front 1 1. The scientist usually considered the first to see microorganisms, which he called "animalcules", was A. Redi. B. van Leeuwenhoek. C. Pasteur. D. Tyndall. | back 1 B. van Leeuwenhoek. |
front 2 2. The word "animalcule" was coined by A. Pasteur. | back 2 B. van Leeuwenhoek. |
front 3 The idea of spontaneous Generation postulated that A. organisms could evolve into the next generation of
organisms. | back 3 D. living organisms could spontaneously arise from non-living material. |
front 4 4. Which of these scientist(s) was/were involved in, among other
things, investigating the idea of spontaneous generation? | back 4 E. Redi AND Pasteur |
front 5 5. The work of Tyndall and Cohn | back 5 B. was used to explain why others investigating spontaneous generation had obtained results that were opposite of those obtained by Pasteur. |
front 6 The structures present in the hay infusions used in experiments on spontaneous generation that made them difficult to sterilize are A. chlorophyll. | back 6 D. endospores. |
front 7 7. The opposite results obtained by scientists apparently doing the
same experiments in investigating spontaneous generation | back 7 D. All of the choices are correct. |
front 8 If while investigating spontaneous generation, Pasteur had his laboratory located in a stable A. the results would, most likely, have supported the idea of
spontaneous generation. | back 8 A. the results would, most likely, have supported the idea of spontaneous generation. |
front 9 9. Cellulose is a major component of plants and is only directly
digested by | back 9 D. microorganisms. |
front 10 10. Plants are dependent on microorganisms for | back 10 C. changing atmospheric nitrogen to a usable form. |
front 11 11. Microorganisms are involved in | back 11 E. All of the choices are correct. |
front 12 12. Bacteria have been used to help produce or modify food products
C. since the late 1800s. D. since the 1950s. | back 12 A. for several thousand years. |
front 13 13. Microorganisms are involved in | back 13 E. All of the choices are correct. ` |
front 14 14. Bioremediation refers to | back 14 B. using bacteria to clean up pollutants. |
front 15 15. The Golden Age of Medical Microbiology | back 15 E. occurred during the late 1800s to early 1900s, is a time when the knowledge of and techniques to work with bacteria blossomed AND was when people realized that diseases could be caused by invisible agents. |
front 16 Newly emerging or reemerging diseases A. may be due to changing lifestyles. C. may reflect a breakdown in sanitation/social order. D. may be related to global cooling. | back 16 E. may be due to changing lifestyles, are exemplified by Lyme disease and toxic shock syndrome, AND may reflect a breakdown in sanitation/social order. |
front 17 Lyme disease is an example of a disease A. that is due to a greater degree of interaction between humans
and tick-carrying animals. | back 17 A. that is due to a greater degree of interaction between humans and tick-carrying animals. |
front 18 18. The outbreak of measles within the last few years was due to
| back 18 C. a decline in vaccination of children in the previous years. |
front 19 19. Smallpox C. probably only had a human reservoir. | back 19 E. has been eliminated as a naturally occurring infection in human beings, AND was dealt with by vaccination. |
front 20 20. Smallpox B. has not occurred naturally anywhere in the world since
1977. | back 20 E. All of the choices are correct. |
front 21 21. Diseases such as ulcers and cardiovascular disease | back 21 A. have been shown to be, or may be due to, a bacterial infection. |
front 22 22. Bacteria are useful to study because | back 22 E. All of the choices are correct. |
front 23 23. Bacteria D. always cause disease when growing on our bodies. | back 23 C. provide protection to us from disease by covering our bodies, crowding out "bad" invading bacteria. |
front 24 24. Bacteria are present on the body | back 24 B. constantly. |
front 25 25. Bacteria are good models to use because they | back 25 B. share many biochemical/physiological properties with more complicated organisms. |
front 26 Which is usually true of bacteria? A. They are found as rods, spheres, or spirals. | back 26 E. All of the choices are correct. |
front 27 Which is usually true of archaea? A. They are found as rods, spheres, or spirals. | back 27 E. All of the choices are correct. |
front 28 Which is not usually true of archaea? A. They are found as rods, spheres, or spirals. | back 28 E. They contain peptidoglycan as part of their cell walls. |
front 29 Some archaea are commonly found in A. meteors. | back 29 E. boiling hot springs AND the Great Salt Lake. |
front 30 The cell types that lack a membrane-bound nucleus are found in the A. eukaryotes. | back 30 E. prokaryotes AND archaea. |
