Module 2 Test*
Recombination of genetic material between homologous chromosomes occurs during?
A.) late phase II of meiosis
B.) prophase of mitosis
C.) metaphase I of meiosis
D.) metaphase of mitosis
E.) early prophase I of meiosis
E
Which of the following is a cell type produced during sexual reproduction in fungi?
A.) haustoria
B.) pneumocyst
C.) sporangiospore
D.) dikaryon
E.) mycorrhiza
D
Which of the following is a particle found in the nucleus of an atom and that has no electrical charge?
A.) neutron
B.) element
C.) proton
D.) electron
E.) isotope
A
Which of the following are magnifying lenses?
A.) dark-feild stops
B.) objectives
C.) oculars
D.) condensers
E.) both objectives and the oculars
E
Members of the genus Chlamydia are
A.) classified with deeply branching bacteria
B.) thermophiles
C.) endospore-formers
D.) intracellular parasites
E.) Gram-positive bacteria
D
Which of the following types of animal virus requires RNA-dependant RNA transcriptase to be replicated?
A.) retroviruses
B.) -ssRNA viruses
C.) +ssRNA viruses
D.) ssDNA viruses
E.) dsDNA viruses
B
Anna is conducting an experiment using a pH indicator that is red at low pH, green at neutral pH, and purple at high pH. She starts with a green solution. When she adds compound X to her solution it turns purple. Then she adds compound Z to the solution and it turns green. She adds more Z and the solution remains green. The observation suggests X is_____ and Z is ____.
A.) a base; a buffer
B.) a base; a strong acid
C.) an acid; a base
D.) an acid; a buffer
E.) a buffer; a base
A
Zones of clearing in a cell cultures that are the result of virus infection are called plaques. Sometimes "cloudy plaques" are seen on bacterial cultures infected with bacteriophage. What type of viral infection might cause this appearance?
A.) prion
B.) lytic
C.) transducing
D.) viroid
E.) lysogenic
E
Which of the following statements concerning glycolysis is TRUE?
A.) Glycolysis occurs in the cells membranes of bacteria
B.) Glycolysis is an alternative to fermentation
C.) Ribulose 5-phosphate is an intermediate of glycolysis
D.) Glycolysis produces ATP by oxidative phosphorylation
E.) Glycolysis both requires the input of ATP and produce ATP
E
Which of the following is an accurate description of a virion?
A.) the protein portion of a viral particle
B.) an infectious particle and nucleic acid outside a host cell
C.) a population of infectious particles
D.) the nucleic acid of a viral pathogen inside a host cell
E.) the nucleic acid of a viral pathogen
B
The ___ is the entire interwoven mass of one multicellular fungal organism.
A.) mycelium
B.) pseudoplasmodium
C.) sporangium
D.) conidiophore
E.) hyphae
A
You are performing an experiment in your chemistry lab class. The directions advise caution because the reaction is exothermic. Which of the following is the hazard the directions warn you about?
A.) The reaction will generate radiation
B.) The reaction may cause the container to become dangerously hot
C.) The reaction may cause the container to freeze and break
D.) The reaction will produce a noxious vapor
E.) The reaction will generate enough light to require eye protection
B
Aristotle was an early natural philosopher who formulated the
A.) scientific method
B.) theory of natural selection
C.) germ theory of disease
D.) theory of "magic bullets"
E.) theory of spontaneous generation (abiogenesis)
E
When mitosis occurs without cytokinesis, which of the following is produced?
A.) chromatids
B.) coenocytes
C.) cysts
D.) macronuclei
E.) merozoites
B
The Gram-negative diplococci____ are pathogenic member of the betaproteobacteria that infect mammalian mucous in membranes.
A.) Streptococcus
B.) Haemophilus
C.) Neisseria
D.) Coxiella
E.) Listeria
C
Small circular RNA molecules without capsids are characteristic of
A.) plasmids
B.) viroids
C.) viruses
D.) prions
E.) viruses and prions
B
Which of the following statements concerning prokaryotic flagella is TRUE?
A.) Treponema is an example of a bacterium that has a tuft of polar flagella
B.) Prokaryotic flagella are anchored in the cytoplasm
C.) Prokaryotic flagella rotate like a drive shaft
D.) A "run" results from clockwise movement of the flagellum
E.) Prokaryotic flagella are composed of tubulin
C
A microorganism found living under conditions of high____ is a barophile.
