Lecture 4: Bacterial taxonomy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 goals of the classification of microorganisms?

A

Stability, predictability, building larger hierarchical groups, and being able to learn about a whole group by studying an individual.

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2
Q

Name the 7 levels of classification from broad to specific.

A

Kingdom/domain, phylum/division, class, order, family, genus, species

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3
Q

What do the following names say about the appearance of a microorganism?
Staphyl, coccus, aureus, helico, campylo

A

Cluster, round, golden, spiral-shaped, curved

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4
Q

What do the following names say about the habitat of microorganisms?
Jejuni, pylori

A

Gut, gatekeeper

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5
Q

What is a species in bacteriology?

A

It is a collection of strains that share many stable properties and differ significantly from other groups of strains.

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6
Q

What are 3 different ways of dividing up a species into strains?

A

Biovars (biochemical or physiological differences), morphovars (different morphology), serovars (different antigenic properties)

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7
Q

What formula can be used to calculate the similarity between organisms?

A

Sj (Jacquard similarity constant) = # similarities shared/# similarities compared

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8
Q

Explain how to interpret Sj scores.

A

Sj = 1 means the two organisms are totally identical for the characteristics being compared, while Sj = 0 means they share nothing in common. Using more similarities will lead to a more accurate comparison.

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9
Q

What can Sj scores be used for?

A

They can be used to build dendograms.

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10
Q

What is the difference between a dendogram and a phylogenetic tree?

A

A dendogram is based on visible characteristics, while a phylogenetic tree is based on genetic sequencing.

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11
Q

Name 3 morphological features typically considered when distinguishing between microorganisms.

A

Shape (round, elongated, clusters, etc,), flagella (presence, location, number), gram-stain (gram-positive, gram-negative).

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12
Q

Name 6 biochemical/physiological features typically considered when comparing microorganisms.

A

Aerobic or not, optimal temperature, optimal pH, salt concentration, carbon source (96 well plates), fermentation properties (produce acids or gases)

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13
Q

What is phage typing?

A

It involves looking at whether bacteriophages can infect the microorganism you’re trying to classify, as bacteriophages have specific kinds of bacterium they can infect.

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14
Q

Name two indirect methods and one direct method of using genomic characteristics to classify microoganisms.

A

Indirect: G+C content and DNA hybridization.
Direct: sequencing genes to uncover phylogenetic relationships

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15
Q

Explain how G+C content can be used to classify microorganisms.

A

Since G-C base pairs have 3 H bonds, it takes more energy to break them. So the melting point of the genome will be higher with a greater % G+C. The density will also be higher proportional to GC content because GC base pairs are bigger.

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16
Q

What are the two types of DNA hybridization?

A

Total genome hybridization and probe hybridization (targeting specific gene).

17
Q

Explain how complete genome hybridization works.

A

You need the genome of a control bug and of the one you’re trying to classify. You split open their genomes and take a single strand of each and mix them. If they don’t stay together at all, the two are very different. If they complete hybridize, they’re really similar. There can also be outcomes in between.

18
Q

Explain how specific gene hybridization works.

A

You take an unknown bacteria and once against separate the DNA into single strands. You can then synthesize the complement to a small part of a known genome (the gene in question). If it can hybridize with the unknown bacteria’s DNA, it tells us that the gene is present. If not, the gene is absent.

19
Q

What are dichotomous keys?

A

It is a series of yes or no questions that allow you to narrow down the type of bacteria an unknown specimen could be.

20
Q

How do procaryotes and eucaryotes differ in terms of cell organization?

A

Eucaryotic cells are complex and have organelles and compartments. The DNA is stored in the nucleus. In procaryotes, the DNA is free-floating in the cytoplasm and there are no organelles so that they can grow as fast as possible.

21
Q

How do eucaryotes and procaryotes differ in terms of cell wall?

A

Eucaryotes don’t have a cell wall, while bacterial cells specifically are surrounded by a cell wall of peptidoglycan (note archaea don’t have one either)

22
Q

How do eucaryotes and procaryotes differ in terms of size?

A

Eucaryotic cells are approximately 10 times larger.

23
Q

Name the 4 main shapes of cells and the proper term for them.

A

Spherical or ellipsoidal: cocci
Cylindrical or rodlike: bacilli
Helical or spiral: spirilla
Others: irregular, square, star, etc.

24
Q

What term describes:
A single coccus, two cocci, a chain of cocci, a group of 4, a group of 8, and a cluster?

A

Single, diplococci, streptococci, tetrad, sarcinae, staphylococci

25
Q

What term describes:
Two bacilli stuck together, a chain of bacilli

A

Diplobacillus, streptobacillus

26
Q

Explain why diplobacilli don’t arrange themselves one on top of the other.

A

Because it requires too much energy for them to divide along their large plane, so they divide along the smaller plane instead, forming chains.

27
Q

The science of taxonomy includes which 3 components?

A

Classification, nomenclature, and identification (based on visible characteristics)

28
Q

Who came up with the hiearchichal scheme of classification?

A

Carolus Linnaeus