front 31 31. The prokaryotic cell scheme is found in B. archaea. C. eucarya. D. All of the choices are correct. | back 31 E. bacteria AND archaea. |
front 32 32. Eucarya C. have a simpler internal structure than archaea or bacteria. D. have a membrane around the DNA. | back 32 E. have a more complex internal structure than archaea or bacteria AND have a membrane around the DNA. |
front 33 33. Which group(s) below contain single-celled and multicellular
organisms? B. Fungi C. Protozoa D. All of the choices are correct. | back 33 E. Algae AND Fungi |
front 34 34. Organisms | back 34 B. may be classified in three domains. |
front 35 35. The system by which organisms are named is referred to as | back 35 C. nomenclature |
front 36 36. The scientific name of an organism includes its | back 36 C. genus and species. |
front 37 37. Which is/are the correct form(s)? | back 37 E. Staphylococcus aureus AND S. aureus |
front 38 38. Which of these may pertain to the term strain? D. Major variation of a species E. E. coli 0157:H7 AND minor variation of a species | back 38 E. E. coli 0157:H7 AND minor variation of a species |
front 39 39. Viroids | back 39 A. are naked (lacking a protein shell) pieces of RNA. |
front 40 40. Outside a cell, viruses are | back 40 C. inactive |
front 41 41. Viruses may only be grown | back 41 B. in living cells. |
front 42 42. Viruses are in the group B. eukarya. C. archaea. D. bacteria. E. None of the choices is correct. | back 42 E. None of the choices is correct. |
front 43 43. Viruses | back 43 A. are obligate intracellular parasites. |
front 44 44. Viruses are often referred to as | back 44 A. infectious agents. |
front 45 45. Viruses, viroids, and prions all A. operate intracellularly. | back 45 E. operate intracellularly AND may be considered acellular agents of disease. |
front 46 46. Both viruses and viroids are | back 46 B. obligate intracellular parasites. |
front 47 47. Prions | back 47 C. are only composed of protein. |
front 48 48. The smallest organism is probably determined by | back 48 E. the number of molecules necessary for its growth and replication AND the size of the molecules necessary for its growth and replication. |
front 49 49. A new organism was found that was unicellular and 1 cm long. The
"large" size of this organism alone would | back 49 C. mean little. |
front 50 50. Although it is said that the twentieth century was the Age of
Physics, it is predicted that the twenty-first century will be the age
of | back 50 C. microbial biodiversity. |
front 51 HIV/AIDS can be categorized as a new or emerging infectious disease. By putting it into this category, we are effectively saying that A. this infection hasn't been observed in the human population
prior to recent (approximately 50 years or sooner) outbreaks. | back 51 A. this infection hasn't been observed in the human population prior to recent (approximately 50 years or sooner) outbreaks. |
front 52 An illness outbreak occurs in New York City birds in the late 1990s. After a lengthy scientific investigation, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) determine that the agent causing the birds to die is the West Nile virus. Outbreaks of this illness have been observed in several other countries in Asia and the Middle East across the last 50 years, but not in the United States. With this information, what would be the best categorization of this infectious agent/disease A. This is clearly a reemerging infection. It's been around for a long time, and it is reappearing in a susceptible population again. B. This is clearly a nosocomial infection. It's transmitted from animals to human beings in urban environments. C. This is clearly an emerging infection. It
hasn't been around that long, and it has made a jump across
continents into a new susceptible population. | back 52 C. This is clearly an emerging infection. It hasn't been around that long, and it has made a jump across continents into a new susceptible population. |
front 53 64. Why are we concerned at all with monitoring emerging/reemerging
diseases? C. Because the speed of travel has increased greatly. With increased speed of travel, it is far more likely that a serious pathogenic threat from one area of the world can spread rapidly across the globe in a very fast manner. We need to monitor the occurrence of these illnesses to try to protect populations. D. All of the above. | back 53 D. All of the above. |
front 54 A microbiologist obtained two pure isolated biological samples: one of a virus, and one of a viroid. The labels came off during a move from one lab to the next, however. The scientist felt she could distinguish between the two samples by analyzing for the presence of a single type of molecule. What type of molecule would she be looking for to differentiate between the two? A. DNA C. Lipids D. RNA | back 54 B. Protein |
