Final Exam Micro Without True or False & no fill in the blanks
Chapter 1 & 3
Chapter 1 & 3
Microbes are NOT responsible for __________.
a. oxygen
generation via photosynthesis
b. antibody production
c. the
synthesis of acetone and alcohol
d. the synthesis of
vitamins
e. breaking down wastes
b. antibody production
The cell theory states that __________ are made up of cells.
a.
plants
b. all living things
c. archaea
d.
animals
e. protozoa
b. all living things
In Pasteur's swan-neck flask experiment, the importance of the
S-shaped curves in the flasks was twofold. The curves allowed entry of
air but excluded __________.
a. viruses
b. nutrients
c.
heat
d. airborne bacteria
e. oxygen
d. airborne bacteria
Pasteurization was first developed to kill __________ in
wine.
a. spoilage bacteria
b. all bacteria
c. probiotic
bacteria
d. disease-causing bacteria
e. antibiotic-producing bacteria
a. spoilage bacteria
Robert Koch's studies on Bacillus anthracis established a sequence of
experimental steps to prove that microbes __________.
a. recycle
elements such as nitrogen
b. can be altered to produce products
such as human insulin
c. control insect pests
d. produce
antiviral compounds
e. cause disease
e. cause disease
An exposure to __________ protects against infection with
smallpox.
a. cowpox
b. influenza
c.
chemotherapy
d. penicilline
a. cowpox
Ehrlich searched for a/an __________ that would destroy a pathogen
without harming the infected host.
a. vaccine
b. vital
force
c. pathogen
d. magic bullet
d. magic bullet
How would you recognize an antibiotic-producing soil bacterium on a
plate crowded with other bacteria? The bacterial colony producing the
antibiotic would be __________.
a. visible as masses called
mycelia
b. surrounded by a clear area
c. star-shaped
d.
red or yellow
e. characterized by pseudopods
b. surrounded by a clear area
The usefulness of antibiotics is hampered by __________.
a. the
emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
b. difficulties
encountered in mass production
c. an antibiotic's lack of
specificity for bacterial versus animal cells
d. the limited
types of antibiotic available
e. their inability to kill gram
negative bacteria
a. the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
All living organisms can be classified into three domains:
__________.
a. Carnivores, Herbivores, and Omnivores
b.
Eukaryotes, Prokaryotes, and Viruses
c. Animalia, Plantae, and
Microbes
d. Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
e. Bacteria,
Fungi, and Protozoa
d. Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
Which of the following is characteristic of bacteria?
a.
Bacteria reproduce by a cell-division process known as
mitosis.
b. Bacteria lack a membrane-bound nucleus.
c.
Bacteria have DNA or RNA, but not both.
d. Bacteria have
cellulose or chitin in their cell walls.
e. Bacteria live in
extreme environments including pH, temperature, and pressure extremes.
b. Bacteria lack a membrane-bound nucleus.
All of the following are eukaryotes EXCEPT __________.
a.
bacteria
b. fungi
c. helminths
d. algae
e. protozoa
a. bacteria
A new microorganism has been isolated from hot springs in Yellowstone
National Park. It consists of single cells, which appear to lack a
nucleus. Chemical analysis shows the presence of both DNA and RNA in
the cytoplasm and pseudomurein in the cell wall. In which of the
following groups will this organism be classified?
a.
Archaea
b. protists
c. plants
d. Bacteria
e. fungi
a. Archaea
Arsenic is a relatively common hazardous waste generated by smelting
processes and can contaminate soil and water surrounding smelting
facilities. A bioprocess using naturally occurring bacteria to remove
arsenic has been developed. This process is an example of
__________.
a. nitrogen fixation
b. fermentation
c.
bioremediation
d. gene therapy
e. genetic engineering
c. bioremediation
Placing the DNA from an animal cell into the genome of a bacterium
will allow the bacterium to produce an animal product. This new piece
of DNA is referred to as __________.
a. conjugated DNA
b. an
enzyme
c. the genetic code
d. recombinant DNA
e. the
hereditary material
d. recombinant DNA
Which of the following properties are true of both bacteria and
viruses?
a. Both have cell walls composed of
peptidoglycan.
b. Both can replicate using biogenesis.
c.
Both use a molecule of nucleic acid to determine heredity.
d.
Both are surrounded by a protein coat.
e. Both contain DNA and RNA.
c. Both use a molecule of nucleic acid to determine heredity.
Which is NOT a characteristic of the normal microbiota?
a.
regularly associated with disease symptoms
b. are often called
the normal flora
c. may benefit the human host
d. live
within our bodies
e. live on our bodies
a. regularly associated with disease symptoms
Increased human exposure to new and unusual infectious agents in
areas that are undergoing ecologic changes accounts for the
__________.
a. emergence of new infectious diseases
b.
development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
c. increased
incidence of smallpox
d. debate over the use of vaccines
e.
lack of natural resistance to infectious disease
a. emergence of new infectious diseases
Mad cow disease is caused by a prion, which is an infectious
__________.
a. protein
b. lipid
c. piece of DNA
d.
piece of RNA
e. sugar
a. protein
Overuse and misuse of antibiotics has __________.
a. directly
caused mutations in humans that make them allergic to the
antibiotic
b. caused bacteria to acquire virulence factors and
become more deadly
c. caused bacteria to become resistant to
household disinfectants, such as chlorine bleach
d. selected for
antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria and increased their frequency
in both the hospital environment and the community
e. caused
viruses to become resistant to a variety of antibiotics
d. selected for antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria and increased their frequency in both the hospital environment and the community
Microbes are responsible for __________.
a. synthesis of acetone
and alcohol
b. synthesis of vitamins
c. oxygen generation
via photosynthesis
d. breaking down wastes
e. all of the
listed tasks
e. all of the listed tasks
Which of the following is a scientific name?
a. Legionella
pneumophila
b. Legionnaires' disease
c. Philadelphia
fever
d. Legionnaires' bacterium
a. Legionella pneumophila
In the scientific name Escherichia coli, Escherichia is the
__________.
a. class
b. family
c. species
d. genus
d. genus
All life can be classified into three domains: __________.
a.
Animalia, Plantae, and Microbes
b. Bacteria, Archaea, and
Eukarya
c. Bacteria, Fungi, and Protozoa
d. Eukaryotes,
Prokaryotes, and Viruses
e. Carnivores, Herbivores, and Omnivores
b. Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
Which of the following properties are true of bacteria but not
viruses?
a. Bacteria cannot infect viruses.
b. Both have
cell walls composed of peptidoglycan.
c. Both use a molecule of
nucleic acid to determine heredity.
d. Both contain DNA and
RNA.
e. Both are surrounded by a protein coat.
c. Both use a molecule of nucleic acid to determine heredity.
Which of the following types of microorganism and its description are
NOT correctly matched?
a. bacteria—prokaryotic
b.
protozoa—small animals
c. helminths—multicellular animals
d. fungi—eukaryotic
b. protozoa—small animals
An exposure to __________ protects against infection with
smallpox.
a. cowpox
b. chemotherapy
c. antibody
d.
penicillin
e. normal microbiota
a. cowpox
Which of the following fields of study and its example are NOT
correctly matched?
a. bacteriology—study of E. coli
O157:H7
b. parasitology—study of HIV
c. immunology—study of
vaccines
d. mycology—study of athlete's foot
b. parasitology—study of HIV
All of the following are examples of biotechnology EXCEPT
__________.
a. bread making with bacteria and fungi
b.
enzyme production by bacteria and fungi
c. antibiotic production
by bacteria
d. bacteria that cause disease
a. bread making with bacteria and fungi
Mad cow disease is caused by a prion, which is an infectious
__________.
a. lipid
b. protein
c. sugar
d. piece
of DNA
b. protein
Which of the following is the most convenient and appropriate unit
for expressing the size of an average bacterial cell?
a.
centimeter
b. micrometer
c. millimeter
d. nanometer
b. micrometer
All of the following are visible through a compound light microscope
EXCEPT __________.
a. 0.02-μm ribosome
b. 2-μm bacterial
cell
c. 5-μm nucleus
d. 10-μm human cell
a. 0.02-μm ribosome
Which of the following is NOT a type of a compound
microscope?
a. electron microscope
b. brightfield
microscope
c. fluorescent microscope
d. darkfield microscope
a. electron microscope
Place these structures of the compound light microscope in the order
that light passes through them on the way to the observer's eyes: (1)
condenser, (2) ocular lens, (3) illuminator, (4) specimen, (5)
objective lens.
a. 3-1-4-5-2
b. 3-1-5-4-2
c.
3-4-1-5-2
d. 2-1-4-3-5
a. 3-1-4-5-2
Which of the following kinds of microscopy would be most appropriate
for viewing the shape and arrangement of pili or fimbriae on the
surface of a bacterial cell?
a. darkfield microscopy
b.
brightfield microscopy
c. transmission electron
microscopy
d. phase-contrast microscopy
e. scanning electron microscopy
e. scanning electron microscopy
Which of the following types of microscopy is most useful for viewing
the internal structures of unstained specimens?
a.
brightfield
b. confocal
c. phase-contrast
d.
fluorescence
e. electron
c. phase-contrast
In the Gram stain, if the decolorizing step is NOT performed,
gram-negative cells will appear __________ at the completion of the
staining procedure.
a. blue
b. pink
c. green
d.
purple
e. unstained
d. purple
Acid-fast mycobacteria differ from non–acid-fast bacteria by the
presence of __________. In the decolorizing step of the acid-fast
stain, __________ is used.
a. waxy material in their cell walls;
acid-alcohol
b. capsules; acetone-alcohol
c. peptidoglycan;
carbolfuchsin
d. endospores; methylene blue
a. waxy material in their cell walls; acid-alcohol
The __________ charge of a basic dye adheres to the __________ charge
of bacterial cell surfaces.
a. negative; positive
b.
positive; negative
c. negative; acidic
d. positive;
acidic
e. positive; basic
b. positive; negative
You are viewing a sputum smear that has been stained with an
acid-fast stain. On this smear you see 5-μm- long red cells. You can
conclude that __________.
a. there are no acid-fast bacteria in
the specimen
b. the normal microbiota are acid-fast
c. the
normal microbiota are Gram-negative
d. human cells are
acid-fast
e. there are acid-fast bacteria in the specimen
e. there are acid-fast bacteria in the specimen
Chapter 4,11, 12
Chapter 4,11, 12
1. Spherical bacteria that divide and remain attached in chainlike
patterns are called __________.
a. spirochetes
b.
tetrads
c. staphylococci
d. streptococci
d. streptococci
Which of the following bacterial structures are necessary for
chemotaxis?
a. capsules
b. metachromatic granules
c.
fimbriae
d. flagella
d. flagella
Chemotaxis refers to the ability of microorganisms to
__________.
a. move toward or away from chemical stimuli
b.
move in a wavelike motion
c. attach to solid surfaces
d.
survive under adverse conditions
e. escape phagocytosis
a. move toward or away from chemical stimuli
All of the following are found in the cell walls of Gram-positive
bacteria EXCEPT __________.
a. N-acetylglucosamine
b. lipid
A
c. lipoteichoic acid
d. peptidoglycan
e. teichoic acid
b. lipid A
Gram-negative cells contain a periplasmic space that is
__________.
a. filled with lysozyme
b. abundant in
photosynthetic pigments
c. a site of endocytosis
d. the site
of protein synthesis
e. rich in degradative enzymes
e. rich in degradative enzymes
Which of the following is NOT true of the Gram-negative outer
membrane?
a. It contains lipopolysaccharide.
b. It contains
enzymes for energy synthesis.
c. It has polysaccharide antigens
that are useful in bacterial identification.
d. It is a part of
the gram-negative cell wall.
e. It contains lipids also known as endotoxin
b. It contains enzymes for energy synthesis
Which of the following statements about a Gram-negative cell wall is
NOT true?
a. It contains endotoxin.
b. It has teichoic
acids.
c. It maintains the shape of the cell.
d. It includes
a thin layer of peptidoglycan.
b. It has teichoic acids.
A population of bacterial cells has been placed in a very
nutrient-poor environment with extremely low concentrations of sugars
and amino acids. Which kind of membrane transport becomes crucial in
this environment?
a. simple diffusion
b. active
transport
c. facilitated diffusion
d. osmosis
e. pinocytosis
b. active transport
Which of the following statements is true?
a. Endospores allow a
cell to attach to solid surfaces and to surfaces within the
host.
b. Endospores are extremely durable structures that can
survive high temperatures.
c. One bacterial cell produces many
endospores.
d. Endospores are reproductive structures.
b. Endospores are extremely durable structures that can survive high temperatures.
Which organism is NOT correctly matched to its motility?
a.
Myxococcus; gliding motility
b. motile cyanobacteria; gliding
motility
c. spirochetes; axial filaments
d. Spirillum; axial
filaments
e. Proteus; flagella
d. Spirillum; axial filaments
Some actinomycetes are similar to filamentous fungi because they
__________.
a. have a prokaryotic cell structure
b. produce
asexual reproductive spores
c. have a similar filament
diameter
d. have chitin in their cell walls
e. live in a
freshwater environment
b. produce asexual reproductive spores
Which answer is NOT true of bacterial photosynthesis and/or
photosynthetic bacteria?
a. Cyanobacteria deposit sulfur derived
from the splitting of hydrogen sulfide outside of the cells.
b.
Some photosynthetic bacteria are anaerobes.
c. Cyanobacteria
carry out the photosynthetic process similar to the way plants and
algae do.
d. Some photosynthetic bacteria are also capable of
chemoheterotrophic growth.
e. Green nonsulfur bacteria use
organic compounds as the source of electrons for reduction of carbon dioxide.
e. Green nonsulfur bacteria use organic compounds as the source of electrons for reduction of carbon dioxide.
A new microorganism has been discovered that resides in the mouths of
dogs. This microorganism lacks a nucleus, has a cell wall consisting
of peptidoglycan and an outer membrane of lipopolysaccharide, is
shaped like a corkscrew, and is motile by means of an axial filament.
This organism is most likely related to __________.
a.
spirochaetes
b. Acidithiobacillus
c.
alphaproteobacteria
d. pseudomonadales
e. actinobacteria
a. spirochaetes
Which member of the gammaproteobacteria is a potential cause of
pneumonia and can be found in warm-water supply lines and air
conditioning cooling towers?
a. Legionella
b.
mycoplasma
c. Salmonella
d. Coxiella
e. Klebsiella
a. Legionella
Which of the following bacteria are INCORRECTLY matched with gram
reaction and morphology?
a. Bacillus; gram-positive rod
b.
Neisseria; gram-positive coccus
c. Shigella; gram-negative
rod
d. Streptococcus; gram-positive coccus
e.
Staphylococcus; gram-positive coccus
b. Neisseria; gram-positive coccus
Which of the following bacteria does NOT fix nitrogen?
a.
Azospirillum
b. some cyanobacteria
c. Azotobacter
d.
Rhizobium
e. Nitrobacter
e. Nitrobacter
Which is NOT true of the rickettsias?
a. They are classified as
alpha-proteobacteria.
b. They reproduce by fragmentation.
c.
They can cause human diseases often characterized by a rash.
d.
They are typically transmitted by insects and ticks.
e. They are
obligate intracellular parasites
b. They reproduce by fragmentation.
