Unit IV.B The Prokaryotes (The Gram-Positive Bacteria) Flashcards

1
Q
  • include common soil bacteria, the lactic acid bacteria, and several human pathogens.
    *important endospore-forming bacteria such as the genera Clostridium and Bacillus. Also of extreme importance in medical microbiology are the genera Staphylococcus, Enterococcus, and Streptococcus.
A

Low G + C gram-positive bacteria (Firmicutes)

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2
Q
  • include mycobacteria, corynebacteria, and actinomycetes.
  • related to gram-positive bacteria because they share common rRNA sequences.
A

High G + C gram-positive bacteria (Tenericutes)

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3
Q

obligate anaerobes; rod-shaped cells contain endospores that usually distend the cell
C. tetani: tetanus
C. botulinum : botulism

A

Clostridium

Clostridiales

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4
Q
  • cigar shaped with 80 mm:600 mm in length, can be seen with the unaided eye
  • Epulopiscium fishelsoni doesn’t reproduce by binary fission, daughter cells formed within the cell are released through a slit opening in the parent cell.
A

Epulopiscium

Clostridiales

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5
Q
  • typically rods that produce endospores, common in soil, and only a few are pathogenic to humans
  • Several species produce antibiotics.
    (Bacillus anthracis causes anthrax, a disease of cattle, sheep, and horses that can be transmitted to humans )
A

Bacillus

Bacillales

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6
Q

occur in grapelike clusters
Staphylococcus aureus yellow-pigmented colonies (aureus = golden), facultative anaerobes,can grow in high osmotic pressure and low moisture

A

Staphylococcus

Bacillales

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7
Q

lactic acid–producing bacteria aerotolerant and capable of growth in the presence of oxygen

A

Lactobacillus

Lactobacillales

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8
Q
  • spherical, gram-positive bacteria that typically appear in chains
  • Pathogenic streptococci produce several extracellular substances that contribute to their pathogenicity.
A

Streptococcus

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9
Q
  • adapted to areas of the body that are** rich in nutrients but low in oxygen** → gastrointestinal tract, vagina, and oral cavity.
  • found in large numbers in human stool
  • persist as contaminants in a hospital environment, on hands, bedding, and even as a fecal aerosol, high resistance to most antibiotics
A

Enterococcus:

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10
Q

Listeria monocytogenes can contaminate food, especially dairy products.
survives within phagocytic cells and is capable of growth at refrigeration temperatures
If it infects a pregnant woman, the organism poses the threat of stillbirth or serious damage to the fetus.

A

Listeria

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11
Q

highly pleomorphic because they lack a cell wall
* smallest self-replicating organisms, ranging from 0.1 to 0.25 μm

A

Mycoplasma

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12
Q

highly pleomorphic in their morphology

A

Actinobacter (High G + C Gram-Positive Bacteria

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13
Q

aerobic, non–endospore forming rods
myco (funguslike) → exhibition of filamentous growth

A

Mycobacterium

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14
Q

2 groups of Mycobacterium:

A
  • slow growers
  • fast or rapid growers
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15
Q
  • coryne (club-shaped), tend to be pleomorphic, and their morphology often varies with the age of the cells
  • C. diphtheriae the causative agent of diphtheria
A

Corynebacterium

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16
Q

Ability to form propionic acid; some species are important in the fermentation of Swiss cheese.
* P. acnes are bacteria that are commonly found on human skin and are implicated as the primary bacterial cause of acne.

A

Propionibacterium

17
Q
  • Gardnerella vaginalis is a bacterium that causes one of the most common forms of vaginitis.
  • There has always been some difficulty in assigning a taxonomic position in this species, which is gram variable and exhibits a highly pleomorphic morphology.
A

Gardnerella

18
Q

causes nitrogen-fixing nodules to form in alder tree roots, much as rhizobia cause nodules on the roots of legumes.

A

Frankia

Actinomycetes

19
Q
  • best known of the actinomycetes and most commonly isolated from soil
  • produce a gaseous compound called geosmin, which gives fresh soil its typical musty odor
  • produce most of our commercial antibiotics
A

Streptomyces

actinomycetes

20
Q
  • facultative anaerobes that are found in the mouth and throat of humans and animals.
  • form filaments called hyphae that can fragment
  • A. israelii causes actinomycosis, a tissue destroying disease usually affecting the head, neck, or lungs.
A

actinomyces

21
Q

aerobic and common in soil
* to reproduce, they form rudimentary filaments, which fragment into short rods.
* N. asteroides, cause a chronic, difficult-to-treat pulmonary infection.

A

Nocardia

22
Q

thrive in salt concentrations of more than 25%, → Great Salt Lake and solar evaporating ponds.

A

halophiles

23
Q

optimal growth temperature is 80°C or higher.

A

thermophilic archaea

24
Q

can be found growing at pH values below zero and frequently at elevated temperatures, as well.

A

Acidophilic archaea

25
Q

oxidize ammonia for energy.

A

nitrifying archaea

26
Q

strictly anaerobic archaea that produce methane as an end-product by combining hydrogen (H2) with carbon dioxide (CO2).

A

Methanogens