front 55 1. Eukaryotic cells are C. defined by the presence of a membrane bound nucleus. D. able to reproduce more rapidly than prokaryotes. | back 55 C. defined by the presence of a membrane bound nucleus. |
front 56 2. The two magnifying lenses found in a light microscope are the
| back 56 C. ocular and objective. |
front 57 3. The resolving power of a microscope is described as the ability of
the microscope to | back 57 A. separate clearly two objects that are very close together. |
front 58 4. In viewing a microscopic specimen, oil is used to | back 58 E. decrease the refraction AND increase the resolution. |
front 59 The use of oil with certain high-power objective lenses increases A. magnification. | back 59 E. resolution AND the amount of light that enters the objective lens. |
front 60 6. If everything else is equal, the best way to observe more details
in a microscopic specimen is to | back 60 A. increase resolution. |
front 61 7. The microscope that allows the specimen to appear three-dimensional is the A. phase contrast microscope. B. interference microscope. C. fluorescence microscope. | back 61 B. interference microscope. |
front 62 8. Which of the following microscope types would be least useful in
viewing unstained living cells? Phase contrast B. Interference C. Bright-field D. Dark-field | back 62 C. Bright-field |
front 63 9. Electron microscopes differ from light microscopes in that | back 63 E. All of the choices are correct. |
front 64 10. Specimens can be observed at the atomic level using a(n) | back 64 C. atomic force microscope. |
front 65 11. An electron microscope must use electromagnet "lenses" shaped like donuts to direct the electrons onto the specimen. Why? A. Electrons are particles-there are also
particles in air. Without a vacuum, the electrons would strike and be
scattered by the atoms/particles within the air. | back 65 A. Electrons are particles-there are also particles in air. Without a vacuum, the electrons would strike and be scattered by the atoms/particles within the air. |
front 66 12. An electron microscope must use electromagnet 'lenses'shaped like
donuts to direct the electrons onto the specimen. Why aren't they
solid, like the lenses in a light microscope? | back 66 D. Electrons are particles, and particles cannot travel through a solid item. The hole in the middle allows them to travel from the source of the electrons to the specimen. |
front 67 13. Which microscope would be the BEST selection for examination of a
virus? | back 67 D. Scanning electron microscope |
front 68 14. Individual atoms on the surface of prepared samples can be
observed by using the | back 68 D. atomic force microscope. |
front 69 15. Basic dyes | back 69 B. have positive charges. |
front 70 16. Which of the following stains is/are considered differential?
B. Flagella stain. C. Acid-fast stain. D. Gram stain. E. Acid-fast stain AND Gram stain. | back 70 E. Acid-fast stain AND Gram stain. |
front 71 17. The Gram stain and the endospore stain both use crystal violet. B. iodine. C. safranin. E. acidic dyes. | back 71 C. safranin. |
front 72 18. The order of reagents in the Gram stain reaction are | back 72 B. crystal violet, iodine, alcohol, safranin. |
front 73 19. Which may result in Gram-positive bacteria appearing to be
Gram-negative? Decolorizing too long B. Decolorizing too short C. Using old cultures D. Using young cultures E. Decolorizing too long AND using old cultures | back 73 E. Decolorizing too long AND using old cultures |
front 74 20. The major criteria used in placing bacteria into different groups
is based on differences in | back 74 A. cell wall structure. |
front 75 21. In a basic staining procedure, which is the correct order? Fix, smear, stain B. Smear, fix, stain C. Fix, stain, decolorize D. Smear, decolorize, stain | back 75 B. Smear, fix, stain |
front 76 22. The acid-fast stain | back 76 E. is useful for distinguishing a small group of organisms, including Mycobacterium AND uses carbolfuchsin and methylene blue. |
front 77 23. Capsules | back 77 E. may correlate with an organism's ability to cause disease, are typically "negatively" stained, AND are stained as a wet mount |
front 78 24. The endospore stain | back 78 E. is applicable to only a few groups of bacteria AND usually shows the spores as green structures among a background of pink cells. |
front 79 25. Immunofluorescence | back 79 E. uses fluorescently tagged molecules, makes use of the specificity in binding of antibodies, AND would require a special UV microscope. |
front 80 26. Which term(s) refer(s) to bacterial morphology? Coccus C. Polyhedral D. Coccus AND Bacillus | back 80 D. Coccus AND Bacillus |