A bacterium isolated from the soil has the following characteristics:
it is a gram-negative straight rod, it is aerobic and motile, it
produces water-soluble pigment, and it readily grows on several common
laboratory media. Ribosomal RNA analysis places this bacterium with
the gammaproteobacteria. This organism is most likely in the genus
__________.
a. Vibrio
b. Legionella
c.
Haemophilus
d. Pseudomonas
e. Bacillus
d. Pseudomonas
Which of the following statements is NOT true of the genus Mycoplasma
?
a. They are unusually small bacteria.
b. They are highly
pleomorphic.
c. They are obligate intracellular
pathogens.
d. They are genetically related to gram-positive
bacteria.
e. They may produce filaments that resemble fungi.
c. They are obligate intracellular pathogens.
Which of these bacteria is NOT associated with foodborne
illness?
a. Erwinia
b. Campylobacter
c.
Salmonella
d. Staphylococcus aureus
e. Shigella
a. Erwinia
Enteric bacteria would most likely be found in which
environment?
a. warm, tropical soil
b. human skin
c.
intestinal tract of an animal
d. unpasteurized milk and apple
juice
e. aquatic environments
c. intestinal tract of an animal
Which of the following statements is true of members of the order
Lactobacillales?
a. They are all Gram-negative.
b. They can
grow only in dark environments.
c. They do not perform aerobic or
anaerobic respiration.
d. They are all rod-shaped.
e. They
are obligate anaerobes.
c. They do not perform aerobic or anaerobic respiration.
Which of the following is an example of a helical bacterium that does
NOT make a complete twist?
a. Yersinia
b.
Helicobacter
c. Treponema
d. Serratia
e. Klebsiella
b. Helicobacter
Which of the following is an endospore-forming bacterium?
a.
Bacillus
b. Nocardia
c. Streptomyces
d.
Corynebacterium
e. Streptococcus
a. Bacillus
All of the following can form filaments EXCEPT __________.
a.
Actinomyces
b. Nocardia
c. Mycoplasma
d.
Borrelia
e. Streptomyces
d. Borrelia
Enterics are __________.
a. anaerobic, Gram-negative bacteria
that cause disease
b. anaerobic bacteria
c. Gram-positive
bacteria found in humans
d. facultatively anaerobic,
Gram-negative rods
d. facultatively anaerobic, Gram-negative rods
Which of the following genera contains organisms that are
psychrotrophic?
a. Streptococcus
b. Listeria
c.
Staphylococcus
d. Bacillus
b. Listeria
Which of these descriptive terms best fits organisms growing near
hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor?
a. acidophilic
b.
hyperthermophilic
c. halophilic
d. osmophilic
b. hyperthermophilic
In the 1990s a new parasitic helminth was described in a 3-year-old
boy. The only unusual part of his history was that he played in a shed
frequented by raccoons. To diagnose the child's behavioral changes and
loss of speech and motor skills, doctors did MRIs and CT scans. The
data collected from these scans suggested the presence of larval
helminths in his brain. Which of the following is the most likely
scenario?
a. Raccoons are both the intermediate hosts and the
definitive hosts.
b. Raccoons are the intermediate hosts, and
humans are the definitive hosts.
c. Raccoons are the definitive
hosts, and humans are accidental intermediate hosts.
d. Humans
are both the intermediate and definitive hosts.
e. Raccoons are
the intermediate hosts, and the definitive host is unknown.
c. Raccoons are the definitive hosts, and humans are accidental intermediate hosts.
Which of the following is NOT true of the fungi?
a. They are
strict aerobes.
b. They are capable of metabolizing complex
carbohydrates found in newspaper and wood.
c. Diseases caused by
fungi are called mycoses.
d. They can grow in high concentrations
of sugars and salts.
e. Identification of fungi usually involves
examination of spore types.
a. They are strict aerobes.
Fungi are __________.
a. photoheterotrophs
b.
photoautotrophs
c. chemoautotrophs
d. lithotrophs
e. chemoheterotrophs
c. chemoautotrophs
Fungal spores __________.
a. require moisture for
survival
b. include only sexual spores
c. are as resistant
to extreme environmental conditions as bacterial endospores
are
d. are considered "reproductive" spores
e. are
released from the "parent" only after the parent dies
d. are considered "reproductive" spores
Algae differ from fungi in that algae __________.
a. are
unicellular
b. are eukaryotic
c. reproduce sexually
d.
are autotrophs
a. are unicellular
Which of these answers appropriately describes the symbiotic
relationship within lichens?
a. mutualism
b.
codependence
c. commensalism
d. parasitism
a. mutualism
Cellular slime molds differ from plasmodial slime molds because
cellular slime molds ___________. A unicellular alga with cell walls
containing pectin and silica is isolated from coastal waters. It is
capable of photosynthesis and stores oil for energy. This alga is most
likely a __________.
a. are eukaryotic; red alga
b. have
uninucleate cells; diatom
c. are prokaryotic; green alga
d.
resemble protozoa; green alga
e. form spores; brown alga
b. have uninucleate cells; diatom
Which of the following phyla does NOT contain members that cause
disease in humans?
a. Apicomplexa
b. Ciliophora
c.
Euglenozoa
d. All of the listed phyla include human pathogens.
d. All of the listed phyla include human pathogens.
You are an epidemiologist studying an emerging disease reported over
the past 3 years in Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Michigan. You have
noticed a seasonal pattern of disease, with new cases appearing in
late April through September and peaking in July. No new cases appear
during late fall or the winter months. This pattern is suggestive of
__________.
a. Babesia disease caused by a temperature-sensitive
bacterium
b. Cyclospora disease caused by a parasitic
protozoa
c. Plasmodium disease caused by a pathogenic
algae
d. Giardia disease transmission by an arthropod vector such
as a mosquito or tick
e. disease caused by a
temperature-sensitive virus
d. Giardia disease transmission by an arthropod vector such as a mosquito or tick
Chapter 5
Chapter 5
Which of the following pairs is NOT correctly matched?
a.
metabolic pathways; sequences of chemical reactions
b. oxidation;
reaction in which electrons are gained
c. catabolism; breakdown
of organic compounds
d. anabolism; building of complex
molecules
e. metabolism; sum of all chemical reactions
b. oxidation; reaction in which electrons are gained
Enzymes are important in living organisms because they
__________.
a. interact with and destroy unwanted cellular
substrates
b. increase environmental temperatures to increase
rates of reactions
c. catalyze the covalent bonding of NAD+
molecules to substrates
d. bind irreversibly to substrates and
remove them from the cellular pool
e. bring together reactants or
properly orient a molecule for a reaction
e. bring together reactants or properly orient a molecule for a reaction
A coenzyme assists an enzyme by accepting or donating matter. What
does NAD+ transfer?
a. phosphate groups
b. acetyl
groups
c. ATP
d. acetyl CoA
e. electron
e. electron
All of the following are required for the generation of ATP by
chemiosmosis EXCEPT __________.
a. passage of electrons through
electron carrier chains
b. active transport of protons across a
phospholipid membrane
c. conversion of pyruvic acid to lactic
acid
d. formation of a proton motive force
e. use of proton
flow by ATP synthase
c. conversion of pyruvic acid to lactic acid
Competitive inhibition of enzyme action involves __________.
a.
destruction of the enzyme’s substrate
b. competition for binding
at the enzyme’s allosteric site
c. competition with the substrate
for binding at the active site
d. alteration of the enzyme's
active site
e. irreversible binding to the enzyme’s active site
c. competition with the substrate for binding at the active site
In an enzymatic reaction involving oxidation of a substrate, which of
the following would be required?
a. O2
b. FADH2
c.
NAD+
d. ATP
e. H2O
c. NAD+
A Thiobacillus bacterium uses the Calvin-Benson cycle to reduce CO2
and the oxidation of sulfide ions for energy. This organism is a
__________.
a. chemoautotroph
b. chemoheterotroph
c.
photoheterotroph
d. photochemotroph
e. photoautotroph
a. chemoautotroph
Heterotrophs use organic molecules as energy and carbon sources. To
produce five-carbon intermediates needed for synthesis of nucleic
acids, the cell utilizes the __________.
a. glycolytic
pathway
b. cyclic photophosphorylation pathway
c. mixed acid
fermentation pathway
d. pentose phosphate pathway
e. Krebs cycle
d. pentose phosphate pathway
Streptococcus bacteria lack an electron transport chain. How many
molecules of ATP can a Streptococcus cell net from one molecule of
glucose?
a. 1
b. 2
c. 10
d. 36
e. 38
b. 2
The proton motive force is __________.
a. the movement of
flagella
b. ATP accumulation in the mitochondria
c. the
accumulation of water formed in respiration
d. the movement of
water across a membrane
e. an electrochemical gradient formed
across a membrane
d. the movement of water across a membrane
Unlike chemiosmosis in eukaryotes, prokaryotes chemiosmosis
__________.
a. does not require a membrane
b. occurs at the
plasma membrane and not the mitochondria
c. electrons are
eventually passed to organic molecules instead of inorganic
acceptors
d. does not require ATP synthase
e. moves iron
instead of protons across the membrane
b. occurs at the plasma membrane and not the mitochondria
Which of the following would you predict to be a feedback inhibitor
of the glycolytic enzyme phosphofructokinase?
a. NAD+
b.
FAD
c. ATP
d. ADP
e. fructose
c. ATP
All of the following are potential end-products of fermentation
EXCEPT __________.
a. pyruvic acid
b. acetic acid
c.
ethanol
d. carbon dioxide
e. lactic acid
a. pyruvic acid
Which one molecule could provide the carbon source, the energy
source, and the electron source for a chemoheterotroph?
a.
sulfur
b. nitrogen
c. ATP
d. carbon dioxide
e. glucose
e. glucose
Which organism is NOT correctly matched to its energy source?
a.
anoxygenic autotroph; light
b. chemoautotroph; iron
c.
chemoheterotroph; glucose
d. photoheterotroph; light
e.
photoautotroph; CO2
e. photoautotroph; CO2
Organisms that use carbon dioxide as a carbon source and ammonia or
hydrogen sulfide as energy sources are called __________.
a.
photoautotrophs
b. chemoheterotrophs
c.
chemoautotrophs
d. saprophytes
e. photoheterotrophs
c. chemoautotrophs
All of the following pairs are correctly matched EXCEPT
__________.
a. anabolism—building of complex molecules
b.
metabolic pathways—sequences of chemical reactions
c.
catabolism—breakdown of more complex organic compounds
d.
metabolism—sum of all chemical reactions
e. oxidation—reaction in
which electrons are gained
e. oxidation—reaction in which electrons are gained
Competitive inhibition of enzyme action involves __________.
a.
alteration of the enzyme's active site
b. competition for binding
at the enzyme allosteric site
c. destruction of the enzyme
substrate
d. irreversible binding to the enzyme active
site
e. competition with the substrate for binding at the active site
e. competition with the substrate for binding at the active site
Which of the following mechanisms does NOT generate ATP using an
electron transport chain?
a. substrate-level
phosphorylation
b. photophosphorylation
c. anaerobic
respiration
d. aerobic respiration
a. substrate-level phosphorylation
The complete oxidation of glucose in aerobic and anaerobic
respiration involves which three stages?
a. chemiosmosis,
photophosphorylation, and reduction
b. photosynthesis,
fermentation, and oxidation
c. substrate phosphorylation, pentose
phosphate shunt, and the Calvin cycle
d. glycolysis, Krebs cycle,
and the electron transport chain
d. glycolysis, Krebs cycle, and the electron transport chain
Which of the following processes requires energy?
a.
osmosis
b. active transport
c. simple diffusion
d.
facilitated diffusion
b. active transport
Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Bacteria growing in and on the human body, including normal
microbiota as well as pathogens, are classified as __________.
a.
mesophilic and halophilic
b. mesophilic and acidophilic
c.
thermophilic and acidophilic
d. mesophilic and
heterotrophic
e. thermophilic and halophilic
d. mesophilic and heterotrophic
An organism displays some growth at 4°C and at 25°C. However, it
grows best at 20°C. This organism would be classified as a
__________.
a. mesophile
b. halophile
c.
psychrotroph
d. thermophile
e. psychrophile
c. psychrotroph
Through metabolism, pathogens often produce acids that interfere with
their own growth. __________ are/is added to media to control pH
changes.
a. Buffers
b. pH indicators
c. Growth
inhibitors
d. Saline
e. Vinegar
a. Buffers
Which of the following terms are mismatched?
a.
hyperthermophiles; 0 C
b. acidophiles; low pH
c. extreme
thermophiles; 100°C
d. psychrophiles; 0°C
e. extreme
halophiles; 30% salt
a. hyperthermophiles; 0 C
When a bacterial cell reproduces by splitting into two daughter
cells, the process is called __________.
a. budding
b.
mitosis
c. expansion
d. regeneration
e. binary fission
e. binary fission
What do all of these bacteria have in common?
bacteria in the
rumen of cattle and sheep
bacteria growing in the middle ear in
chronic otitis media
bacteria growing on the teeth in dental
plaque
a. The bacteria are all halophiles.
b. The bacteria
are most likely growing in biofilms.
c. The bacteria are all
obligate aerobes.
d. The bacteria are all thermophilic.
e.
The bacteria are all Gram-positive.
b. The bacteria are most likely growing in biofilms.
Which of the following is NOT a chemical requirement of all
bacteria?
a. nitrogen
b. sulfur
c. mineral
elements
d. carbon
e. molecular oxygen
e. molecular oxygen
An organism that grows both in the presence and the absence of oxygen
and uses oxygen when it is available is called a/an
__________.
a. aerotolerant anaerobe
b. anaerobe
c.
microaerophile
d. aerobe
e. facultative anaerobe
e. facultative anaerobe
A culture medium consisting of agar, peptone, and beef-heart extract
is a/an __________.
a. enrichment medium
b. complex
medium
c. selective medium
d. chemically defined
medium
e. differential medium
b. complex medium
Members of the genus Clostridium display the following properties:
Gram-positive bacilli endospore formation anaerobic growth Which of
the following would be appropriate for the culture of members of this
genus?
a. blood agar plate in an anaerobe jar
b. nutrient
broth in a standard incubator
c. blood agar plate in a candle
jar
d. sodium thioglycolate broth
e. both a blood agar plate
in an anaerobe jar and sodium thioglycolate broth
e. both a blood agar plate in an anaerobe jar and sodium thioglycolate broth
Chocolate blood agar is an enriched media (containing heated blood)
designed for the growth of Neisseria gonorrhea. Antibiotics are added
to suppress the growth of normal microbiota that may be found in
patient specimens, yet permit the growth of Neisseria gonorrhea. This
medium would best be described as __________.
a. broad spectrum
media
b. reduced media
c. selective media
d. nutrient
agar
e. differential media
c. selective media
Niacin, when added to a medium, would be considered a/an
__________.
a. organic growth factor
b. reducing
agent
c. electron carrier
d. carbon source
e. enzyme cofactor
a. organic growth factor
Which of the following is NOT a step in binary fission?
a.
cross-wall formation
b. invagination of the plasma
membrane
c. lysis of the existing cell wall
d. replication
of chromosomal DNA
e. cell elongation
c. lysis of the existing cell wall
If a single bacterium replicated every 30 minutes, how many bacteria
would be present in 2 hours?
a. 4
b. 8
c. 16
d.
