L-28 Flashcards

1
Q

Why are prokaryotes so dominant on earth?

A
  • fast growth rate ( 13 min doubling time)

- therefore evolve and adapt fast

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2
Q

What is the process by which prokaryotes reproduce asexually?

A

Binary fission

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3
Q

How long were prokaryotes the sole inhabitants of earth?

A

1.7 billion years

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4
Q

What are the two stages of microbial growth in a closed batch culture system?

A

Feast and famine

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5
Q

What phases are a part of the feast stage

A
  • lag

- exponential growth

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6
Q

What does the length of the lag phase depend on?

A
  • history of the inoculum

- time required to get bio synthetic reactions running

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7
Q

What is happening in the exponential phase?

A
  • cells are actively dividing
  • nothing is limiting for growth
  • population is doubling at a constant time interval
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8
Q

What happens during the stationary phase of microbial growth in a closed batch culture system?

A
  • cryptic growth
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9
Q

What is cryptic growth?

A
  • When organisms survive by consuming lysed cell constituents of other dead cells within the culture
  • dynamic population with equilibrium between growing and dying cells
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10
Q

What is occurring during the death phase of microbial growth in a closed batch culture system?

A

Equilibrium shifts so more cells are dying than growing

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11
Q

What are the necessities for prokaryotic multiplication?

A
  • carbon source (building blocks for macromolecular synthesis)
  • energy source ( electrons to drive anabolic and catabolic reactions in the cell)
  • reducing power (carriers of energy/electrons like NAD+ and NADP+)
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12
Q

What are the 4 tropic groups in microbiology?

A
  • photoautotrophs
  • chemoautotrophs
  • photoheterotrophs
  • chemoheterotrophs
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13
Q

What is a photoautotroph?

A

Organism that uses CO2 as a carbon source and light as an energy source

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14
Q

What is a chemoautotroph?

A

Organism that uses CO2 as a carbon source and chemical compounds as an energy source

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15
Q

What is a Photoheterotroph?

A

Organism that uses organic compounds as a carbon source and light as an energy source

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16
Q

What is a chemoheterotroph?

A

Organism that uses organic compounds as a carbon source and chemical compounds as an energy source

17
Q

What is an auxotroph?

A

An organism that is unable to synthesise one or more essential growth factors and will not grow unless these factors are provided

18
Q

What percentage of all microorganisms sequenced so far lack essential pathways or key genes for the synthesis of amino acids?

A

98%

19
Q

What do auxotrophs rely on so they can survive in the wild?

A

Cross feeding (syntrophy)

20
Q

What is syntrophy?

A

When one species gains the metabolic products of another species

21
Q

What is a microbiome?

A

The complete collection of microorganisms, and their genes, within a particular environment

22
Q

What is microbiota?

A

Individual microbial species in a biome such as bacteria, fungi, archaea, and viruses

23
Q

What are the two ways we can study the microbiome?

A
  • culture dependant

- culture independent

24
Q

How do culture dependant methods of studying the biome work?

A
  • relies on culturing microbes in the lab

- uses pure cultures or simple enrichments

25
Q

What are the pros of culture dependant methods of studying the microbiome? (3)

A
  • allows access to phenotype
  • can study one organism at a time
  • can manipulate conditions to see the response of the organism
26
Q

What are the cons of culture dependant methods of studying the microbiome? (4)

A
  • not all organisms can be cultured
  • there are too many species to grow them all individually
  • requires precise conditions
  • does not match real world conditions
27
Q

How do culture independant methods of studying the microbiome work?

A
  • relies predominantly on nucleic acid based methods, no culturing required
  • uses sequencing or metabolic profiling to study all microbes in a sample
28
Q

What are the pros of culture independant methods of studying the microbiome?

A
  • allows access to genotype
  • can study many organisms at a time
  • shows communities as they are in nature
  • can target non-culturable organisms
  • provides access to unknown information/ species
29
Q

What are the cons of culture independant methods of studying the microbiome?

A
  • no pure culture, so no ability to manipulate

- expensive and complex methods