front 81 27. Which is not true of the cytoplasmic membrane? D. It uses proteins as selective gates and sensors. E. All of the choices are true. | back 81 C. It consists mainly of a fixed, static, phospholipid bilayer. |
front 82 28. Which is true of simple diffusion of water? | back 82 E. Water usually enters a cell and produces a tremendous osmotic pressure AND the diffusion ultimately relies on the selectively permeable nature of the cell membrane. |
front 83 29. The cytoplasmic membrane of both eukaryotes and prokaryotes
functions to D. form lysosomes and Golgi apparatus. | back 83 C. regulate movement of molecules that enter and leave the cell. |
front 84 The proteins of bacteria that are involved in the movement of small molecules into the cell are called A. transport proteins. | back 84 E. transport proteins, permeases, AND carriers. |
front 85 31. Most solutes pass through the cytoplasmic membrane via | back 85 C. transport proteins. |
front 86 32. Facilitated diffusion and active transport | back 86 A. both transport molecules into or out of a cell. |
front 87 33. The macromolecule found in the cell walls of all bacteria is
B. teichoic acid. | back 87 C. peptidoglycan. |
front 88 Which is (are) true concerning the cell wall of prokaryotes? A. It determines the shape of the bacteria. | back 88 E. All of the choices are true. |
front 89 35. Which amino acid(s) is/are found only in the cell walls of
bacteria? Glycerol B. L-form of glycine D. L-form of methionine | back 89 C. Diaminopimelic acid |
front 90 36. The cell wall of Gram-positive bacteria | back 90 B. contains a thick layer of peptidoglycan. |
front 91 37. Which molecules are associated with the cell wall of
Gram-positive bacteria? B. D-form amino acids D. LPS | back 91 E. Peptidoglycan, D-form amino acids, AND teichoic acids |
front 92 38. The cell wall of Gram-negative organisms | back 92 E. has a thin peptidoglycan layer AND is characterized by an outer membrane containing LPS. |
front 93 39. Endotoxin | back 93 A. consists of LPS. |
front 94 40. Penicillin would be most effective against | back 94 E. growing bacteria AND Gram-positive bacteria. |
front 95 41. Peptidoglycan | back 95 C. may be digested by lysozyme. |
front 96 42. Which of the following bacteria lack a cell wall? | back 96 D. Mycoplasma pneumoniae |
front 97 43. The capsule | back 97 E. may be used for protection AND may be used to help the bacteria adhere to surfaces. |
front 98 44. The structures used for motility in both eukaryotes and
prokaryotes are | back 98 B. flagella. |
front 99 45. Movement in bacteria | back 99 E. is often referred to as run and tumble AND may involve pili. |
front 100 46. Extrachromasomal DNA is found in ____________________________.
| back 100 E. mitochondria AND plasmids |
front 101 47. Endospores are | back 101 A. a dormant cell type. |
front 102 48. Eukaryotic cells | back 102 A. are more obviously compartmentalized than prokaryotes. |
front 103 49. The membranes of eukaryotes and mycoplasma C. contain ergosterol. | back 103 B. contain sterols for "strength." |
front 104 50. Phagocytosis | back 104 A. is the ingestion of particles and may be performed by animal cells. |
front 105 51. The cytoskeleton B. is a static structure that gives a rigid shape to the
cell. | back 105 A. is a dynamic structure composed of microtubules, microfilaments, and intermediate filaments. |
front 106 52. The nucleus | back 106 A. is a double membrane sac containing DNA and is found in eukaryotes. |
front 107 53. Which is not true of mitochondria and chloroplasts? | back 107 A. They are found in all organisms. |
front 108 54. An advantage of the smaller size of prokaryotes, compared to
eukaryotes, is | back 108 E. high surface area relative to low cell volume AND more rapid growth rates. |
front 109 65. You want to examine the structure of the protein coat of a virus
by microscopy. Which microscope is your best choice, and why? | back 109 B. An atomic force microscope-this has the highest resolution and magnification of the microscopes we discussed. Here, we want to visualize a subcomponent of the virus particles, so we need the best value for resolution and magnification we can possibly achieve. |
front 110 66. Your instructor wants you to bring in an example of a biofilm to
your lab. Which choice is the best selection for bringing in an intact
biofilm for further study? B. Scraping the mold off of the shower curtain in your dorm's bathroom into a paper cup using a butter knife C. Using a toothpick to scrape plaque off of your teeth and smearing it onto a slide to bring in to lab D. Wiping a sponge across a slimy boulder in a stream in a nearby park and bringing it in to lab | back 110 A. Disconnecting and bringing in the old, mildewed showerhead from the showers in your dorm |