A.) salt concentrations
B.) pH values
C.) hydrostatic pressure
D.) carbon dioxide levels
E.) oxygen concentrations
C
Which of the following is an INCORRECT pairing?
A.) quaternary structure; amino acid sequence
B.) primary structure; amino acid sequence
C.) tertiary structure; covalent bonds
D.) secondary structure; disulfide bridges
E.) secondary structure; β-pleated sheets
D
Lasers are used to generate the images produced by ____microscopes.
A.) phase-contrast
B.) atomic force
C.) fluorescent
D.) confocal
E.) both confocal and atomic force
D
All of the following are ways in which cells regulate metabolism EXCEPT
A.) use of the same coenzymes for anabolic and catabolic reactions that share substrate molecules
B.) synthesis of a catabolic enzyme only when its substrate is available
C.) isolation of various enzymes within membranous organelles
D.) feedback inhibition by end products
E.) synthesis of degradation transport proteins
A
Pleomorphic Gram-negative members of the Firmicutes that colonize mammalian respiratory mucous membranes are the
A.) Rickettsias
B.) Actinobacterai
C.) clostridia
D.) mycobacteria
E.) mycoplasmas
E
The accumulation of glucose 6-phosphate inside bacterial cell via phosphorylation of glucose is an example of
A.) osmosis
B.) diffusion
C.) facilitated diffusion
D.) group translocation
E.) plasmolysis
D
A reaction requires water as a reactant and produces heat. What type of reaction is likely to be involved?
A. a synthesis reaction
B. a decomposition reaction
C. a hydrolysis reaction
D. an exchange reaction
E. The answer cannot be determined with the available information.
B
What was the first disease shown to be bacterial in origin?
A. yellow fever
B. anthrax
C. tuberculosis
D. malaria
E. cholera
B
Which of the following was NOT an aspect of Pasteur's experiments to disprove spontaneous generation?
A. The necks of the flakes he used were bent into an S-shape.
B. The flasks he used were sealed with corks.
C. He boiled the infusions to kill any microbes present.
D. The flasks were free of microbes until they were opened.
E. The flasks were incubated for very long periods of time.
B
Which of the following questions largely stimulated the research of microbes during what is known as the Golden Age of Microbiology?
A. How are microbes related?
B. What causes disease, and is spontaneous generation of microbes possible?
C. How should living organisms be classified?
D. How do genes work?
E. How can microorganisms be seen?
B
(Illustration showing 1 'mother' cell with 2 long lines, 2 short lines ----> 4 cells each w/ 1 long line, 1 short line)
Which process is represented in this figure?
A. budding
B. mitosis
C. meiosis
D. schizogony
E. cytokinesis
C
What functional groups are present in ALL amino acids?
A. carboxyl groups
B. amino groups
C. amino and carboxyl groups
D. amino and sulfhydryl groups
E. hydroxyl groups
C
Which of the following is a feature shared by viruses and living organism?
A. metabolic capability
B. responsiveness
C. possession of a genome that directs synthesis of materials necessary for replication
D. presence of cytoplasm
E. the ability to increase in size
C
The genus Mycobacterium includes species responsible for
A. gastric ulcers.
B. tuberculosis.
C. food poisoning from contaminated dairy products.
D. urinary tract infections.
E. food poisoning from rice.
B
Which of the following is an approach to preventing the formation of biofilms?
A. digesting matrix molecules
B. triggering the production of streamers
C. stimulating quorum sensing receptors
D. increasing quorum sensing
E. blocking the activity of carbohydrate catabolism
D
Which of the following statements is TRUE concerning the fluid mosaic model?
A. Small water soluble molecules move freely across the bilayer.
B. The phospholipids form a rigid structure.
C. Membrane proteins are free to move in two dimensions in the bilayer.
D. The integrated proteins are firmly cemented in place relative to each other.
E. The phospholipids rotate across the bilayer from one face to the other.
C
Safranin dye is used as the counterstain in ______ stain(s).
