Study Guide Sheet 1 (pt3) Flashcards
The maturation phase of the virus infection, involves what?
The nucleic material copies getting packaged with the capsid
What are the major mechanisms/means involving the entrance of a virus into a human cell?
Method similar to phagocytosis or fusion of envelope with host cells cytoplasmic membrane
What are the major mechanisms/steps of viral genetic code translation into protein in a virus-infected cell?
- Viral nucleic acid is transcribed into mRNA (if DNA)
- Viral mRNA is translated into viral proteins
- New viral proteins inhibits the host’s synthetic mechanism and normal host activity
- New viral nucleic acid copies are produced
- New viral capsids are produced
How do enveloped and non-enveloped viruses exit the infected cell?
- Enveloped viruses bud through cell membrane
- Non-enveloped viruses wait for a viral enzyme to lysis the cell wall.
What growth conditions are required for virus replication?
Living host (cell culture, embryonated egg), 2 days to 4 weeks depending on the virus
State the means of locomotion for the different types of protozoa.
- Amoebae – pseudopodia
- Flagellates – flagella
- Ciliates – cilia
- Apicomplexans (Sporozoans) – non-motile in mature forms
What are the characteristics of the major morphologic stages of protozoa?
- Trophozoite stage – active, vegetative, motile, feeding stage.
- Cyst stage – non-motile, dormant, non-feeding stage.
Describe the major characteristics of Trematodes (size, shape/appearance, reproduction, etc.).
- 500 um to 60 mm
- one body part, non-segmented; leaf shape
- mouth, esophagus, and caeca, but no anus
- most are monoecious
Describe the major characteristics of Cestodes (size, shape/appearance, reproduction, etc.)
- 2 mm to over 12 M
- multiple body parts, segmented
- no alimentary tract
- monoecious
Describe the major characteristics of Nematodes (size, shape/appearance, reproduction, etc.)
- 300um to over 1 meter
- unsegmented and cylindrical, body surface may be wrinkled
- complete alimentary tract
- dioecious (copulation)
Cells which are about 1.2 µm in diameter, grow on routine culture media, and reproduce by binary fission are known as ________________.
Bacillus spp.
A microbe which consists of segmented body parts and is about 50 mm in length is most likely _______________.
Cestode
A microbe which reproduces only when it is inside a living “host” cell is most likely __________________.
Virus
Which type of bacteria has the most peptidoglycan in its cell wall?
“Typical” gram positive bacteria
“Typical” bacteria can be differentiated from “Atypical” bacteria by
Ability to grow or not grow on routine culture media