32
e. 64
c. 16
In which phase of the growth curve is the population-doubling time
fastest?
a. lag phase
b. log phase
c. logarithmic
decline phase
d. stationary phase
e. death phase
b. log phase
During the lag phase, __________.
a. cells are decreasing in
number
b. changes in pH occur
c. no cellular activity can be
detected
d. cells are engaged in intense enzymatic
activity
e. nutrients are depleted
d. cells are engaged in intense enzymatic activity
All of the following are true of the plate count method EXCEPT that
it __________.
a. takes less than 12 hours to complete
b.
measures number of viable cells
c. is dependable
d. involves
cell plating and growth
e. is the most commonly used method for
assay of bacterial cell number
a. takes less than 12 hours to complete
Which of the following is NOT a method used for the direct
measurement of microbial growth?
a. serial dilutions
b.
spread plates
c. turbidity
d. the most probable number (MPN)
method
e. filtration
c. turbidity
Blood agar used to observe hemolysis or clearing around Streptococcus
pyogenes colonies is an example of a/an __________.
a. reducing
media
b. selective media
c. isolation media
d.
differential media
e. enrichment media
d. differential media
Chapter 8
Chapter 8
Which of the following statements is NOT true of base
substitutions?
a. A base substitution can result in the
production of a shortened protein.
b. Base substitutions may be
caused by radiation or chemical mutagens.
c. Mutations rarely
involve base substitutions.
d. A base substitution may be
beneficial if the affected gene encodes an enzyme with enhanced
activity.
e. A base substitution may cause no change in the
protein encoded by the affected gene.
c. Mutations rarely involve base substitutions.
A frameshift mutation in a gene encoding a protein usually
__________.
a. results in a modified but functional
protein
b. affects the mRNA but not the peptide
c. results
in a single amino acid change upstream from the mutation
d.
results in the production of a nonfunctional peptide
d. results in the production of a nonfunctional peptide
Which of these statements is NOT true of translation?
a. A
single mRNA may have several ribosomes attached.
b. Each amino
acid is coded for by a single codon.
c. The "language"
of nucleotides is changed to the "language" of amino
acids.
d. A molecule of tRNA can bind to both an mRNA molecule
and an amino acid.
e. Three different nonsense codons code for
termination of protein synthesis.
b. Each amino acid is coded for by a single codon.
The chemical 5-bromouracil is a mutagen because it
__________.
a. is similar to thymine in structure and
base-pairing ability
b. is similar to thymine in structure but
not base-pairing ability
c. causes thymine-thymine dimers to
form
d. is similar to uracil in structure and base-pairing
ability
e. inserts between "stacked base pairs,"
affecting the accuracy of DNA replication
b. is similar to thymine in structure but not base-pairing ability
Assume a cell is grown in a culture medium containing radioactively
labeled thymidine. After three cell divisions, what percentage of the
cells would contain the radioactive label?
a. 25%
b.
30%
c. 37.5%
d. 87.5%
e. 100%
e. 100%
Both transcription and DNA replication involve __________.
a.
formation of molecules containing the same number of nucleotides as
the parent chromosome
b. synthesis of molecules containing the
nitrogenous base thymine
c. formation of polymers of amino
acids
d. synthesis using a DNA template
e. synthesis of
molecules containing the sugar deoxyribose
d. synthesis using a DNA template
Which of these answers is NOT true for positive (direct)
selection?
a. An example would be the detection of bacteria
resistant to ampicillin by incorporation of ampicillin into the
plating medium.
b. The selective medium is designed so that only
the mutant cells grow on that medium.
c. The mutant will grow on
the selective medium, so there is no need for replica plating.
d.
It enables detection of a rare mutant from a population containing an
extremely large number of bacteria.
e. The procedure detects
altered genotypes regardless of the phenotype.
e. The procedure detects altered genotypes regardless of the phenotype.
Auxotrophs __________.
a. cannot be separated from nonmutants in
a population, because both can grow on a complete medium that contains
the growth factor
b. will not grow on a complete medium that
contains the growth factor, but will grow on a plate that lacks the
growth factor
c. are mutants that can synthesize a nutrient the
parent cannot
d. can be isolated by direct selection
e. will
not grow on a plate that lacks the growth factor, but will grow on a
complete medium that contains the growth factor
e. will not grow on a plate that lacks the growth factor, but will grow on a complete medium that contains the growth factor
The Ames test is used __________.
a. to determine if bacteria
develop cancer
b. to determine the carbohydrate requirements of
gram-negative bacteria
c. to verify that a chemical is
mutagenic
d. to determine if a chemical is mutagenic and possibly
carcinogenic
e. to determine if Salmonella can use the amino acid histidine
d. to determine if a chemical is mutagenic and possibly carcinogenic
Which of the following is NOT a step in translation?
a. pairing
of codons with anticodons
b. transport of amino acids by
tRNAs
c. initiation at the AUG start codon
d. joining of the
Okazaki fragments
e. peptide bond formation
d. joining of the Okazaki fragments
Which of the following processes is involved in the production of
diphtheria toxin by C. diphtheria or erythrogenic toxin by
Streptococcus pyogenes?
a. transduction
b.
conjugation
c. transformation
d. mutation
a. transduction
Your lab partner has mixed a dead tryptophan+ strain of Bacillus
subtilis with a live tryptophan– strain and observes that her B.
subtilis culture is now tryptophan+. The most likely explanation for
this is __________.
a. conjugation
b. transformation
c.
specialized transduction
d. mutation
e. generalized transductio
b. transformation
When the antibiotic chloramphenicol binds to the 50S portion of the
ribosome, the effect is to __________.
a. prevent RNA
processing
b. prevent the ribosome from moving along the mRNA
strand
c. prevent transcription
d. prevent peptide bond
formation
e. prevent tRNAs from binding to amino acids
b. prevent the ribosome from moving along the mRNA strand
Which of the following statements in NOT true of plasmids?
a.
They are small, circular molecules of DNA that can carry genes for
heavy metal resistance.
b. They are essential for survival of the
organism in most situations.
c. They may encode genes that
enhance the pathogenicity of an organism.
d. They may contain
antibiotic resistance genes.
e. They can be transferred between
bacteria during conjugation.
b. They are essential for survival of the organism in most situations.
Consider the polypeptide sequence encoded by the following DNA.
TACAAAGAAATT If base number 6 is changed to G, how will this affect
the polypeptide?
a. A nonsense mutation will result in premature
termination of the polypeptide.
b. One amino acid will be
changed.
c. A frameshift mutation will result.
d.
Translation will stop.
e. There will be no change in the polypeptide
e. There will be no change in the polypeptide
In E. coli, Hfr cells __________.
a. can pass main chromosome
genes to a recipient cell
b. lack the genes typically carried on
the F factor
c. fuse with gram-positive cells by way of sticky
surface materials
d. do not form sex pili
e. typically pass
the entire F factor to F– cells
a. can pass main chromosome genes to a recipient cell
Which of these statements is true about transduction?
a.
Segments of DNA move from one region of DNA to another.
b.
Bacteria–bacteria contact is required.
c. Genetic recombination
does not occur.
d. A virus is required for transfer of genetic
material.
e. Naked DNA is passed from bacterium to bacterium.
d. A virus is required for transfer of genetic material.
In the lac operon of E. coli, __________.
a. the structural
genes for lactose utilization are constitutive
b. the gene for
beta-galactosidase is regulated independently of a gene for lactose
uptake by the cell
c. the structural genes cease to be
transcribed if allolactose binds to the repressor
d. the operon
consists entirely of three structural genes for lactose
utilization
e. the repressor protein binds to the operator in the
absence of lactose
e. the repressor protein binds to the operator in the absence of lactose
Which of these statements is NOT true about DNA replication?
a.
Only one strand of the parent DNA serves as a template for a newly
synthesized complementary strand.
b. DNA polymerase is required
to add new nucleotides to the growing ends of the DNA strands.
c.
DNA ligase joins the small DNA fragments of the lagging
strand.
d. RNA polymerase synthesizes the primers.
a. Only one strand of the parent DNA serves as a template for a newly synthesized complementary strand.
Which one of the following is a method of vertical gene
transmission?
a. conjugation
b. transduction
c.
transformation
d. cell division
d. cell division
Which of the following requires cell-to-cell contact?
a.
mutation
b. conjugation
c. transformation
d. transduction
b. conjugation
Which one of the following would be the most likely to yield a
recombinant cell after mating?
a. Hfr cell transfers to F+
cell.
b. F– cell tranfers to Hfr cell
c. Hfr cell transfers
to F– cell.
d. F– cell transfers to F+ cell
c. Hfr cell transfers to F– cell.
24.The major source of the genetic diversity among microorganisms
upon which natural selection operates is __________.
a.
conjugation
b. mutation
c. transduction
d. transformation
b. mutation
Chapter 9
Chapter 9
Which of the following is an example of a cloning vector?
a.
ribosomal RNA
b. plasmid
c. human growth hormone
d.
mosquito
e. tick
b. plasmid
Recombinant DNA technology is used for all of the following EXCEPT
________.
a. human-insulin production by bacterial cells
b.
hepatitis-B-vaccine production using yeast cells
c. insertion of
genes from humans or plants into bacteria or viruses
d. culturing
unknown organisms
e. amplification of DNA for microbe identification
d. culturing unknown organisms
The process of making multiple copies of a DNA molecule is referred
to as __________.
a. hybridization
b. protoplast
fusion
c. DNA fingerprinting
d. amplification
e. transformation
d. amplification
Which of the following is NOT an advantage of obtaining the protein
product called human growth hormone by recombinant DNA technology
rather than extraction from cadavers?
a.
cost-effectiveness
b. cross contamination
c. purity
d.
speed
e. production of endotoxins
e. production of endotoxins
Which of these statements is true for restriction enzymes?
a. A
given restriction enzyme will always recognize the same DNA sequence,
but it will cut differently depending on the species of origin of the
DNA.
b. Restriction enzymes are useful in genetic engineering
when they make staggered cuts in DNA.
c. Any restriction enzyme
can cut any piece of DNA.
d. A different restriction enzyme must
be used to open the vector DNA than to excise the gene sequence to be
cloned.
e. Each restriction enzyme is able to make a staggered
cut at its recognition site.
b. Restriction enzymes are useful in genetic engineering when they make staggered cuts in DNA.
When two DNA pieces cut with the same restriction enzyme are
combined, sticky ends will __________.
a. associate because of
DNA ligase
b. associate only if they are double-stranded
c.
associate by covalent bonds
d. associate by complementary base
pairing and hydrogen bonds
e. not associate
d. associate by complementary base pairing and hydrogen bonds
If DNA ligase were NOT used in the creation of a recombinant plasmid,
__________.
a. links between guanine and cytosine would not
occur
b. base-pairing would occur but the sugar phosphate
backbone would not be connected
c. links between adenine and
thymine would not occur
d. hydrogen bonds between complementary
bases could not form
e. the bacterium to receive the recombinant
plasmid would not be competent and thus would be unable to take up the plasmid
b. base-pairing would occur but the sugar phosphate backbone would not be connected
A good cloning vector __________.
a. should not be capable of
replication
b. should not be able to be cut by more than one
restriction enzyme
c. should have a high concentration of
guanine
d. should be readily degraded in the host
e. should
have a gene or genes that allows for selection of transformed host cells
e. should have a gene or genes that allows for selection of transformed host cells
Which of the following is NOT true of the polymerase chain reaction
(PCR)?
a. A heat-stable DNA polymerase is used in the reaction
process.
b. Short pieces of DNA called primers are added to the
reaction mixtures.
c. An automated thermocycler is used to heat
and cool the reaction samples.
d. Large amounts of DNA must be
isolated from the source organism.
e. Billions of copies of a DNA
sequence are made in a few hours.
d. Large amounts of DNA must be isolated from the source organism.
Which of the following is NOT a purpose of genetic
modification?
a. to remove antibiotic resistant plasmids from
bacteria
b. to create hormones such as insulin or human growth
hormone
c. to create proteins used in vaccines (e.g., hepatitis B
vaccine)
d. to create multiple copies of a gene of
interest
e. to modify the characteristics of an organism
a. to remove antibiotic resistant plasmids from bacteria
Recombinant DNA can be introduced into a host cell by any of the
following methods EXCEPT __________.
a. microinjection
b.
protoplast fusion
c. transformation
d. polymerase chain
reaction
e. electroporation
d. polymerase chain reaction
For the introduction of a genetically modified plasmid into E. coli,
__________.
a. a gene gun must be used
b. calcium chloride
and heat shock can be used
c. protoplast fusion must be
used
d. no treatment is needed, because the cells are naturally
competent
e. microinjection must be used
b. calcium chloride and heat shock can be used
Which of the following statements correctly differentiates a genomic
library from a cDNA library?
a. cDNA libraries can be used for
sequencing, but they cannot be transcribed and translated. Genomic
libraries can be used for sequencing and for production of the desired
protein product.
b. A genomic library contains fragments of the
entire DNA in an organism's genome. A cDNA library contains the coding
sequences of eukaryotic genes (minus the introns).
c. A genomic
library contains only noncoding DNA sequences, whereas a cDNA library
contains only coding sequences.
d. Genomic libraries are prepared
from eukaryotes, and cDNA libraries are prepared from
prokaryotes.
e. Genomic libraries contain only those genes that a
cell is currently expressing, whereas cDNA libraries contain all of
the cell's genes, whether expressed or not.
b. A genomic library contains fragments of the entire DNA in an organism's genome. A cDNA library contains the coding sequences of eukaryotic genes (minus the introns).
During the Southern blotting technique, what is the purpose of
transferring the DNA fragments from the gel to a nitrocellulose
filter?
a. This step prepares the DNA fragments for PCR.
b.
This step selects and transfers only the genes of interest.
c.
This step prepares the DNA for digestion by restriction
enzymes.
d. This step separates the two complementary DNA
strands.
e. This step attaches the DNA fragments to a permanent
substrate, which then can be probed.
e. This step attaches the DNA fragments to a permanent substrate, which then can be probed.
