Lecture 1 Flashcards

1
Q

interactions/forces involved in nonspecific adherence

A
  1. hydrophobic interactions
  2. electrostatic attractions
  3. atomic and molecular vibrations resulting from fluctuating dipoles of similar frequencies
  4. Brownian movement (random interactions)
  5. recruitment and trapping by biofilm polymers interacting with the bacterial glycocalyx (capsule)
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2
Q

nonspecific adherence is ____ and is called ____

A

reversible; docking

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3
Q

specific adherence is ____ and is called _____

A

irreversible; anchoring

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4
Q

adhesins are often found on ____ but can be found in capsules or cell surface

A

fimbrae (aka pili)

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5
Q

why does streptococcus mutans (cause of caries) bind to tooth pellicle?

A

the adhesin is glucosyl transferase which binds to a salivary protein that is involved in pellicle formation

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6
Q

how do bacteria take up nutrients?

A
  1. carrier-mediated diffusion (facilitated)
  2. phosphorylation-linked transport (group translocation)
  3. active transport (energy dependent)
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7
Q

____ can facilitate invasion such as _____

A

secreted enzymes; hyaluronidase, steptokinase, specific proteins that induce endocytosis/phagocytosis

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8
Q

2 different mechanisms for spread

A
  1. lateral propagation to contiguous tissues (multiply then spread)
  2. dissemination to distant sites (spread then multiply)
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9
Q

endotoxins are a component of the bacteria ____, released when the cell disintegrates; endotoxin term usually reserved for _____

A

cell wall; lipopolysaccharides

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10
Q

exotoxins are ____ substances secreted into _____

A

soluble; host tissues

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11
Q

what makes a microbe a pathogen?

A
  • ability to adhere to host
  • ability to colonize the host
  • ability to replicate within a given niche
  • ability to cause damage (invasion, production of toxin, activation of the immune system)
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12
Q

bacterial responses to oxygen

A
  1. strict aerobes- must have oxygen to grow
  2. obligate anaerobes- cannot grow in presence of oxygen
  3. facultative anaerobes- can grow with or without oxygen (most medically important)
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13
Q

microbes that can grow with limited nutrients

A

oligotrophs

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14
Q

microbes that require some oxygen, but lower levels of oxygen

A

microaerophiles

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15
Q

grow well in mild temperatures (15-45 C)

A

mesophiles

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16
Q

difference in envelope structure of Gram + and gram – bacteria

A

Gram + has thick layer of murein (peptidoglycan) on top which helps cell to maintain shape
Gram - has second lipid bilayer on top

17
Q

murein has a ____ structure to help with rigidity

A

cross-linked

18
Q

composition of ____ is slightly different for Gram+/- bacteria; Gram negative has ____ terminal

A

DAP (diaminopimelic acid) –D-alanine

19
Q

between cell membrane and cell wall (murein) is the ____

A

periplasmic space

20
Q

gram negative has ____ surface structure and gram positive has ____ surface structure

A

LPS; teichoic acid

21
Q

LPS is made up of ____, ____ and ____

A

lipid A; core polysaccharide; repeating O-antigen subunits

22
Q

____ is the main reason for the different antigenic specificities among gram negative bacteria

A

O-antigen

23
Q

structures within bacteria are important bc they are considered ____

A

pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)

24
Q

cells of the immune system can recognize PAMPs using _____

A

pattern recognition receptors (PRRs)

25
Q

_____ recognizes LPS

A

toll-like receptor 4

26
Q

_____ recognizes peptidoglycan

A

toll-like receptor 2

27
Q

____ together recognize teichoic acids

A

toll-receptors 2 and 6

28
Q

involved in the attachment of bacteria to cells and other surfaces

A

pili (fimbriae)

29
Q

when movement of flagella is directed it is referred to as ____

A

taxis

30
Q

a substance that surrounds a cell outside the cell wall or lipid membrane

A

glycocalyx

31
Q

glycocalyx that is well organized and firmly attached is a ____

A

capsule

32
Q

capsules are usually made of _____ but can include ____ and _____

A

polysaccharides; monosaccharides; glycoproteins

33
Q

glycocalyx that is not well organized or firmly attached is called a _____

A

slime layer

34
Q

why would capsules be beneficial to pathogens?

A

for some bacteria, encapsulation is a necessary virulence factor

35
Q

_____ can recognize flagella

A

toll-like receptor 5

36
Q

if a microbe is gram negative, you know it has ____ (designated by ____ in the name)

A

LPS; O-antigen

37
Q

if a microbe is motile, you know it has ____, designated by the ____ in the name

A

a flagellum (or multiple flagella); H-antigen

38
Q

____ refer to capsules

A

K-antigens