Block C Part 1: Bacteria, Viruses and Parasites Flashcards

1
Q

What is a pathogen?

A

An organism that causes disease
(Lecture 1, Slide 3)

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2
Q

State 3 ways in which pathogenic effects can vary

A

Between organisms
Severity
May be acute or chronic
Can effect different parts of the body
Can be restricted to certain populations due to their genetic material
(Lecture 1, Slide 3)

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3
Q

How big are virions?

A

Viruses are sized from 10nm up to 400nm
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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4
Q

What type of microscope do you need to see a virus?

A

An electron microscope
(Lecture 1, Slide 4)

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5
Q

What forms the core of a virus?

A

One or two molecules of DNA or RNA
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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6
Q

What is a capsid?

A

RNA/DNA enclosed in a protein coat on a virus
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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7
Q

What is the outer layer of a virus called (if it has one) and what does it contain?

A

The envelope and it can have lipids, proteins or carbohydrates in it
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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8
Q

What is a virus particle called?

A

A virion
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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9
Q

What is the 1st Stage of the life cycle of a virion?

A

Extracellular virion enters cell and begins it’s intracellular phase
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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10
Q

What is the 2nd stage of a life cycle of a virion?

A

Specific cell target “virus factory” - release virions
(Lecture 1, Slide 5)

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11
Q

To combat a virus, what 3 things will you have to control?

A

Virus particles (virions), Virus infected cells and viral toxins
(Lecture 1, Slide 6)

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12
Q

What is measles?

A

A viral infection caused by infection with the measles virus, an enveloped single-stranded RNA virus
(Lecture 1, Slide 8)

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13
Q

How do you become infected with measles?

A

By inhaling droplets with the virus inside
(Lecture 1, Slide 8)

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14
Q

What can measles effect and cause?

A

It can effect your hearing and throat, and can result in pneumonia, diarrhea, seizures and swelling of the brain
(Lecture 1, Slide 9)

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15
Q

What can virus-induced immunosuppression from measles lead to?

A

It can allow other opportunistic infections to flourish which can lead to the central nervous system being effected, comas, and death
(Lecture 1, Slide 9)

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16
Q

What is the primary viraemia of measles?

A

The virus spreads to regional lymph nodes
(Lecture 1, Slide 10)

17
Q

What is the secondary viraemia of measles?

A

Virus disseminated to other sites in the body
(Lecture 1, Slide 10)

18
Q

What 5 cells can the measles virus live in?

A

Dendritic cells, monocytes, lymphocytes, epithelial cells and endothelial cells
(Lecture 1, Slide 10)

19
Q

What size are bacteria?

A

Microscopic
(Lecture 1, Slide 11)

20
Q

Are bacteria intracellular, extracellular or both?

A

Both
(Lecture 1, Slide 10)

21
Q

Are bacteria free living or parasitic or both?

A

Both
(Lecture 1, Slide 10)

22
Q

What are the 3 main shapes of bacteria?

A

Rod, spherical and spiral
(Lecture 1, Slide 11)

23
Q

Are Bacteria prokaryotes or eukaryotes?

A

Prokaryotes
(Lecture 1, Slide 11)

24
Q

Where is the DNA in a bacteria located?

A

In the cytoplasm
(Lecture 1, Slide 11)

25
Q

What size are fungi and their spores?

A

Fungi are visible to the human eye but their spores are microscopic
(Lecture 1, Slide 15)

26
Q

What do fungi produce?

A

They produce fruiting bodies
(Lecture 1, Slide 15)

27
Q

What do fungi spores do?

A

Spores germinate to produce a mycelium
(Lecture 1, Slide 15)

28
Q

How are fungi spores dispersed?

A

They are dispersed by wind/animals
(Lecture 1, Slide 15)

29
Q

What 3 things must the immune response must control to combat a fungi?

A

Budding yeast cells, Pseudohyphae and Hyphae
(Lecture 1, Slide 18)

30
Q

What 4 ways can parasitic infections vary?

A

Can be multi or unicellular
Can be intra or extracellular
Can vary in size
Can live in various locations
(Lecture 1, Slide 24)

31
Q

What causes a parasitic infection?

A

When the immune system cannot control the parasite
(Lecture 1, Slide 24)

32
Q

What are the 3 different routes a parasite infect by?

A

They can infect by using active mechanisms, use an intermediate host, or use a vector
(Lecture 1, Slide 26)

33
Q

How can intracellular parasites kill cells?

A

They can kill by activating or eliminating the infected cell
(Lecture 1, Slide 27)

34
Q

How do you kill gut extracellular parasites?

A

Need to be expelled
(Lecture 1, Slide 28)

35
Q

How do you kill tissue parasites?

A

They need to be damaged and broken down
(Lecture 1, Slide 28)

36
Q

What does the killing of extracellular parasites require?

A

Co-operation between a range of cells and other mechanisms
(Lecture 1, Slide 28)

37
Q

What are the 2 impacts of hookworms?

A

They impair the physical and intellectual development of children and effect economic development of communities
(Lecture 1, Slide 37)

38
Q

What do fruiting bodies produce?

A

Spores
(Lecture 1, Slide 15)