An ampicillin-sensitive culture of E. coli is transformed with a
plasmid that contains the gene of interest plus an
ampicillin-resistant gene. If it is then plated on an
ampicillin-containing growth medium, __________.
a. only the
lactose-positive bacteria will grow
b. no bacteria will
grow
c. only the bacteria with the plasmid will grow
d. all
gram-negative bacteria will grow
e. only the ampicillin-sensitive
bacteria will grow
c. only the bacteria with the plasmid will grow
Which of the following might specifically be used as part of a
reverse-genetics approach to studying a gene?
a. reverse
transcriptase
b. RNA interference
c. PCR
d. Southern
blotting
e. Ti plasmid
b. RNA interference
In the blue-white screening procedure, bacteria that are transformed
with recombinant plasmid and cultured in media containing ampicillin
and X-gal will __________.
a. produce blue colonies
b. grow
more rapidly than cells without recombinant DNA
c. produce white
colonies
d. not grow in this medium
e. produce the enzyme beta-galactosidase
c. produce white colonies
Which of the following is NOT a step in Southern blotting?
a.
separation of DNA fragments by gel electrophoresis
b. addition of
a radioactive probe made from the gene of interest
c. transfer of
DNA fragments to filters
d. addition of heat-stable DNA
polymerase
e. digestion of sample DNA with restriction enzyme
d. addition of heat-stable DNA polymerase
Genetic technology has enabled screening for a variety of genetic
conditions, and use of this technology is becoming more widely
available. Which of the following is likely to become an important
issue that will need to be addressed?
a. the need for legislation
to protect the privacy of individuals' genetic information
b. the
use of DNA analysis in criminal investigations
c. the alteration
of human phenotypes to prevent early disease
d. the use of DNA
analysis in anthropological studies
a. the need for legislation to protect the privacy of individuals' genetic information
For Agrobacterium tumefaciens to be used to introduce foreign DNA
into a plant cell, that DNA must first be __________.
a. inserted
in an A. tumefaciens plasmid other than the Ti plasmid
b.
inserted into the main chromosome of A. tumefaciens
c. inserted
into the T-DNA region of the Ti plasmid of A. tumefaciens
d.
inserted into the Ti plasmid of A. tumefaciens outside the T-DNA
region
e. isolated from the crown gall using the appropriate
restriction enzyme
c. inserted into the T-DNA region of the Ti plasmid of A. tumefaciens
Which of the following statements correctly differentiates
biotechnology and rDNA technology?
a. Biotechnology includes
genetic modification of eukaryotic cells and prokaryotic cells,
whereas rDNA technology exclusively involves the genetic modification
of bacteria.
b. Biotechnology is concerned only with the
production of proteins, whereas rDNA technology is concerned
exclusively with DNA.
c. Biotechnology involves any use of
microorganisms or cells to make products, regardless of the means
used. rDNA technology involves the specific use of molecular
modifications in microorganisms or cells, in which a gene from one
cell is inserted into another cell, altering the recipient cell to
make some desired product.
d. Biotechnology includes techniques
for gene amplification, whereas rDNA technology includes techniques
for altering the nucleotide sequence of an organism's DNA
c. Biotechnology involves any use of microorganisms or cells to make products, regardless of the means used. rDNA technology involves the specific use of molecular
The process of making multiple copies of a DNA molecule is referred
to as __________.
a. DNA fingerprinting
b.
amplification
c. hybridization
d. transformation
e.
protoplast fusion
b. amplification
In genetic engineering, antibiotic resistance genes are often cloned
into a vector to __________.
a. make direct selection of a clone
possible
b. enhance survival of the cloned cell
c. select
for cells that cannot grow
d. kill bacteria
a. make direct selection of a clone possible
Which of the following is NOT a purpose of genetic
modification?
a. creation of hormones such as insulin or human
growth hormone
b. creation of proteins used in vaccines (e.g.,
hepatitis B vaccine)
c. creation of multiple copies of a gene of
interest
d. modification of the characteristics of an
organism
e. removal of antibiotic-resistant plasmids from bacteria
e. removal of antibiotic-resistant plasmids from bacteria
The following steps are necessary to clone eukaryotic genes in
bacteria. What is the third step?
a. transcription
b. remove
introns
c. reverse transcription of mRNA
d. splice exons together
d. splice exons together
E. coli may pick up a recombinant plasmid from a solution by
__________.
a. transduction
b. protoplast fusion
c.
conjugation
d. transformation
d. transformation
Recombinant DNA technology is used for all of the following EXCEPT
__________.
a. hepatitis B vaccine production using yeast
cells
b. amplification of DNA for microbe identification
c.
human insulin production by bacterial cells
d. insertion of genes
from humans or plants into bacteria or viruses
e. culturing
unknown organisms
e. culturing unknown organisms
Which of the following is NOT an advantage of obtaining the protein
product human growth hormone by recombinant DNA technology rather than
extraction from cadavers?
a. production of endotoxins
b.
elimination of the need to extract the protein from tissues that might
harbor pathogens
c. speed
d. cost-effectiveness
e. purity
a. production of endotoxins
If you insert the gene for Bt toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis into
a tomato plant, the resulting plants will __________.
a. be toxic
to humans who eat the tomatoes
b. die
c. have a Bacillus
infection
d. be toxic to insects that eat them
d. be toxic to insects that eat them
Chapter 13
Chapter 13
Viruses possess genetic material comprised of DNA or
__________.
a. RNA
b. NADPH
c. plasmids
d.
guanine
e. ATP
a. RNA
Which type of microscope is needed to view a virus in the
laboratory?
a. darkfield
b. fluorescent
c.
compound
d. electron
e. brightfield
d. electron
Which of the following are possible strategies for treating viral
infections?
a. blocking uncoating of the virus after
entry
b. blocking biosynthesis of viral nucleic acids
c.
blocking insertion of viral DNA into the host cell chromosomes
d.
blocking viral attachment to host cell receptors
e. All of the
listed strategies are correct.
d. blocking viral attachment to host cell receptors
A double-stranded, enveloped DNA virus that contains reverse
transcriptase belongs to which family?
a. Poxviridae
b.
Hepadnaviridae
c. Picornaviridae
d. Rhabdoviridae
e. Retroviridae
b. Hepadnaviridae
Members of the Adenoviridae cause __________.
a.
influenza
b. the common cold
c. hepatitis
d.
smallpox
e. cold sores
b. the common cold
Which method cannot be used to culture viruses in a
laboratory?
a. nutrient agar culture media
b. embryonated
eggs
c. live animals
d. tissue culture
e. primates
a. nutrient agar culture media
Cell lines derived from transformed (cancerous) cells are called
__________.
a. plaques
b. monolayers
c. continuous cell
lines
d. primary cell lines
e. embryonated
c. continuous cell lines
During the bacteriophage lysogenic cycle, __________.
a. new
phage DNA is synthesized
b. phage DNA is inserted into the host
chromosome
c. the host cell lyses, releasing new virions
d.
the burst time is shortened
b. phage DNA is inserted into the host chromosome
After the attachment and entry of a virus into a host cell, what is
the next step in the multiplication of
animal viruses?
a.
synthesis of capsid proteins
b. transcription of
"early" genes
c. transcription of "late"
genes
d. viral DNA is degraded by enzymes
e. uncoating
e. uncoating
An example of a latent virus infection is __________.
a.
shingles
b. influenza
c. measles
d. polio
e. smallpox
a. shingles
A virus may contain any of the following EXCEPT (a) __________.
a. ribosomes
b. ssRNA
c. spike proteins
d. capsid
proteins
e. lipid envelope
a. ribosomes
Viruses that use RNA as a template for transcribing DNA include
__________.
a. Retroviridae
b. Togaviridae
c.
Rhabdoviridae
d. Picornaviridae
e. Herpesviridae
a. Retroviridae
All of the following are prion diseases EXCEPT __________.
a.
Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker syndrome
b. kuru
c. fatal
familial insomnia
d. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
e.
Wiles-Davidoff syndrome
e. Wiles-Davidoff syndrome
Which of the following terms are NOT correctly matched?
a.
Picornaviridae; common cold
b. Herpesviridae; infectious
mononucleosis
c. Flaviviridae; hepatitis
d. Picornaviridae;
polio
e. Poxviridae; chickenpox
e. Poxviridae; chickenpox
In polio virus replication, the function of the antisense (– strand)
RNA is to __________.
a. be translated for the production of
capsid proteins
b. enhance the pathogenicity of the viral
toxins
c. allow a virus to enter the nucleus
d. become
incorporated into the capsid proteins
e. serve as a template for
the production of sense (+ strand) RNA
e. serve as a template for the production of sense (+ strand) RNA
How might a virus pick up a human oncogene?
a. specialized
transduction
b. reverse transcription
c.
transformation
d. viral conversion
a. specialized transduction
Influenza viruses are classified according to their hemagglutin and
__________ proteins.
a. nucleic
b. amphiphilic
c.
polymorphic
d. neuraminidase
e. arabinose
d. neuraminidase
To what does the term viral species refer?
a. a group of viruses
that are reproductively isolated
b. a group of viruses sharing
the same disease symptoms
c. viruses grouped according to their
susceptibility to antibiotics
d. a group of viruses sharing the
same genetic information and structure
e. viruses grouped
according to growth on selective media
d. a group of viruses sharing the same genetic information and structure
Which of these enzymes is necessary for the replication of a + strand
RNA virus?
a. RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
b. reverse
transcriptase
c. RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
d.
DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
e. DNA-dependent DNA polymerase
a. RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
Which of these statements is NOT true?
a. Enveloped viruses are
released from the cell by budding.
b. Attachment of animal
viruses to host cells is random and nonspecific.
c. Penetration
of enveloped viruses can occur by a process called fusion.
d.
Uncoating can occur because of host cell lysosome action.
e.
Animal viral DNA that is integrated into the host chromosome is called
a provirus.
b. Attachment of animal viruses to host cells is random and nonspecific.
Which of these processes of viral multiplication is most likely to
damage the host cell?
a. release of enveloped viruses
b.
release of nonenveloped viruses
c. viral entry into host cells by
fusion
d. uncoating
e. reverse transcription of retroviral RNA
b. release of nonenveloped viruses
Which of the following are possible strategies for treating viral
infections?
a. blocking uncoating of the virus after
entry
b. blocking viral attachment to host cell receptors
c.
blocking insertion of viral DNA into the host cell chromosomes
d.
blocking biosynthesis of viral nucleic acids
e. All of the listed
choices are possible strategies for treating viral infections.
b. blocking viral attachment to host cell receptors
The protein coat of a virus is called the __________.
a.
capsomere
b. envelope
c. capsid
d. viral membrane
c. capsid
How would you know that viruses were multiplying in a confluent lawn
of E. coli on a solid culture
medium?
a. The bacterial
colonies would swell.
b. There would be small zones of clearing
in the bacterial culture.
c. There would be small blue spots on
the bacterial culture.
d. The bacterial culture would grow faster.
b. There would be small zones of clearing in the bacterial culture.
What is the name given to the viral DNA incorporated into a lysogenic
cell?
a. prophage
b. latent phage
c. oncogenic
virus
d. bacteriophage
a. prophage
Chapter 14
Chapter 14
Germ-free (gnotobiotic) animals often are more susceptible to
infections and serious disease than are animals with a typical
complement of normal microbiota. Based on this observation, which of
the following would be an appropriate conclusion?
a. Normal
microbiota are parasitic.
b. Normal microbiota are incapable of
causing disease.
c. Normal microbiota always result in
opportunistic infections.
d. Normal microbiota provide
supplemental nutrition to the host.
e. Normal microbiota
stimulate the development of the immune system.
e. Normal microbiota stimulate the development of the immune system.
In a healthy human, resident microorganisms would be found in all of
the following areas EXCEPT the __________.
a. tooth and gum
surfaces
b. nasal passages
c. conjunctiva
d.
bloodstream
e. lower urethra
d. bloodstream
Health care professionals who fail to use aseptic techniques can
cause __________.
a. nosocomial infections
b.
zoonoses
c. predisposing factors
d. herd immunity
e. pathogens
a. nosocomial infections
In the human intestinal tract, E. coli produces vitamins beneficial
to the host and can inhibit pathogen growth. In turn, the bacterium is
supplied with nutrients and an environment for growth. This symbiotic
relationship between E. coli and its host is an example of
________.
A. commensalism
B. opportunism
C.
parasitism
D. antagonism
E. mutualism
E. mutualism
Which of the following is NOT an example of microbial antagonism
(also known as competitive exclusion)?
a. microbes competing with
other microbes for nutrients
b. microbes producing vitamins and
growth factors that can be utilized by the host
c. microbes
utilizing oxygen necessary for the growth of other microbes
d.
microbes producing acidic compounds that limit the growth of many
bacteria
e. microbes producing compounds inhibitory to other microbes
b. microbes producing vitamins and growth factors that can be utilized by the host
An infection transmitted by a handkerchief or tissue is transmitted
by __________.
a. common vehicle transmission
b. a
vector
c. droplet transmission
d. direct contact
e.
indirect contact
e. indirect contact
Which of the following is NOT necessary to satisfy Koch's
postulates?
a. The organism must cause disease through toxin
production.
b. The organism must be grown in pure culture outside
the diseased host.
c. The organism must be re-isolated from the
experimentally infected diseased animal and shown to be identical to
the original isolate.
d. The organism must cause the disease when
introduced from pure culture into a healthy host.
e. The organism
must be present in every case of the disease
a. The organism must cause disease through toxin production.
Following coronary artery bypass surgery, seven patients develop
Rhodococcus bronchialis infections. Cultures of the operating rooms,
Nurse A, and Nurse B are taken. R. bronchialis grows from the hand and
nasal swabs of Nurse A. The patients' infections are an example of
a/an __________.
a. emerging infectious disease
b.
vector-borne infection
c. endemic infection
d. nosocomial
infection
e. epidemic infection
d. nosocomial infection
Women who have a healthy population of Lactobacillus spp. as part of
the normal vaginal microbiota are less likely to get yeast infections.
Which of the following terms is used to explain this
observation?
a. competitive exclusion
b. synergism
c.
commensalism
d. mutualism
e. parasitism
a. competitive exclusion
The occurrence of streptococcal bronchopneumonia in an individual
recovering from influenza is an example of a __________.
a.
sporadic infection
b. secondary infection
c. latent
infection
d. subacute infection
e. chronic infection
b. secondary infection
Infections in which the pathogen is distributed throughout the body
are referred to as generalized infections or __________.
a.
emerging infections
b. systemic infections
c.
zoonoses
d. local infections
e. focal infections
b. systemic infections
The presence of bacteria in the bloodstream is referred to as
__________.
a. bacteremia
b. edema
c. bacterial
dimorphism
d. symbiosis
e. cytokine storm
a. bacteremia
Which of these diseases does not have a human reservoir?
a.
Candida albicans
b. gonorrhea
c. HIV
d.
diphtheria
e. tetanus
e. tetanus
Which of these events is an example of contact transmission?
a.
Tuberculosis is spread from one person to another after traveling
through the air for several meters.
b. Several people become
infected with Listeria after consuming contaminated ice cream.
c.
A person drinks from a cup used by another individual.
d. A
person develops plague from a flea bite.
e. Vacationers develop
shigellosis, caused by the intestinal pathogen Shigella spp. after
drinking contaminated water
c. A person drinks from a cup used by another individual.
Which of these disease stages is most likely to be altered in length
if the number of infecting organisms at the start of the infection is
very high?
a. incubation period
b. period of illness
c.
period of decline
d. period of convalescence
e. prodromal period
a. incubation period
Which of the following events does NOT occur in diseases transmitted
by vectors?
a. In biological transmission, the vector multiplies
in the human host.
b. In biological transmission, vectors can
spread pathogens by vomiting.
c. In biological transmission,
pathogens multiply in the vector, which can transmit the pathogens by
injecting saliva directly into the host.
d. In biological
transmission, a vector transmits pathogens by defecating while taking
a blood meal.
e. In mechanical transmission, insects contact
feces containing pathogenic bacteria and transfer it to food.
a. In biological transmission, the vector multiplies in the human host.