A. the endospore
B. the acid-fast
C. the Gram
D. the flagellar
E. both the Gram and endospore
E
(Diagram w/ Number of Live cells (log) as y axis)
The correct sequence for the phases indicated by the letters A, B, C, and D is
A. death phase, stationary phase, log phase, lag phase
B. stationary phase, lag phase, log phase, death phase
C. death phase, log phase, stationary phase, lag phase
D. log phase, stationary phase, lag phase, death phase
E. lag phase, log phase, stationary phase, death phase
E
During which growth phase do antimicrobial drugs have the greatest inhibitory effect?
A. stationary phase
B. death phase
C. lag phase
D. log phase
E. The susceptibility is the same for all phases
D
Which of the following is characteristic of proteins?
A. They are composed of carbohydrate.
B. They have multiple layers of structural organization.
C. They are primarily hydrophobic.
D. They are composed of nucleic acids.
E. Their secondary structure is composed of B-helices. (beta helices)
B
Which of the following statements concerning Koch's postulates is FALSE?
A. All of Koch's postulates must be satisfied before an organism can be shown to cause a particular disease.
B. A suspected pathogen must be able to be grown in the laboratory.
C. The suspected pathogen may not be present in all cases of the disease being studied.
D. Koch's postulates involve the experimental infection of susceptible hosts.
E. Koch's postulates cannot be used to demonstrate the cause of all diseases.
C
A Gram stain of a tissue sample from a patient shows Gram-negative spheres that can barely be resolved on the best light microscope. A transmission election micrograph reveals the spheres have a double membrane but no cell wall. The intracellular parasites are likely to be a
A. Rickettsia
B. Coxiella
C. Listeria
D. Chlamydia
E. Mycoplasma
D
How is the HIV provirus different from a lambda-phage prophage?
A. all the offspring of a cell infected with a prophage will contain the virus
B. Lambda phage-infected cells produce virus slowly over time
C. The HIV provirus is integrated permanently into the host cell's DNA
D. All subsequent generations of HIV-infected cells carry the provirus
E. The HIV provirus is inactive inside the host cell.
C
If a microbiology lab student left the safranin out of the Gram stain procedure, what would be the result?
A. Gram-positive cells would be purple and Gram-negative cells would be colorless
B. Gram-positive cells would be pink and Gram-negative cells would be purple.
C. Gram-positive cells would be colorless and Gram-negative cells would be pink.
D. All cells would be pink
E. All cells would be purple
A
A flexible, spiral-shaped bacterium is called a
A. spirillum
B. sarcina
C. vibrio
D. coccobacillus
e. spirochete
E
A laboratory protocol lists the following ingredients: 1 g sucrose, 16.4 g Na2HPO4, 1.5 g (NH4)3PO4, 0.02 g CaCO3, KNO3, water to 1 liter and autoclave. This recipe is for a ______ medium.
A. complex enrichment broth
B. defined broth
C. defined agar
D. complex broth
E. reducing agar
B
Fungi called Deuteromycetes are not known to reproduce asexually. Nonetheless, most of them are considered members of the _______ on the basis of genetic sequences.
A. Ascomycota
B. Rhizaria
C. Basidiomycota
D. Zygomycota
E. Sporozoa
A
Which of the following molecules would be expected to cross the cytoplasmic membrane rapidly and without the use of transport proteins?
A. small hydrophobic molecules only
B. large molecules only
C. small hydrophilic molecules only
D. ions only
E. both ions and small hydrophilic molecules
A
Hopanoids are found in _______ cytoplasmic membranes.
A. no
B. eurkaryotic
C. archaeal
D. prokaryotic
E. bacterial
E
Mites are responsible for the spread of
A. helminth diseases.
B. Lyme disease.
C. diseases caused by Rickettsias
D. malaria
E. diseases caused by Apicomplexans
C
A unique feature of cytokinesis in algae is
A. the new cell in pinched off by a ring of a cell wall.
B. the formation of a cell plate between daughter cells
C. that cytokinesis is delayed until several rounds of mitosis have occurred
D. the formation of a cleavage furrow
E. the unequal division of the cytoplasm
B
Which of the following is found only in eukaryotic cells?
