Mid Term 1 Review Questions (Part 1) Flashcards

1
Q

What are prions?

A

acellular infectious agent that is only a protein

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2
Q

How are prions formed?

A

when the scrapie/misfolded version of a prion (PrPsc) contacts the regular version of a cell (PrPc) is causes the normal protein to misfold

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3
Q

What diseases do prions cause?

A

transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs)

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4
Q

What happens to the impacted tissue of a prion disease?

A

misfolded proteins bind together inside the cell to form thread-like structures called fibrils. fibril-filled cells can’t function and eventually die, forming spaces in the brain that lead to the characteristic sponge-like appearance

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5
Q

What are some general characteristics of prion disease? (3)

A
  • untreatable
  • fatal
  • animal to animal, human to human transmission
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6
Q

Why doesn’t a misfolded protein just fold back?

A

PrPsc (misfolded) assumes a beta pleated configuration, which is much more stable and resists our bodies efforts to degrade it

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7
Q

How are prion diseases diagnosed? (4)

A

SendToDB
- by symptoms (often misdiagnosed)
- MRI, EEG, 14-3-3 protein levels in CSF
- post-death
- new blood test as of 2016 to test before symptoms start, uses PMCA

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8
Q

what is PMCA?
what does PMCA stand for?

A

PMCA to find prions today.

how we detect prions. Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification. amplification technique to multiply misfolded proteins.

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9
Q

how can plants play a role in prion contamination?

A

by taking up contaminated soil

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10
Q

what is a “strain”?

A

related isolates of the same species which may harbor a few unique characteristics

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11
Q

rDNA sequencing based definition of a species

A

16S sequencing identity. two species in prokaryotes corresponds to less than 95-97% 16S rDNA sequence identity. this is the most popular way of defining species.

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12
Q

what is thought to be the origin of life on our planet?
where is thought to be the origin of life on our planet?

A

microbes under the sea in hypothermal vents. microbes exist in all three domains of life and outside of them!

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13
Q

what are Koch’s postulates?

A
  1. microorganism must be found in abundance in sick organisms and not in healthy ones
  2. microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture
  3. cultured microorganism must cause disease when introduced to a healthy organism
  4. microorganism must be isolated from inoculated organism and be proven to be identical to original pathogen
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14
Q

what is the most important update to Koch’s postulates?

A

a nucleic acid sequence belonging to a pathogen must be detected. so we are trying to DETECT a nucleic acid, not SEE and GROW one.

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