the resistance gene.

    (It's evolution!)
  24. How does bacteria pass on resistance genes?
    Bacteria can transfer genes like those for antibiotic resistance onto lots of other bacteria. 

    They use plasmids (small circular bacterial DNA)
  25. What are plasmids
    Plasmids are circular bits of double-stranded DNA independent of chromosomal DNA. They can replicate and have between 5 and 100 genes.
  26. What is Conjugation?
    Two bacteria join by a tube-like extension called a sex pilus that allows the transfer of DNA from one bacterium to the other.
  27. What is Transformation?
    Plasmids can be absorbed from the enviornment
  28. What is transduction?
    Plasmids from dead cells can be passed via viral delivery
Author
GoBroncos
ID
358188
Card Set
Test Review
Description
Updated