A. DNA
B. cytoplasmic membrane
C. ribosomes
D. cytoplasm
E. nuclear envelope
E
The type(s) of bonds produced when atoms share electrons equally is/are
A. ionic bond.
B. a nonpolar covalent bond.
C. a hydrogen bond.
D. A polar covalent bond.
E. both polar covalent and ionic bonds
B
(Illustration w/ flow pathways)
Identify the processes of glucose metabolism represented in Figure 5-1.
A. A= fermentation, B= glycolysis, C= Krebs cycle, D= electron transport chain
B. A= glycolysis, B= fermentation, C= Krebs cycle, D= electron transport chain
C. A= glycolysis, B= Krebs cycle, C= fermentation, D= electron transport chain
D. A= glycolysis, B= Krebs cycle, C= electron transport chain, D= fermentation
E. A= electron transport chain, B= Krebs cycle, C= glycolysis, D= fermentation
B
Students in a microbiology lab are provided plates of medium to use in their bacterial culturing. The growth of organisms that can metabolize mannose sugar will result in the agar turning yellow, while the agar color remains unchanged if the mannose is not metabolized. The plates contain a __________ medium.
A. selective
B. differential
C. reducing
D. transport
E. defined
B
A measurement of a microbe is reported as 1 x 10-6m, also know as
A. nanometers (nm)
B. micrometers (um)
C. yards
D. centimeters (cm)
E. millimeters (mm)
B
During the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from pyruvic acid, ______ is produced.
A. FADH2
B. acetic acid
C. H2O
D. NADH
E. ATP
D
Identification of bacteria in the laboratory usually begins with the _______ for placement in one of two large groups of bacteria.
A. Koch's stain
B. Gram stain
C. Petri stain
D. Ehrlich magic test
E. Pasteur fermentation test
B
One mechanism by which viruses may cause cancer is to interrupt the genetic regulatory sequences of repressor proteins. Which of the following types of viruses is most likely to be involved in causing cancer by this mechanism?
A. +ssRNA viruses
B. dsRNA viruses
C. -ssRNA viruses
D. retroviruses
E. both +ssRNA and -ssRNA viruses
D
Which of the following is a property of water?
A. It is a nonpolar molecule.
B. It is liquid in a very narrow temperature range.
C. It is not a common reactant in metabolic reactions.
D. It is not a good solvent
E. It has a high capacity for heat.
E
Why does immersion oil improve resolution?
A. It increases numerical aperture and maintains a uniform light speed.
B. It decreases the working distance.
C. It increases the angle of refraction of the light.
D. It increases the numerical aperture.
E. It allows light to travel at a uniform speed on its way to the lens.
A
The acid-fast stain is used to stain
A. bacteria with capsules
B. endospores
C. bacteria lacking cell walls.
D. bacteria with waxy cell walls.
E. living bacteria
D
Chloroplasts differ from mitochondria in that the former have
A. 70S Ribosomes
B. DNA
C. thylakoids
D. two lipid bilayers
E. cristae
C
What is one of the most difficult aspects of studying animal viruses?
A. The use of animals to study the viruses is unethical in the eyes of many.
B. The viruses are extremely dangerous to handle.
C. The viruses are hard to obtain.
D. The use of animals is expensive, and unethical to many people.
E. The study requires expensive facilities
D
Which of the following would NOT normally be found as a component of a cell's nucleic acids?
A. adenine deoxyribonucleotides
B. adenine ribonucleotides
C. thymine deoxyribonucleotides
D. uracil deoxyribonucleotides
E. cytosine ribonucleotides
D
Simple eukaryotes that carry out oxygenic photosynthesis and reproduce by means of alternation of generations are known as
A. arachnids
B. algae
C. slime molds
D. fungi
E. euglenids
B
Lipid-soluble molecules would be expected to cross the cytoplasmic membrane by which of the following processes?
A. group translocation
B. diffusion
C. active transport
D. facilitated diffusion
E. osmosis
B
Plant cell walls are composed of ________ held together by _______.
A. fatty acids; polar covalent bonds
B. peptidoglycan; ionic bonds
C. amino acids; peptide bonds
D. polysaccharides; hydrogen bonds
E. disaccharides; hydrophobic interactions
D
How are prions different from all other known infectious agents?