Which of the following is the third stage of a disease?
a.
period of decline
b. period of illness
c. prodromal
period
d. incubation period
e. period of convalescence
b. period of illness
The morbidity rate is best defined as __________.
a. the number
of individuals, relative to the population, affected by a particular
disease in a period of time
b. the decrease in death rate
following effective vaccination
c. the immunization rate for
notifiable diseases that can be prevented through vaccination
programs
d. the number of individuals, relative to the
population, who have died as a result of a particular disease in a
period of time
e. the percentage of infectious diseases that are
nationally notifiable
e. the percentage of infectious diseases that are nationally notifiable
19. Ingesting lactic acid bacteria to prevent colonization by
intestinal pathogens such as Salmonella enterica during antibiotic
therapy is an example of __________.
a. parasitism
b.
probiotics
c. opportunism
d. vaccination
e. chemotherapy
b. probiotics
An example of descriptive epidemiology is __________.
a. a
comparison of drug effectiveness in two groups of patients
b. the
first report of a disease occurrence
c. Florence Nightingale's
studies of disease transmission in soldiers and civilians during the
Crimean War
d. a study comparing disease rates in vaccinated and
unvaccinated individuals
e. John Snow's study of the London
cholera outbreak from 1848 to 1849
John Snow's study of the London cholera outbreak from 1848 to 1849
The fungus Coccidioides immitis is found in the soil. Humans contract
coccidioidomycosis by inhaling fungal spores. Which of these terms
applies to the role of soil in transmission of
coccidioidomycosis?
a. Soil is the carrier.
b. Soil is the
reservoir.
c. Soil is the predisposing factor.
d. Soil is
the vector.
b. Soil is the reservoir.
Which of the following diseases does NOT share a commonality with the
others?
a. rabies
b. Yersinia pestis
c.
Hantavirus
d. Brucella
e. All of the listed diseases share a
commonality; they are all zoonoses.
e. All of the listed diseases share a commonality; they are all zoonoses
Which one of these diseases is noncommunicable?
a.
rabies
b. the common cold
c. influenza
d. botulism
d. botulism
In order to understand the full scope of a disease, we take its
occurrence into account. The __________ of a disease is the number of
people in a population who develop a disease at a specified
time.
a. prevalence
b. incidence
c. sporadic
infection
d. endemic infection
a. prevalence
and
b. incidence
Chapter 15
Chapter 15
1. Which disease is correctly matched with the common portal of
entry?
a. influenza; mucous membranes of genitourinary
tract
b. poliomyelitis; mucous membranes of gastrointestinal
tract
c. chlamydia; skin
d. hookworm; mucous membranes of
genitourinary tract
e. measles; parenteral route
b. poliomyelitis; mucous membranes of gastrointestinal tract
If a patient has a deep tissue infection as the result of an animal
bite on the arm, the portal of entry is described as the
__________.
a. connective tissue
b. gastrointestinal
route
c. respiratory route
d. skin
e. parenteral route
e. parenteral route
The ID50 for cutaneous anthrax due to Bacillus anthracis is 10 to 50
endospores, while the ID50 for inhalation anthrax is 10,000 to 20,000
endospores. This means that __________.
a. cutaneous anthrax is
easier to acquire than inhalation anthrax
b. both cutaneous and
inhalation anthrax can easily be acquired
c. inhalation anthrax
is easier to acquire than cutaneous anthrax
d. neither cutaneous
or inhalation anthrax can easily be acquired
e. not enough
information is available to answer this
a. cutaneous anthrax is easier to acquire than inhalation anthrax
Which would be the most UNLIKELY location to find adhesin molecules
on a newly discovered bacterium?
a. cell wall
b.
glycocalyx
c. ribosomes
d. capsule
e. fimbriae
c. ribosomes
What cell structures does Neisseria gonorrhoeae use to attach and
enter host epithelial cells?
a. cell wall waxes
b.
fimbriae
c. flagella
d. capsules
e. M proteins
b. fimbriae
Which of these conditions would NOT affect the ability of
Streptococcus mutans to attach to teeth?
a. the lack of
sucrose
b. the lack of the enzyme glucosyltransferase
c. the
absence of Actinomyces, a bacterium that can be part of dental
plaque
d. the lack of a glycocalyx
e. the inability to form dextran
c. the absence of Actinomyces, a bacterium that can be part of dental plaque
Which of these statements is NOT true for bacterial capsules?
a.
For Streptococcus pneumoniae, the encapsulated strain is more
virulent.
b. Pathogenic and nonpathogenic bacteria can produce
capsules.
c. The importance of the capsule to virulence for
Streptococcus pneumoniae can be determined because there are strains
both with and without the capsule.
d. Capsules related to
virulence are produced by the causative agents of anthrax and bubonic
plague.
e. Immune system antibodies are not produced against a capsule
e. Immune system antibodies are not produced against a capsule
Capsules play a role in the virulence of all of the following EXCEPT
__________.
a. Mycobacterium tuberculosis
b. Klebsiella
pneumoniae
c. Yersinia pestis
d. Haemophilus
influenzae
e. Bacillus anthracis
a. Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Which of these substances are most important in the establishment of
biofilms?
a. invasins
b. adhesins
c. exotoxins
d.
hemolysins
e. siderophores
b. adhesins
Which one of these pairs is NOT correctly matched?
a.
siderophore; traps iron
b. leukocidin; lyses WBC
membranes
c. collagenase; breaks down connective tissue
d.
coagulase; lyses fibrin clots
e. IgA protease; digest antibodies
d. coagulase; lyses fibrin clots
Which of these eukaryotic molecules/structures can be responsible for
movement of bacteria within host cells?
a. pseudopods
b.
flagella
c. invasins
d. cilia
e. actin molecules
e. actin molecules
Which of the following statements is NOT true of A-B
exotoxins?
a. The B portion of the toxin binds to surface
receptors on host cells.
b. They consist of two polypeptide
components.
c. They are produced only by gram-negative
bacteria.
d. Many exotoxins are A-B toxins.
e. The A portion
of the toxin is the active component
c. They are produced only by gram-negative bacteria.
The LD50 of Vibrio cholerae is 108 cells through the oral route. If
the bacterial cells are ingested with bicarbonate, the LD50 drops to
104. Which of these explanations is the most likely?
a. Sodium
bicarbonate decreases the virulence of Vibrio cholerae.
b. Sodium
bicarbonate inactivates Vibrio cholerae.
c. Stomach acid
decreases the virulence of Vibrio cholerae.
d. Vibrio cholerae
makes toxins only in the presence of stomach acid.
e. Stomach
acid increases the virulence of Vibrio cholerae.
c. Stomach acid decreases the virulence of Vibrio cholerae.
Which statement is true of endotoxins?
a. They are disease
specific.
b. They are proteins.
c. They are released upon
cell lysis.
d. They are produced by gram-positive
bacteria.
e. They increase blood pressure.
c. They are released upon cell lysis.
A newly identified bacterial pathogen has been shown to cause disease
in humans, disrupting the production of some proteins by interfering
with the function of the endoplasmic reticulum of liver cells. Under
specific growth conditions, this bacterial strain secretes a protein
that appears to be responsible for the pathology of the disease. This
protein is composed of two polypeptide chains, one of which binds to a
receptor on the surface of liver cells, stimulating the uptake of the
protein by endocytosis. Once inside the cell, the other polypeptide
component interferes with the activity of ribosomes bound to the
endoplasmic reticulum. This bacterial protein will most likely be
classified as a/an __________.
a. A-B toxin
b.
superantigen
c. membrane-disrupting toxin
d. invasin
e.
bacterial kinase
a. A-B toxin
Which statement is NOT true of endotoxins?
a. They can lyse
amebocytes found in crab hemolymph.
b. Endotoxins are produced by
Neisseria meningitidis and E. coli.
c. They are eliminated from
the body as a result of antitoxin production.
d. They are more
heat-resistant than exotoxins are.
e. They can induce chills,
fever, aches, clotting, shock, and miscarriage.
c. They are eliminated from the body as a result of antitoxin production.
Which of these viral cytopathic effects is most likely to be
associated with the development of cancer?
a. loss of contact
inhibition
b. stimulation of interferon production
c. cell
death
d. inclusion bodies
e. cell fusion
a. loss of contact inhibition
Which of these events leads to all of the others in a pyrogenic
(fever) response?
a. Endotoxin is released from the cell wall of
gram-negative bacteria.
b. The body's thermostat is set to a
higher level, and fever occurs.
c. IL-1 is released by
macrophages.
d. The hypothalamus releases prostaglandins.
e.
IL-1 travels via the blood to the hypothalamus.
a. Endotoxin is released from the cell wall of gram-negative bacteria.
The pathogenicity of which of the following is NOT the result of
lysogeny?
a. Streptococcus pyogenes
b. Vibrio
cholerae
c. Corynebacterium diphtheriae
d. Clostridium
tetani
e. Clostridium botulinum
d. Clostridium tetani
Which of the following would be the most UNLIKELY location to find
adhesin molecules on a newly discovered bacterium?
a.
ribosomes
b. fimbriae
c. glycocalyx
d. capsule
e.
cell wall
a. ribosomes
Which of the following pairs is NOT correctly matched?
a.
collagenase; breaks down connective tissue
b. leukocidin; lyses
WBC membranes
c. siderophore; traps iron
d. IgA protease;
digests antibodies
e. coagulase; lyses fibrin clots
e. coagulase; lyses fibrin clots
Which of these effects is most likely to occur if a pathogen enters
the body by a portal of entry other than the preferred one?
a.
Pathogens cannot enter by alternate routes.
b. A milder disease
will result.
c. The exact same disease will result.
d. A
more severe disease will result.
b. A milder disease will result.
Which one of the following virulence factors contributes most to the
spread of disease in the body?
a. hyaluronidase
b.
siderophore production
c. endotoxin production
d. hemolysin
a. hyaluronidase
Based on the following LD50 values, which microbe is the most
virulent? Assume each bacterium enters through the appropriate portal
of entry.
a. Shigella: 10 cells
b. Cryptosporidium: 50
cells
c. E. coli O157: 1000 cells
d. Vibrio cholerae: 108 cells
a. Shigella: 10 cells
Which of these is a cell wall component that contributes to
invasiveness?
a. M protein
b. coagulase
c.
endotoxin
d. hemolysin
a. M protein
Which of the following diseases CANNOT be prevented by
toxoids?
a. Gram-negative septic shock
b. botulism
c.
diphtheria
d. tetanus
a. Gram-negative septic shock
Chapter 16
Chapter 16
Which of these molecules or structures is/are NOT associated with
innate immunity?
a. macrophages
b. lysozyme
c.
antibodies
d. mucous membranes
e. phagocytes
c. antibodies
The epidermis __________.
a. is below the dermis
b. serves
as one of the more common portals of entry for pathogens
c. is
composed of loosely packed cells
d. is composed largely of
epidermal cells, all of which are alive
e. contains the protein keratin
e. contains the protein keratin
The ID50 for many pathogens is significantly smaller when testing
with gnotobiotic animals compared to animals with normal microbiota.
This is likely because of __________.
a. commensalism
b.
parasitism
c. microbial antagonism
d. impaired
phagocytosis
e. complement inactivation
c. microbial antagonism
The respiratory system is protected against harmful microbes by all
of the following EXCEPT __________.
a. the ciliary
escalator
b. mucus-coated hairs
c. the epiglottis
d.
ciliated cells
e. the lacrimal apparatus
e. the lacrimal apparatus
Which of the following statements about sebum is NOT true?
a.
Accutane limits acne by preventing its formation.
b. It has
antimicrobial properties.
c. Its metabolism can result in
acne.
d. It raises the pH of skin.
e. It is secreted by
sebaceous glands
d. It raises the pH of skin.
One remarkable finding on a patient's laboratory workup is a marked
eosinophilia. This might be suggestive of __________.
a. a
parasitic infection
b. a viral infection
c. a bacterial
infection
d. an allergic (hypersensitivity) reaction
d. an allergic (hypersensitivity) reaction
Which of these structures are NOT part of the mononuclear phagocytic
system?
a. wandering macrophages
b. alveolar
macrophages
c. lymphocytes
d. microglial cells
e.
Kupffer's cells
c. lymphocytes
Which answer is NOT true for adherence of a phagocyte to a
microbe?
a. The M protein of Streptococcus pyogenes limits
adherence.
b. Antibody molecules attached to the microbe will
limit adherence.
c. A capsule limits adherence.
d. Adherence
is a critical step in phagocytosis.
e. Complement molecules
attached to the microbe can enhance adherence.
b. Antibody molecules attached to the microbe will limit adherence.
Which answer is true for bacterial destruction by
phagocytosis?
a. Phagolysosomes have a neutral pH.
b.
Listeria monocytogenes is killed within the phagolysosome.
c.
Myeloperoxidase in lysosomes is involved in the formation of
HOCl.
d. Toxic oxygen products, such as hydrogen peroxide, are
removed.
e. Lipids and proteins, but not nucleic acids, can be
digested inside lysosomes.
c. Myeloperoxidase in lysosomes is involved in the formation of HOCl.
The stage of phagocytosis in which the phagocyte's plasma membrane
attaches to the surface of the microbe is called __________.
a.
fusion
b. chemotaxis
c. ingestion
d. adherence
e. cytolysis
d. adherence
Which answer is NOT true of the inflammatory process?
a. The
area becomes red because of a decrease in capillary diameter.
b.
Kinins cause increased capillary permeability.
c. Leukotrienes
cause increased capillary permeability.
d. Swelling occurs
because of vasodilation and increased capillary permeability.
e.
Edema occurs.
a. The area becomes red because of a decrease in capillary diameter.
Which of the following statements is NOT true of
inflammation?
a. Vasodilation causes redness in affected
tissues.
b. Many neutrophils can be found at the site of chronic
inflammation.
c. Inflammation can be triggered by microbial
infection, burns, exposure to chemicals, or trauma.
d. Histamine
released by damaged host cells can result in vasodilation.
e.
Granulocytes that have died are commonly engulfed by macrophages.
b. Many neutrophils can be found at the site of chronic inflammation.
Activation of the complement cascade __________.
a. reduces
swelling in affected tissues
b. can cause the infecting microbe
to be killed by lysis
c. can reduce inflammation
d. prevents
cleavage of complement proteins, such as C3 and C5
e. typically
reduces the ability of phagocytes to engulf microbes
b. can cause the infecting microbe to be killed by lysis
Complement can be activated by all of the following EXCEPT
__________.
a. antigen–antibody binding
b.
opsonization
c. mannose-binding lectins
d. the presence of
host tissue
e. contact with a pathogen
d. the presence of host tissue
Which of the following statements is NOT true of nitric oxide
(NO)?
a. It is of little value in killing microbes or tumor
cells.
b. It can be produced by blood vessel endothelial
cells.
c. It can cause relaxation of blood vessel smooth
muscle.
d. Excessive production can cause septic shock.
e.
It can be produced by macrophages that have been induced to produce NO synthase
a. It is of little value in killing microbes or tumor cells.
Assume you mix red blood cells, antibodies against the red blood
cells, and complement in a test tube. What would you expect to
see?
a. agglutination of the red blood cells
b. lysis of the
red blood cells
c. opsonization of the red blood cells
d.
phagocytosis
e. shrinkage (crenation) of the red blood cells
b. lysis of the red blood cells
Which of the following statements is NOT true of the classical
pathway of complement activation?
a. C1 is activated by an
antigen–antibody complex
b. C5b joins C6, C7, C8, and C9 to form
the membrane attack complex.
c. Activated C2a and C4b activate
C3.
d. C3 is the first component to be activated.
e.
Activated C1 activates C2 and C4.
d. C3 is the first component to be activated.
Which of the following occurs first, setting in motion the remaining
events?
a. The macrophages and dendritic cells release
cytokines.
b. Adaptive immune responses are initiated.
c.
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are produced and damage microbes in a
variety of ways.
d. Additional dendritic cells are attracted to
the infection site by AMPs.
e. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) on
macrophages and dendritic cells attach to pathogen-associated
microbial patterns (PAMPS) on invading microorganisms.
e. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) on macrophages and dendritic cells attach to pathogen-associated microbial patterns (PAMPS) on invading microorganisms.
