Lecture 18 Gram Positive Bacteria Flashcards

1
Q

What is the GC content of SuperPhylum Bacillota?

A

28-35%

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2
Q

What are the 3 classes of firmicutes?

A

Clostirida
Bacilli
Negativicutes

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3
Q

What are the key characteristics of Class Clostridia?

A

Class Clostridia includes strict anaerobes with fermentative or respiratory metabolism. They are spore-forming and are involved in various industrial (biobutanol), environmental (fermenters), and medical processes (exotoxin).

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4
Q

How does Genus Clostridium metabolize amino acids?

A

Clostridium is an obligate anaerobe that forms spores.

It engages in fermentative metabolism, specifically using the Stickland reaction to ferment amino acids.

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5
Q

What are Clostridium tetani and where are they found?

A

Strict anaerobic spore forming bacteria
Found in soil, intestines, or feces of livestock

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6
Q

What disease is associated with Clostridium tetani?

A

Tetanus
produces neurotoxins leading to muscle contractions and “lock-jaw”

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7
Q

Where are Clostridium Botulinum found?

A

canned foods and soil or aquatic sediment

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8
Q

What does Clostridium Botulinum cause?

A

Causes Botulism
- commonly found on surfaces of canned foods
-grow under anaerobic conditions and produce exotoxin

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9
Q

What is Botox

A

Botulism toxin, prevents muscle contractions
- wrinkles, tremors, migraines etc

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10
Q

What is the major impact of Clostridium perfringens on human tissues?

A

Causes gas gangrene
- infection of skeletal tissue
- replicates quickly
a-toxin breaks down muscle tissue
H2 fermentation product and CO2 cause unusual swelling

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11
Q

What else does Clostridium perfringens cause?

A

Food poisoning

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12
Q

Describe Class Bacilli

A

aerobic/facultative, fermenters
industrially and medically relevant.

Produce antibiotics and causative agent of anthrax.

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13
Q

Name 3 types of Bacillus and their contributions to the industry

A

Antibiotic producers – bacitracin, gramicidin, polymyxin

B anthracis - causative agent for anthrax
B.thurengensis - insecticides
B.subtilis - model organism, gene regulation, cell division

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14
Q

What distinguishes Order Lactobacillales?

A

non-endospore forming
non-motile
ferment sugars using homolactic or heterolactic fermentation

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15
Q

What is lactobacillus known for?

A

homo and heterolactic fermentation
kimchi, yogurt, etc

normal in human gut and vaginal microbiome.

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16
Q

Leuconostoc spp. known for?

A

kombucha, wine, sour dough

some produce bacteriocins to prevent listeria growth

17
Q

Staphylococcus

A

facultative anaerobes

can be pathogenic or non, depend on enzyme coagulase (if +, then pathogenic)

causes many infections; skin infections

resistant to antibiotics

18
Q

Streptococcus

A

characterized by their hemolytic patterns
a - hemolytic pneumonia
b - hemolytic strep throat

19
Q

What is hemolysis, and how is it observed in Streptococcus and Staphylococcus?

A

Hemolysis is the ability to lyse red blood cells.

Streptococcus exhibits α, β, or γ hemolysis, while Staphylococcus can be distinguished by coagulase production.

20
Q

Compound that lyses blood

A

Hemolysin

21
Q

What morphological features define Class Negativicutes?

A

Class Negativicutes have inner and outer membranes with LPS, stain Gram-negative, and are metabolically similar to Clostridia.

22
Q

How did the Gram-positive cell wall likely evolve?

A

The loss of the outer membrane led to the evolution of the Gram-positive cell wall.
G (-) cell wall traits were likely ancestral.