A. They cause neurological problems.
B. They can be destroyed by incineration.
C. They cannot reproduce outside a cell.
D. They act as slow viruses.
E. They lack nucleic acid.
E
Lipid A is a component of
A. lipopolysaccharides
B. bacterial glycocalyces
C. cytoplasmic membranes
D. plant cell walls
E. mycolic acid
A
An epidemiologist is investigating a new disease and observes what appear to be bacteria inside tissue cells in clinical samples from victims. The scientist wants to try to isolate the bacteria in the lab. What culture conditions are most likely to be successful?
A. inoculating of cell cultures
B. culturing on blood agar plates
C. inoculation of a minimal medium broth
D. inoculation of EMB plates
E. incubation in an anaerobic culture system
A
Which of the following statements concerning endocytosis and exocytosis is TRUE?
A. These processes occur in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
B. Endocytosis is a form of passive transport, whereras exocytosis is a form of ative transport.
C. Waste products and secretions are exported from the cell during endocytosis.
D. Endocytosis produces a structure called a food vesicle.
E. Phagocytosis is a type of endocytosis in which liquids are brought into the cell.
D
Which of the following is an INCORRECT pairing?
A. contrast; staining techniques
B. numerical aperture; curved glass
C. dark field; high contract
D. magnification; refraction of radiation
E. electron beams; shorter wavelength
B
Some bacteria have an outer layer composed of _____ that protects them from desiccation and allows them to adhere to surfaces.
A. polysaccarides
B. waxes
C. polypeptides
D. nucleotides
E. either polypetptides or polysaccarides
E
The valence of an atom represents its
A. ability to interact with other atoms
B. electronegativity
C. ability to interact with water
D. radioactivity
E. ability to attract electrons
A
How many ATP molecules can theoretically be produced from the NADH generated by the catabolism of a molecule of glucose during aerobic respiration?
A. 36 B. 38 C. 4 D. 34 E. 30
E
The anaerobic Clostridium species are troublesome pathogens in part because of their capacity for
A. biofilm production
B. rapid reproduction
C. high salt tolerance
D. endospore production
E. oxygen production
D
Pasteur's experiments on fermentation laid the foundation for
A. abiogenesis
B. antisepsis
C. industrial microbiology
D. epidemiology
E. immunology
C
What is the major product of the Calvin-Benson cycle that can then be used to form glucose?
A. adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
B. ribulose biphosphate (RuBP)
C. NADPH
D. carbon dioxide (CO2)
E. glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P)
E
Which of the following products of glucose catabolism is a substrate for fatty acid synthesis?
A. succinyl- CoA
B. acetyl-CoA
C. pyruvic acid
D. oxaloacetate
E. phosphoglyceric acid
B
The filamentous water molds are no longer classified with the true fungi because
A. They are never diploid.
B. their cell walls are composed of cellulose.
C. they have cell walls composed of cellulose and motile spores with two flagella.
D. they produce motile spores with two types of flagella.
E. they have cell walls composed of chitin and never diploid
C
Changes in temperature or pH can cause enzymes to lose activity. What is a common feature of these two effects?
A. Temperature and pH change the activation energy of the reaction.
B. Temperature and pH affect the rate of substrate binding.
C. Temperature and pH change the ionization state of cofactors.
D. Temperature and pH both induce an enzyme to lose its precise three- dimensional shape.
E. There is no common mechanism of temperature and pH effects on enzyme activity.
D
Which of the following statements concerning the characteristics of life is FALSE?
A. Organisms may not exhibit all of the characteristics of life at all times.
B. Reproduction can occur asexually or sexually in living things.
C. Reproduction is defines as an increase in the size of an organism.
D. Living things store metabolic energy in the form of chemicals such as ATP.
E. Viruses have some, but not all, of the characteristics of living things.
C
Virus replication results in the death of the cell in _____ infection(s).
A. a lysogenic
B. a latent
C. a persistent
D. a lytic
E. both latent and persistent
D
Parasitic worms, even meters-long tapeworms, are studied in microbiology because
A. diagnosis usually involves microscopic examination of patient samples.
B. no one else wants to study them.
C. the Gram stain can be used to identify them.
D. they are parasites.
E. Leeuwenhoek first discovered them.
A
A microbiologist inoculates a growth medium with 100 bacterial cell/ml. If the generation time of the species is 1 hour, and there is no lag phase, how long will it be before the culture contains more than 10,000 cells/ml?