Interferons ___________.
a. are both host-specific and
virus-specific
b. are useful only for treating viral
infections
c. are host-specific but not virus-specific
d.
can protect any host against any virus
e. are virus-specific but
not host-specific
c. are host-specific but not virus-specific
Which of these structures are NOT part of the mononuclear phagocytic
system?
a. microglial cells
b. alveolar macrophages
c.
wandering macrophages
d. Kupffer's cells
e. lymphocytes
e. lymphocytes
All of the following cells demonstrate phagocytic activity EXCEPT
__________.
a. lymphocytes
b. monocytes
c.
neutrophils
d. eosinophils
a. lymphocytes
Which of these answers best describes the relationship between humans
and most of their skin and intestinal normal microbiota?
a.
mutualism
b. parasitism
c. pathological
d. commensalism
a. mutualism
Histamine causes all of the following reactions. Which occurs
first?
a. redness
b. vasodilation
c. swelling
d. pain
b. vasodilation
The rise in temperature that causes a fever is due to the
hypothalamus responding to __________.
a. interleukin-1
b.
gram-negative bacteria
c. complement
d. interleukin-2
a. interleukin-1
Propionibacterium acnes is norma True l flora of sebaceous glands of the skin.
True or False
True
Acne can be prevented with antibiotics.
True or False
False
Chapter 17
Chapter 17
1. Which of the following results in comparatively long-lasting
immunity?
a. A person survives an infectious disease.
b. An
adult receives antiserum.
c. An adult receives gamma
globulin.
d. A baby receives antibodies to chicken pox across the
placenta.
e. A baby receives antibodies against many pathogens
through breastfeeding.
a. A person survives an infectious disease.
2. The resistance to reinfection with measles virus following
recovery from measles infection is called __________.
a. passive
immunity
b. natural selection
c. adaptive immunity
d.
innate immunity
e. artificial immunity
c. adaptive immunity
HIV selectively destroys CD4 cells and as a result, a person with
AIDS is susceptible to life-threatening viral infections. Knowing
this, you can conclude that __________.
a. these viruses have
T-independent antigens
b. B cells do not recognize viral
antigens
c. regulatory T cells are killed by the virus
d.
these viruses have T-dependent antigens
e. CD4 T cells need help
from B cells to recognize viral antigens
a. these viruses have T-independent antigens
Cyclosporine is a drug sometimes used to prevent transplant rejection
after organ transplant surgery. This drug specifically disrupts
cell-mediated immunity by cytotoxic T cells. Which of these events can
be predicted based on this information?
a. Antigen presentation
by macrophages and dendritic cells will be impaired.
b. Antibody
production will NOT be disrupted in the recipient.
c. The
recipient will be susceptible to repeated infections with common
bacteria such as staphylococci and streptococci.
d. T helper
cells will no longer be produced.
e. Autoimmune disorders will be
a potential side effect.
b. Antibody production will NOT be disrupted in the recipient.
Cell-mediated immunity in part protects against __________.
a.
extracellular viruses
b. toxins
c. bacteria free in body
fluids
d. viruses free in body fluids
e. intracellular
bacteria and viruses
e. intracellular bacteria and viruses
Which of these cell types is NOT involved in cell-mediated
immunity?
a. plasma cells
b. T helper cells
c. T
cytotoxic cells
d. T regulatory cells
e. TH1 cells
a. plasma cells
Which of the following statements is NOT true of antigens?
a.
They can include nonmicrobial molecules, such as pollen, egg white,
and blood cell surface molecules.
b. They often have a molecular
weight of less than 10,000.
c. They are typically nonself
molecules.
d. They are often proteins or polysaccharides.
e.
They are often surface molecules on microbes.
b. They often have a molecular weight of less than 10,000.
The most abundant Ig in the blood serum is __________.
a.
A
b. D
c. E
d. G
e. M
d. G
Which of the following statements is NOT of the IgA antibody
class?
a. It can be found as a monomer in serum.
b. It can
trigger the complement cascade.
c. It prevents pathogens from
attaching to mucosal surfaces.
d. It is the most abundant
antibody class in body secretions.
e. It is a dimer in its most
effective form.
b. It can trigger the complement cascade.
Which of the following would be a possible consequence of a disorder
that selectively destroys the T regulatory cells in a patient?
a.
impaired antibody production
b. increased incidence of certain
cancers
c. frequent infections with parasitic pathogens
d.
frequent infections with viral and fungal pathogens
e. autoimmune diseases
e. autoimmune diseases
Which of the following are NOT antigen-presenting cells ?
a. B
cells
b. All of the listed choices are antigen-presenting
cells.
c. macrophages
d. dendritic cells
e. helper T cells
b. All of the listed choices are antigen-presenting cells.
Which of these processes is in the proper sequence?
a. IgE is
formed; antigen binds IgE; IgE binds to mast cells; mast cells bind to
basophils; histamine is released.
b. IgE is formed; IgE binds to
mast cells and basophils; antigen binds IgE; histamine is
released.
c. IgE is formed; antigen binds IgE; histamine is
released; IgE binds to mast cells and basophils.
d. IgE is
formed; antigen binds IgE; IgE binds to mast cells and basophils;
histamine is released.
e. IgE is formed; IgE binds to mast cells
and basophils; histamine is released; antigen binds IgE.
a. IgE is formed; antigen binds IgE; IgE binds to mast cells; mast cells bind to
Which of these lists is in the correct order of
differentiation?
a. B cells to stem cells to plasma cells
b.
B cells to plasma cells to stem cells
c. stem cells to plasma
cells to B cells
d. stem cells to B cells to plasma cells
e.
plasma cells to B cells to stem cells
d. stem cells to B cells to plasma cells
Which of these statements is NOT true of antibody molecules?
a.
Antibody molecules can directly destroy antigens.
b. Cell-bound
antibody molecules can bind complement, triggering the complement
cascade.
c. Cell-bound antibody molecules can initiate a process
that results in cell lysis.
d. Antibody molecules can enhance
phagocytosis of the antigen.
e. Cell-bound antibody molecules can
bind cells that in turn release chemical compounds that
a. Antibody molecules can directly destroy antigens.
A property of T cells, but not B cells, is their __________.
a.
ability to differentiate into memory cells
b. ability to form
cells that directly kill virus-infected host cells
c. ability to
undergo clonal selection
d. development from stem cells in the
bone marrow
e. recognition of specific antigens
b. ability to form cells that directly kill virus-infected host cells
Which of the following statements is NOT true for T helper
cells?
a. They lyse target cells.
b. They have CD4 molecules
on the cell surface.
c. They activate macrophages.
d. They
recognize antigen presented by class II MHC molecules.
e. They
activate B cells.
a. They lyse target cells.
T cytotoxic cells __________.
a. respond to viruses free in
circulation but not to those in host cells
b. recognize antigen
presented by class II MHC molecules
c. are distinguished by the
CD4 markers on their surface
d. produce perforin
e. engulf
foreign cells
b. recognize antigen presented by class II MHC molecules
Which of these answers is a potential concern of using T-independent
antigens as vaccines?
a. These antigens can lead to an aggressive
cell-mediated immune response.
b. These antigens can induce
autoimmune reactions.
c. These antigens will be ineffective in
producing an immune response in infants.
d. Many individuals have
impaired responses to T-independent antigens because of an inherited
T-cell disorder.
e. The lack of macrophage participation will
lead to a weak response.
c. These antigens will be ineffective in producing an immune response in infants.
Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity __________.
a.
damages, but rarely lyses, a microbe
b. involves NK cells binding
directly to a microbe
c. involves eosinophils binding directly to
a microbe
d. is particularly important for killing microbes that
are too large be destroyed by phagocytosis
e. involves antibodies
binding to a microbe in the same orientation that IgE antibodies bind
to basophils
d. is particularly important for killing microbes that are too large be destroyed by phagocytosis
Which answer is true of the anamnestic response?
a. IgM
predominates.
b. IgG and IgM are present in equal
proportions.
c. IgG predominates.
d. IgM is not
produced.
e. IgG is not produced.
c. IgG predominates.
Chapter 19
Chapter 19
Which of the following statements is NOT true for type I
(anaphylactic) hypersensitivity reactions?
a. The reactions may
be localized or systemic.
b. The reactions occur when IgE
antibodies bind to antigen.
c. Mediators of the reactions include
histamine, leukotrienes, and prostaglandins.
d. IgG and IgM
antibodies are involved.
e. Examples include hay fever, asthma,
and bee-sting allergies.
d. IgG and IgM antibodies are involved.
What type of immunoglobulin binds to mast cells during an allergic
reaction?
a. IgM
b. IgA
c. IgD
d. IgE
e. IgG
d. IgE
Which of the following is NOT a case of localized
anaphylaxis?
a. poison ivy rash
b. hay fever
c.
hives
d. allergy to dust mites
e. asthma
a. poison ivy rash
Blood transfusion hypersensitivity reactions are examples of
__________.
a. type I (anaphylactic) hypersensitivity
b.
type II (cytotoxic) hypersensitivity
c. type III (immune complex)
hypersensitivity
d. type IV (cell-mediated)
hypersensitivity
e. delayed hypersensitivity
b. type II (cytotoxic) hypersensitivity
Although maternal–fetal incompatibilities are possible in the ABO
blood group, the incidence of adverse reactions in the fetus or
newborn is far less common than in the case of Rh incompatibilities.
Which of the following is the most likely explanation?
a.
Maternal anti-A and anti-B antibodies typically do not cross the
placenta.
b. The A and B antigens are not expressed on fetal red
blood cells.
c. Maternal antibodies are destroyed when they enter
fetal circulation.
d. Antibody production is greatly reduced
during pregnancy.
e. Blocking antibodies exist in the fetal circulation.
a. Maternal anti-A and anti-B antibodies typically do not cross the placenta.
Which of the following diseases is a type III autoimmune
disease?
a. rheumatoid arthritis
b. myasthenia
gravis
c. poison ivy
d. hemolytic disease of the
newborn
e. Graves’ disease
a. rheumatoid arthritis
A patient with severe burns on her hands and arms has a skin graft
with skin taken from her upper thigh. This type of tissue transplant
is a/an __________.
a. autograft
b. stem cell graft
c.
xenograft
d. isograft
e. allograft
a. autograft
Following an organ transplant, therapeutic immunosuppression to
prevent organ rejection may be accomplished by any of the following
EXCEPT __________.
a. cyclosporine
b. chimeric monoclonal
antibodies
c. RhoGAM
d. suppression of cell-mediated
immunity
e. blocking IL-2
a. cyclosporine
9. Which of the following is NOT an example of immunotherapy for
cancer treatment or prevention?
a. HAART for HIV
infection
b. stimulation of dendritic cells with tumor
antigens
c. injections of immunotoxins that target tumor
cells
d. the Gardasil vaccine
e. vaccination against
hepatitis B
a. HAART for HIV infection
10. Which type of graft will most likely cause hyperacute
rejection?
a. mesograft
b. isograft
c.
autograft
d. xenotransplant
e. allograft
d. xenotransplant
11. Which of the following is/are NOT a component of the HIV
virion?
a. gp120
b. RNA strands
c. lipoprotein
envelope
d. reverse transcriptase
e. DNA strands
e. DNA strands
12. HIV can remain latent in the host cell by integrating its
reverse-transcriptase-produced DNA into the host chromosome, becoming
a/an __________.
a. provirus
b. prophage
c.
virion
d. prion
e. antivirus
a. provirus
13. All of the following concerning the clinical phases of HIV
infection are correct EXCEPT__________.
a. phase 2: persistent
oral Candida infection
b. phase 3: Pneumocystis pneumonia or
toxoplasmosis of the brain
c. phase 1: Kaposi’s sarcoma
d.
phase 1: persistent lymphadenopathy
e. phase 3: CD4 T cell count
less than 200 cells per cubic millimeter
c. phase 1: Kaposi’s sarcoma
14. Which of the following could be predicted for an individual with
a mutation in the gene encoding CCR5?
a. resistance to HIV
infection
b. inability to be stimulated by interleukin-1
c.
inability to produce antibodies
d. inability to produce
cytokines
e. inability to interact with macrophages and dendritic
cells during antigen presentation
a. resistance to HIV infection
15. Which of the following predictions can be made regarding the
immune responses of individuals with AIDS?
a. They cannot make
any antibody.
b. They produce good immune responses against
fungal pathogens.
c. They can make antibody in response to
T-independent antigens.
d. They can only make antibody in
response to T-dependent antigens.
e. They produce good immune
responses against protozoan pathogens.
c. They can make antibody in response to T-independent antigens.
16. Which of the following diseases is most likely to be similar to
AIDS in terms of the specific immunodeficiency?
a. severe
combined immunodeficiency
b. DiGeorge syndrome
c. selective
IgA deficiency
d. X-linked infantile agammaglobulinemia
e.
common variable hypogammaglobulinemia
b. DiGeorge syndrome
Which is NOT a mechanism used in anti-HIV drugs?
a. blocking
viral fusion
b. blocking reverse transcriptase
c. inhibition
of HIV integrase
d. inhibition of cell-wall synthesis
e.
protease inhibition
d. inhibition of cell-wall synthesis
Which of the following is NOT a common disease associated with
AIDS?
a. cytomegalovirus eye infections
b. Pneumocystis
pneumonia
c. influenza
d. toxoplasmosis of the brain
e.
Candida albicans infection
c. influenza
19. The desensitization injections for allergy treatments are aimed
at producing __________.
a. IgE
b. IgA
c. IgD
d.
IgG
e. IgM
d. IgG
20. In hemolytic disease of the newborn, fetal red blood cells are
targeted for destruction by __________.
a. maternal IgG
antibodies
b. fetal IgG antibodies
c. maternal IgM
antibodies
d. maternal IgE antibodies
e. fetal IgE antibodies
a. maternal IgG antibodies
21. When will someone infected with HIV have the most viral particles
in his or her blood?
a. 1 to 2 months after the initial
infection
b. when the patient dies
c. 1 year after the
initial infection
d. 3 to 4 years after the initial infection
a. 1 to 2 months after the initial infection
22. What causes the rapid decline in the HIV population in the blood
3 to 6 months after the initial infection?
a. New viruses are not
being released from the T cells.
b. The patient begins to make
antibodies against HIV.
c. Both of the listed choices are
correct.
d. Neither of the listed choices is correct.
b. The patient begins to make antibodies against HIV.
23. Which of the following statements is NOT true for type I
hypersensitivity reactions?
a. The reactions may be localized or
systemic.
b. Mediators of the reaction include histamine,
leukotrienes, and prostaglandins.
c. IgG and IgM antibodies are
involved.
d. Examples include hay fever, asthma, and bee-sting
allergies.
e. The reactions often occur within minutes of
exposure to the allergen.
c. IgG and IgM antibodies are involved.
24. Immune complexes cause tissue damage by __________.
a.
releasing cyclosporine
b. causing T cells to destroy self
c.
fixing complement
d. releasing histamine
b. causing T cells to destroy self
25. Which of the following promotes the development of self-tolerance
and prevents the eventual development of autoimmune diseases?
a.
loss of T memory cells
b. inhibition of B cell
development
c. clonal deletion of self-reactive T cells
d.
development of self-reactive B cell clones
c. clonal deletion of self-reactive T cells
26.All of the following are causes of immune deficiencies. Which one
is NOT a natural cause?
a. inheritance
b. infection
c.
transplant drugs
d. None of the listed choices is a natural cause
of immune deficiencies.
c. transplant drugs
27. Incidence of which of the following cancers is now reduced by a
vaccine?
a. leukemia
b. cervical cancer
c. bone
cancer
d. breast cancer
b. cervical cancer
The tuberculin reaction develops within 30 minutes of the skin test
in people with prior sensitization due
to tuberculosis
infection.