A. 2 hours B. 7 hours C. 3 hours D. 24 hours E. 10 hrs
B
Unstained cells that lack pigment are best observed on the ____ microscope.
A. scanning electron
B. phase-contrast
C. transmission electron
D. bright-field
E. scanning tunneling
B
The rules of naming organisms are called
A. taxonomy
B. classification
C. binomials
D. nomenclature
E. identification
D
Which of the following is an accurate description of viruses?
A. They are acellular obligatory parasites.
B. They are typically about the size of prokaryotic cells.
C. They are visible with a light microscope.
D. They are the smallest known cells.
E. They are composed of protein only.
A
The Gram-positive coccus _____ grows in irregular clusters, and is frequently found in the human nasal cavitiy. When it invades other parts of the body it can cause serious disease.
A. Clostridium perfringens
B. Bacillus thuringiensis
C. Helicobacter pylori
D. Escherichia coli
E. Staphylococcus aureus
E
At temperatures higher than the maximum growth temperature for an organism,
A. hydrogen bonds within molecules are broken.
B. membranes become too fluid for proper function.
C. hydrogen bonds are broken and proteins are permanently denatured.
D. hydrogen bonds are broken, proteins are denatured, and membranes become too fluid.
E. proteins are permanently denatured.
D
Which of the following statements about fungi is INCORRECT?
A. Molds are multicellular.
B. Yeasts are unicellular.
C. Fungi are eukaryotes.
D. Fungi have a cell wall.
E. Fungi are photosynthetic.
E
Prions cause disease in
A. mammals.
B. bacteria.
C. fungi.
D. plants.
E. birds.
A
The development of a cancerous cell is said to require "multiple hits." This means
A. multiple oncogenic viruses infect the cell at the same time.
B. multiple cell cycle regulators are inactivated at once.
C. the cell must be infected with several different types of viruses to be transformed.
D. several protoncogenes are activated at the same time.
E. a series of separate events over time lead to the loss of cell cycle regulation.
E
The process known as _____ is a mechanism of release for enveloped viruses.
A. budding
B. lytic replicaton
C. latency
D. persistent infection
E. metastasis
A
Rocky Mountain spotted fever is caused by Gram-negative tiny bacilli that are intracellular parasites. They are in the genus
A. Bordetella
B. Coxiella
C. Acetobacter
D. Rickettsia
E. Enterococcus
D
Microorganisms characterized by the absence of a nucleus are called
A. fungi.
B. viruses.
C. eukaryotes.
D prokaryotes.
E. pathogens
D
Isomerases catalyze reactions in which
A. atoms in biomolecules are rearranged.
B. groups are transferred from one molecule to another
C. biomolecules are oxidized or reduced.
D. biololecules are broken down into their component parts.
E. biomolecules are assembled from smaller molecules.
A
Which of the following lipids has the lowest ratio of hydrogens to carbons?
A. monounsaturated fats
B. polyunsaturated fats
C. both saturated and monounsaturated fats
D. saturated fats
E. saturated, unsaturated, and polyunsaturated fats have equal ratios of hydrogen to carbons.
B
The production of NADH takes place during the _____ stage(s) of glycolysis.
A. lysis
B. energy-conservation
C. energy-investment
D. lysis and energy-investment
E. energy-investment and energy-conservation
B
Which of the following is unique to archaea?
A. pili
B. LPS
C. fimbriae
D. peptidoglycan
E. hami
E
A species of the genus Streptococcus is the leading cause of
A. contaminated milk and meat.
B. tuberculosis.
C. food poisoning from rice.
D. "flesh-eating" bacterial infections.
E. urinary tract infections.
D
What is the correct order for the application of Koch's postulates?
I. Inoculate suspect agent into test subject and observe that subject develops disease of interest.
II. Isolate and culture suspect agent in the laboratory.
III. Find suspect agent is every case of disease of interest but not in healthy hosts.
IV. Recover and isolate suspect agent from test subject.
A. III, II, I, IV
B. IV, III, II, I
C. I, II, III, IV
D. III, IV, I, II
E. II, III, I, IV
A