True OR False
False
Chapter 20
Chapter 20
1. You have a 200 mg/ml antibiotic solution. You prepare serial
dilutions (1:2, 1:4, etc.) of the antibiotic; the first tube contains
100 mg/ml. You then inoculate each tube with Salmonella. Bacteria grow
in tubes 4, 5, and 6. You subculture bacteria from tubes 1 through 3
to nutrient broth. Growth occurs in the tube 3 subculture. You can
conclude that the MIC is __________.
a. 12.5 mg/ml
b. 25
mg/ml
c. 50 mg/ml
d. 200 mg/ml
e. none of the listed choices
e. none of the listed choices
An antimicrobial drug that inhibits peptidoglycan synthesis is most
likely to be effective against __________.
a. Gram-negative
bacteria
b. viruses
c. protozoan parasites
d.
gram-positive bacteria
e. fungi
d. gram-positive bacteria
Which of the following antibiotics inhibits protein
synthesis?
a. isoniazid
b. rifampin
c.
cephalosporin
d. streptomycin
e. vancomycin
d. streptomycin
You are reviewing the following results of a disk- diffusion
antibiotic susceptibility test on an isolate of Staphylococcus
aureus:
Antibiotic A: ZI (zone of inhibition) = 0
millimeters
Antibiotic B: ZI = 23 millimeters
Antibiotic C:
ZI = 16 millimeters
Antibiotic D: ZI = 19 millimeters
Which
antibiotic is bactericidal?
a. Antibiotic A
b. Antibiotic
B
c. Antibiotic C
d. Antibiotic D
e. The correct answer
cannot be determined from the information provided.
e. The correct answer cannot be determined from the information provided
Which antimicrobial works by inhibiting the synthesis of mycolic
acid?
a. methicillin
b. penicillin
c. isoniazid
d.
chloramphenicol
e. vancomycin
c. isoniazid
Which of the following antibiotics is a common choice to treat
streptococcal infections in children?
a. erythromycin
b.
tetracycline
c. trimethoprim
d. rifampin
e. neomycin
a. erythromycin
Which of the following antibiotics inhibits folic acid
synthesis?
a. ampicillin
b. chloramphenicol
c.
tetracycline
d. sulfanilamide
e. neomycin
d. sulfanilamide
Which of the following drugs inhibits the synthesis of mRNA in
bacteria?
a. ampicillin
b. rifampin
c.
trimethoprim
d. polymyxin B
e. ethambutol
b. rifampin
Which of the following antibiotics is frequently used as an
alternative for those who are allergic to penicillin?
a.
amoxicillin
b. erythromycin
c. ethambutol
d.
streptomycin
e. vancomycin
b. erythromycin
Which of the following types of antibiotics is most likely to be
associated with the development of a superinfection?
a.
bactericidal antibiotics
b. broad-spectrum antibiotics
c.
narrow-spectrum antibiotics
d. β-lactam antibiotics
e.
bacteriostatic antibiotics
b. broad-spectrum antibiotics
Which drug would be used to treat athlete's foot?
a.
neomycin
b. clotrimazole
c. chloroquine
d.
amantadine
e. polymyxin B
b. clotrimazole
Which antifungal drug was recently introduced to treat systemic
fungal infections?
a. clotrimazole
b. miconazole
c.
posaconazole
d. amphotericin B
e. tolnaftate
c. posaconazole
Tetracyclines are effective against all of the following EXCEPT
__________.
a. intracellular chlamydias
b. Gram-positive
bacteria
c. Gram-negative bacteria
d. intracellular
rickettsias
e. fungi
e. fungi
A nucleoside analog used to treat HIV infection is
__________.
a. zidovudine
b. ribavirin
c.
amantadine
d. acyclovir
e. praziquantel
a. zidovudine
All of the following are antiprotozoan drugs EXCEPT
__________.
a. quinacrine
b. metronidazole
c.
chloroquine
d. mefloquine
e. mebendazole
e. mebendazole
Which drug is NOT a nucleoside analog?
a. nevirapine
b.
lamivudine
c. ribavirin
d. acyclovir
e. zidovudine
a. nevirapine
Which of the following is the drug of choice for the treatment of
malaria?
a. iodoquinol
b. chloroquine
c.
nifurtimox
d. Flagyl
e. quinacrine
b. chloroquine
The drug Flagyl is commonly used to treat an STD caused by
__________.
a. herpesvirus
b. Neisseria gonorrhoeae d.
Trichomonas vaginalis
c. Treponema pallidum
d. Trichomonas
vaginalis
e. HIV
d. Trichomonas vaginalis
Which of the following mechanisms is antifungal?
a. cause muscle
spasms
b. inhibit peptidoglycan synthesis
c. interfere with
anaerobic metabolism
d. inhibit ergosterol synthesis
e.
inhibit 70S ribosomes
d. inhibit ergosterol synthesis
Which of the following is used for treating influenza
infections?
a. indinavir
b. oseltamivir
c. pentamidine
isethionate
d. acyclovir
e. interferon
b. oseltamivi
Clindamycin binds to the 50S ribosomal subunit to inhibit
translocation. This antibiotic stops __________.
a. translation
in eukaryotes
b. transcription in prokaryotes
c.
transcription in eukaryotes
d. translation in prokaryotes
d. translation in prokaryotes
Which of the following statements about antibiotics is true?
a.
The finding of antibiotic-producing microorganisms is a rare
event.
b. Antibiotics are not typically produced by
microorganisms growing in their natural environment.
c.
Penicillin was first discovered by two researchers named Florey and
Chain.
d. Most of our antibiotics are produced by Streptomyces, a
genus of filamentous soil bacteria.
d. Most of our antibiotics are produced by Streptomyces, a genus of filamentous soil bacteria.
A drug that binds with sterols would injure __________.
a.
bacterial cell walls
b. eukaryotic plasma membranes
c.
fungal cell walls
d. DNA
b. eukaryotic plasma membranes
The method of action of nucleoside analogs is __________.
a.
inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis
b. inhibition of protein
synthesis
c. inhibition of cell wall synthesis
d. disruption
of plasma membrane
a. inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis
The mode of action for erythromycin is __________.
a. inhibition
of nucleic acid synthesis
b. inhibition of protein
synthesis
c. inhibition of essential metabolite synthesis
d.
inhibition of cell wall synthesis
b. inhibition of protein synthesis
What is the mechanism of the resistance of MRSA to
methicillin?
a. blocking the entry of the methicillin
b.
enzymatic destruction of the methicillin
c. alteration of the
target molecule
d. efflux of the methicillin
c. alteration of the target molecule
Chapter 21
Chapter 21
Which of the following is NOT normal skin microbiota?
a.
Streptococcus
b. Propionibacterium
c. Staphylococcus
d.
Corynebacterium
e. Micrococcus
a. Streptococcus
What do the following diseases have in common?
Scalded skin
syndrome
Toxic shock syndrome
Staphylococcal food
poisoning
a. They are all diseases seen in neonates.
b. They
are all caused by endotoxins produced by Escherichia coli.
c.
They are all caused by exotoxins produced by strains of Staphylococcus
aureus.
d. All of these diseases are caused by beta-hemolytic
streptococci.
e. All of these diseases are readily treated with penicillin.
c. They are all caused by exotoxins produced by strains of Staphylococcus aureus.
Which microorganism is responsible for otitis externa?
a.
Staphylococcus aureus
b. Micrococcus spp.
c.
Propionibacterium spp.
d. Streptococcus pyogenes
e.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of
Streptococcus?
a. cocci
b. coagulase-positive
c.
gram-positive
d. beta-hemolytic
e. M proteins
b. coagulase-positive
Place the following infections in order of increasing tissue
involvement and
severity:
1-septicemia
2-folliculitis
3-cellulitis
4-furuncle
a.
2, 4, 3, 1
b. 1, 2, 3, 4
c. 4, 2, 1, 3
d. 2, 3, 4,
1
e. 2, 4, 1, 3
a. 2, 4, 3, 1
Which of the following may produce infections of the skin with
blue-green pus?
a. Candida albicans
b. varicella-zoster
virus
c. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
d. Staphylococcus
aureus
e. Streptococcus pyogenes
c. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Warts are generally caused by __________.
a.
varicella-zoster
b. rubella
c. papillomavirus
d.
herpesvirus
e. variola virus
c. papillomavirus
All of the following are characteristics of the varicella-zoster
virus EXCEPT __________.
a. benign skin growths
b. vesicular
skin rash
c. latent infection in nerve cells
d. reactivation
infections decades after initial infection
e. transmission via
the respiratory route
a. benign skin growths
Which of the following is NOT caused by HSV-1?
a. canker
sores
b. encephalitis
c. cold sores
d. herpes
whitlow
e. cystic acne
a. canker sores
Which of the following is NOT a possible result of rubeola?
a.
macular rash
b. pneumonia
c. encephalitis
d.
shingles
e. subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
d. shingles
All of the following cause conjunctivitis EXCEPT __________.
a.
Pseudomonas
b. Propionibacterium
c. Chlamydia
d.
Haemophilus
e. Neisseria
b. Propionibacterium
Sporotrichosis is the most common type of __________.
a.
dermatomycoses
b. scabies
c. candidiasis
d.
subcutaneous mycoses
e. cutaneous mycoses
d. subcutaneous mycoses
Which of the following is NOT associated with Candida
albicans?
a. susceptibility to nystatin
b. bright red skin
with lesions on the borders
c. immunosuppressed
individuals
d. susceptibility to penicillin
e. whitish
overgrowth of the oral cavity
d. susceptibility to penicillin
Which of the following would be the most appropriate way of testing
whether a skin lesion is caused by a dermatophyte?
a. culture
scrapings of the lesion periphery on Sabouraud’s agar
b.
performing a dermatophyte titer
c. swabbing the lesion center and
culturing it on blood agar
d. doing a gram stain on a swab from
the lesion
e. Any of these choices would be equally effective.
a. culture scrapings of the lesion periphery on Sabouraud’s agar
Ringworm is caused by a/an __________.
a. fungus
b.
helminth
c. arthropod
d. nematode
e. protozoan
a. fungus
Which of the following statements is true regarding chickenpox and
shingles?
a. An individual is likely to develop shingles after
exposure to a person with shingles.
b. A child who is not immune
to chickenpox may get it following exposure to a patient with
shingles.
c. A nonimmune adult is likely to develop shingles
after exposure to a person with chickenpox.
d. An individual who
has never been infected with varicella can get shingles as an
adult.
e. All of these statements are true
b. A child who is not immune to chickenpox may get it following exposure to a patient with shingles.
Which of the following is NOT a treatment for papillomas?
a.
treatment with certain topical drugs
b. acyclovir
treatment
c. cryotherapy
d. electro-desiccation
e.
laser therapy
b. acyclovir treatment
Which enzyme is NOT produced by deep-tissue streptococcal
infections?
a. streptokinase
b. coagulase
c.
deoxyribonuclease
d. protease
e. hyaluronidase
b. coagulase
Measles can potentially be eradicated because __________.
a. the
virus has mutated to the point that it is no longer infectious
b.
it is not highly contagious
c. most people have developed
resistance to it
d. humans are the only reservoir, and
vaccination is effective
e. it is easily controlled by antibiotics
d. humans are the only reservoir, and vaccination is effective
Which of the following is a eukaryotic pathogen that infects the
eye?
a. Staphylococcus aureus
b. human herpesvirus I
c.
Acanthamoeba
d. Sarcoptes scabiei
e. Chlamydia trachomatis
c. Acanthamoeba
Chapter 22
Chapter 22
Consider the following three common agents of bacterial meningitis:
Neisseria meningitidis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Haemophilus
influenzae type B. Which of the following would be most helpful in
differentiating these three agents?
a. Gram-stain
morphology
b. CSF white blood cell count
c. duration of
symptoms
d. presence or absence of a capsule
e. patient symptoms
a. Gram-stain morphology
The current first choice of antibiotic for bacterial meningitis is
__________.
a. ampicillin
b. cephalosporin
c.
erythromycin
d. vancomycin
e. penicillin
b. cephalosporin
Vaccination is recommended to prevent epidemic meningitis among
college students and military recruits resulting from infection with
__________.
a. Haemophilus influenzae
b. Clostridium
tetani
c. Neisseria meningitidis
d. Streptococcus
pneumoniae
e. Listeria monocytogenes
c. Neisseria meningitidis
The most important element in the pathogenicity of S. pneumoniae is
__________.
a. exotoxins
b. endotoxins
c. the
capsule
d. the cell wall
e. rapid growth rate
c. the capsule
The diagnosis of bacterial meningitis requires a sample of
__________.
a. blood
b. sputum
c. urine
d.
lymphatic tissue
e. cerebrospinal fluid
e. cerebrospinal fluid
Which of the following diseases is NOT caused by a prion?
a.
African sleeping sickness
b. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
c.
scrapie
d. kuru
e. bovine spongiform encephalopathy
a. African sleeping sickness
Treatment for rabies exposure requires __________.
a. injections
of antirabies vaccine and immune globulin
b. injections of
antirabies vaccine and antibiotics
c. oral antibiotics and immune
globulin
d. IV antibiotics and immune globulin
e. injections
of rabies antitoxin and chemotherapy
a. injections of antirabies vaccine and immune globulin
Which disease may be transmitted by contaminated dairy
products?
a. tetanus
b. poliomyelitis
c.
encephalitis
d. listeriosis
e. botulism
d. listeriosis
Which of the following statements is NOT true about botulism?
a.
Antibiotics are the first choice of treatment.
b. Nitrites are
added to foods to inhibit bacterial growth.
c. The bacterium
forms endospores.
d. The bacterium is anaerobic.
e. The
toxin is heat labile.
a. Antibiotics are the first choice of treatment.
Which of the following is used to diagnose West Nile
encephalitis?
a. ELISA test for IgM antibodies
b. acid-fast
stain
c. ELISA test for viral proteins
d. agglutination test
for viruses
e. constant level of IgG antibodies for 1 week
a. ELISA test for IgM antibodies
Reservoirs for rabies include all of the following EXCEPT
__________.
a. skunks
b. bats
c. mosquitoes
d.
raccoons
e. foxes
c. mosquitoes
Which of these vaccines has actually been implicated in causing the
disease it is designed to prevent?
a. tetanus vaccine
b.
pneumococcus vaccine
c. Salk polio vaccine
d. Sabin oral
polio vaccine
e. Hib vaccine
d. Sabin oral polio vaccine
A migrant farmworker has been brought into the emergency room showing
early symptoms of tetanus. He indicates that he had received a
puncture wound in his hand a week before the onset of symptoms. When
asked about vaccination or booster, he did not know whether he had
ever been vaccinated. Which of the following should be administered to
the patient as soon as possible?
a. tetanus immune
globulin
b. hyperbaric therapy
c. tetanus toxoid
d.
antibiotics
e. a tetanus titer
a. tetanus immune globulin
A 10-month-old infant has become constipated and demonstrates
muscular weakness by her inability to sit up or crawl. Her muscle tone
is continuing to deteriorate, and she is beginning to have difficulty
holding her head up. While questioning her mother to get more
information, the doctor noted that the infant's cereal had been
sweetened with honey for the last 10 days. What is a likely
diagnosis?
a. infant botulism
b. viral encephalitis
c.
bacterial meningitis
d. tetanus
a. infant botulism
What is the best way to control West Nile encephalitis?
a. Get
vaccinated.
b. Eliminate the vector.
c. Take prophylactic
antibiotics.
d. Avoid endemic areas.
e. Treat the patient
b. Eliminate the vector.
Which method is best for controlling African trypanosomiasis?
a.
Control the vector.
b. Take prophylactic antibiotics.
c.
Avoid reservoirs.
d. Avoid swimming in contaminated
water.
e. Get a vaccination
a. Control the vector.
An otherwise healthy 19-year-old college student was admitted to the
emergency room with a fever, bad headache, and a stiff neck, symptoms
suggestive of meningitis. A spinal tap was done. The CSF was cloudy,
and the cell count on the fluid was 500 WBC/ml. The differential WBC
count of the CSF showed predominantly neutrophils. The CSF glucose was
decreased, and the CSF protein was elevated. The Gram stain showed
gram-negative diplococci. The most likely etiologic agent is
__________.
a. Neisseria meningitidis
b. Cryptococcus
neoformans
c. Haemophilus influenza B
d. Streptococcus
pneumoniae
e. beta-hemolytic group B streptococcus
a. Neisseria meningitidis
Naegleria encephalitis is commonly acquired by __________.
a.
children swimming in ponds and streams
b. mosquitoes
c.
bats
d. inhalation of bird droppings
e. eating contaminated beets
a. children swimming in ponds and streams
Which of these statements is true concerning foodborne botulism in
older children and adults?
a. Disease results from consuming
botulism toxin in improperly preserved foods.
b. Disease results
from consuming vegetative C. botulinum organisms that invade
peripheral neurons.
c. Disease results when ingested C. botulinum
spores germinate in the intestine and invade the bloodstream, causing
septicemia.
d. Disease usually results from consuming C.
botulinum spores in improperly canned foods. These spores germinate
and produce toxin within the intestine.
e. Disease results from
toxin produced by vegetative C. botulinum organisms when contaminated
foods sit at room temperature between preparation and consumption.
a. Disease results from consuming botulism toxin in improperly preserved foods.
Which of the following begins as a lung infection but may cause
meningitis in immunosuppressed individuals?
a.
cryptococcosis
b. listeriosis
c. polio
d. amebic
encephalitis
e. scrapie
a. cryptococcosis
Drugs used to treat encephalitis must __________.
a. inhibit
acetylcholine
b. enter the lymphatic system
c. be lipid
soluble
d. be broad spectrum
c. be lipid soluble
Which of the following microorganisms is NOT a bacterial cause of
meningitis?
a. Cryptococcus neoformans
b. Streptococcus
pneumoniae
c. Haemophilus influenzae
d. Neisseria meningitidis
a. Cryptococcus neoformans
Which if the following diseases is caused by the toxin released by a
bacterium?
a. rabies
b. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
c.
botulism
d. polio
c. botulism
Which one of the following diseases is transmitted by a
vector?
a. African trypanosomiasis
b. poliomyelitis
c.
Naegleria meningoencephalitis
d. leprosy
a. African trypanosomiasis
A postmortem examination of a brain shows spongelike degeneration.
This is most likely a case of __________.
a. rabies
b.
poliomyelitis
c. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
d. arboviral encephalitis
c. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Chapter 23
Chapter 23
Which disease is NOT caused by an obligatory intracellular
bacterium?
a. Lyme disease
b. Rocky Mountain spotted
fever
c. epidemic typhus
d. endemic murine typhus
e. ehrlichiosis
a. Lyme disease
A hyperbaric chamber is sometimes used to treat wounds infected with
__________.
a. Bacillus anthracis
b. Streptococcus
pyogenes
c. Staphylococcus aureus
d. Enterococcus
faecium
e. Clostridium perfringens
e. Clostridium perfringens
The CDC recommends that pregnant women be tested and offered
antibiotic therapy before delivery if they are vaginal carriers of
__________.
a. Staphylococcus aureus
b. Streptococcus
agalactiae
c. Enterococcus faecalis
d. Toxoplasma
gondii
e. Escherichia coli
b. Streptococcus agalactiae
Why do antibiotics sometimes aggravate septic shock?
a. The
bacteria are resistant to the antibiotics.
b. Antibiotics cannot
reach the site of infection.
c. The bacteria chemically modify
the antibiotics into toxins.
d. Antibiotics may cause the lysis
of more bacteria and the release of more endotoxin.
e. Septic
shock is caused by viruses that are not affected by antibiotics.
d. Antibiotics may cause the lysis of more bacteria and the release of more endotoxin.
A 24-year-old woman in Minnesota complained of a flu like illness
accompanied by a high fever and headache a week after being bitten by
a tick. During examination of a blood smear, it was noted that some of
her monocytes contained clumps of tiny bacteria (morulae). What is the
most likely diagnosis?
a. tularemia
b. human granulocytic
anaplasmosis
c. Lyme disease
d. babesiosis
e. Rocky
Mountain spotted fever
b. human granulocytic anaplasmosis
Which one of the following is NOT correctly matched to its
vector?
a. Trypanosoma cruzi; reduviid bug
b. Leishmania
tropica; sandfly
c. yellow fever; mosquito
d. Babesia
microti; flea
e. Plasmodium vivax; mosquito
d. Babesia microti; flea
Tularemia can be contracted by humans by all of the following methods
EXCEPT __________.
a. infection with Epstein-Barr virus
b.
eating undercooked meat from diseased animals
c. being bitten by
deerflies
d. handling diseased carcasses
e. coming into
contact with infected rabbits
a. infection with Epstein-Barr virus
Which of the following statements is NOT true of brucellosis?
a.
Treatment requires prolonged antibiotic therapy.
b. Transmission
occurs via mosquitoes.
c. Wild elk and bison are
reservoirs.
d. The causative agent grows intracellularly.
e.
Infected cows excrete bacteria in their milk
b. Transmission occurs via mosquitoes.
Most cases of Burkitt’s lymphoma occur in individuals who are
infected with EB virus and __________.
a. schistosomes
b.
Plasmodium species
c. Trypanosoma species
d. HIV
e. herpesviru
b. Plasmodium species
Which of the following pairs is NOT a correct match?
a. Yersinia
pestis; rodents
b. Rickettsia typhi; rodents
c. Clostridium
perfringens; soil
d. Francisella tularensis; rabbits
e.
Leishmania spp.; water
e. Leishmania spp.; water
Which of the following is frequently the cause of infection following
animal bites?
a. Toxoplasma gondii
b. Borrelia
burgdorferi
c. Rickettsia rickettsia
d. Staphylococcus
aureus
e. Pasteurella multocida
e. Pasteurella multocida
Most naturally occurring anthrax infections are __________.
a.
pulmonary anthrax from inhaling endospores
b. cutaneous
infections from endospore entry at a skin lesion
c. sepsis due to
transfusion with contaminated blood
d. gastrointestinal
infections from eating undercooked food containing anthrax
spores
e. pneumonic anthrax contracted by contact with human carriers
b. cutaneous infections from endospore entry at a skin lesion
A man found living in a rat-infested building develops a high fever
and swollen lymph nodes, called buboes, in the armpit and groin. A
gram-negative bacillus is isolated from the patient, and the rats are
found to be infested with Xenopsylla cheopis. What is the
disease?
a. bubonic plague
b. relapsing fever
c. Lyme
disease
d. cat-scratch disease
e. rat-scratch disease
a. bubonic plague
A patient has flulike symptoms and a bull's-eye rash on his leg.
Investigation reveals that he had been hiking in Connecticut and was
bitten by two ticks. What is the diagnosis?
a. cat-scratch
disease
b. relapsing fever
c. deer-lick fever
d.
bubonic plague
e. Lyme disease
e. Lyme disease
Which of the following statements is NOT true of yellow
fever?
a. Liver damage may result from infection.
b.
Burkitt's lymphoma may develop.
c. Fever, chills, and jaundice
are frequent symptoms.
d. Control of mosquito populations can
reduce the disease incidence.
e. Aedes aegypti is the vecto
b. Burkitt's lymphoma may develop.
A Nigerian tourist is hospitalized with a fever and chills that occur
in 48-hour cycles. A blood smear reveals circular rings within the
erythrocytes. What is the treatment of choice for this
patient?
a. gin
b. penicillin
c. acyclovir
d.
chloroquine
e. tetracycline
d. chloroquine
Swimmer's itch is caused by __________.
a. filovirus
b.
Plasmodium merozoites
c. larvae of schistosomes
d.
Babesia
e. arbovirus
c. larvae of schistosomes
The symptoms of schistosomiasis are due primarily to
__________.
a. reactions to drugs used for treatment
b.
larval cercaria entering the skin
c. eggs deposited by adult
worms in host tissue
d. adult worms living in host blood
vessels
e. an immune reaction to developing worms
c. eggs deposited by adult worms in host tissue
A 34-year-old Caucasian male is being examined in the emergency room
of a Boston hospital, complaining of a high fever and severe muscle
pain and joint pain. He returned to Boston two days ago, after
spending 10 days traveling throughout Brazil on business. He indicated
that he was bitten by mosquitoes several times while on the trip.
Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
a. Lassa
fever
b. Marburg virus
c. influenza
d. yellow
fever
e. dengue fever
e. dengue fever
Toxoplasmosis is most commonly contracted by __________.
a. dog
bites
b. cat scratches
c. flea bites
d. contact with
cat feces
e. African green monkeys
d. contact with cat feces
All of the following are defensive cells associated with the lymph
nodes
a. fixed macrophages
b. B lymphocytes
c. T
lymphocytes
d. eosinophils
c. T lymphocytes
A slaughterhouse worker develops fever and chills, with the fever
reaching a high of 40°C each evening. Oxidase-positive, gram-negative
coccobacilli are isolated from a lesion on his arm. What is your
diagnosis?
a. Rocky Mountain spotted fever
b.
malaria
c. relapsing fever
d. brucellosis
d. brucellosis
A patient is hospitalized with fever, headache, jaundice, and rash.
Spirochetes are observed in her blood. What is your diagnosis?
a.
relapsing fever
b. Lyme disease
c. Rocky Mountain spotted
fever
d. yellow fever
a. relapsing fever
Which one of these diseases has the highest incidence in the United
States?
a. CMV (cytomegalovirus) infection
b. plague
c.
Rocky Mountain spotted fever
d. malaria
a. CMV (cytomegalovirus) infection
A microorganism has just been introduced to a point below the dermis
of the foot via the parenteral route. It is in the interstitial fluid
and will eventually become engulfed by a fixed macrophage in an
inguinal lymph node. What is the next location it will travel to after
leaving the interstitial fluid?
a. lymphatics
b.
blood
c. lymph node
d. lymph capillary
d. lymph capillary
Chapter 24
Chapter 24
One of the most serious infections of the upper respiratory system is
__________.
a. sinusitis
b. tonsillitis
c.
pharyngitis
d. epiglottitis
e. laryngitis
d. epiglottitis
One of the most important reasons to diagnose and treat strep throat
is that __________.
a. untreated strep throat is associated with
the development of otitis media and conjunctivitis
b. untreated
strep throat may contribute to the development of diphtheria
c.
untreated strep throat may progress to necrotizing fasciitis
d.
untreated strep throat may contribute to the development of rheumatic
fever
e. untreated strep throat may progress to drug-resistant influenza
d. untreated strep throat may contribute to the development of rheumatic fever
Which of the following statements is NOT true of diphtheria?
a.
It is prevented by immunization with diphtheria toxoid.
b.
Complications may include damage to heart or kidneys.
c. Symptoms
include the formation of a tough grayish membrane in the
throat.
d. It is readily treated with antibiotics.
e. It is
caused by a gram-positive, non–endospore-forming rod.
d. It is readily treated with antibiotics.
Haemophilus influenzae can cause all of the following respiratory
infections EXCEPT __________.
a. sinusitis
b.
laryngitis
c. influenza
d. epiglottitis
e. otitis media
c. influenza
All of the following cause lower respiratory tract infections EXCEPT
__________.
a. rhinovirus
b. Legionella
c.
Mycoplasma
d. Chlamydia
e. Blastomyces
a. rhinovirus
Pertussis is characterized by __________.
a. a tough, grayish
membrane formed in the throat
b. thick fluid build-up in the
inner ear canal
c. calcification of lung tissue and acid-fast
bacteria
d. a whooping type cough
e. fluid accumulation in alveoli
d. a whooping type cough
An effective vaccine does NOT exist for the common cold, because
__________.
a. the toxin producing the symptoms cannot be
inactivated
b. the disease is not serious enough to warrant
immunization
c. the common cold can be caused by a virus,
bacterium, or parasite
d. there are likely over 200 agents that
cause the common cold
e. it is not possible to culture the
causative agent
d. there are likely over 200 agents that cause the common cold
Which of the following best describes why antibiotic administration
is inappropriate for most of the common upper respiratory tract
infections?
a. The diseases produced are not serious enough to
treat.
b. The infectious agents produce enzymes that destroy
penicillin.
c. The antibiotics do not reach the infected
sites.
d. Antibiotics can exacerbate symptoms.
e. Most are
caused by viruses
e. Most are caused by viruses
A physician receives a lab report indicating that acid-fast bacilli
were found in sputum from a patient with a lower respiratory tract
infection. The physician suspects __________.
a. mycoplasma
pneumonia
b. histoplasmosis
c. Legionnaire's disease
d.
pneumococcal pneumonia
e. tuberculosis
e. tuberculosis
An 8-week-old infant has been brought to the ER because of difficulty
breathing. Chest sounds and a chest X-ray indicate an acute
bronchiolitis. Oxygen saturation is poor. What is the most likely
diagnosis?
a. influenza
b. respiratory syncytial virus
(RSV)
c. pertussis
d. Pneumocystis pneumonia
e.
Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia
b. respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
Which of the following statements is NOT true of
tuberculosis?
a. TB bacteria can survive for months on
sputum-contaminated materials.
b. Infection has been greatly
reduced because of mass immunization.
c. It is transmitted by
contact with infected humans.
d. Extremely dangerous multiple
drug-resistant strains have emerged.
e. Once phagocytized, the
bacteria can survive inside the phagocytic cells.
b. Infection has been greatly reduced because of mass immunization.
If a patient has a positive tuberculin skin test, it means that
__________.
a. the patient has a latent case of
tuberculosis
b. the patient was vaccinated with the BCG
vaccine
c. the patient has an active case of tuberculosis
d.
the patient has recovered from tuberculosis
e. All of the listed
choices are possible regarding a patient with a positive tuberculin
skin test.
e. All of the listed choices are possible regarding a patient with a positive tuberculin skin test.
An outbreak of pneumonia occurs in a wing of a hospital housing
kidney-transplant patients. The source of infection is traced to the
water supply of the air conditioner. This case describes transmission
of which of the following?
a. Haemophilus influenza
b.
Histoplasma capsulatum
c. Legionella pneumophila
d.
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
e. Streptococcus pneumoniae
c. Legionella pneumophila
The frequency of influenza epidemics is associated with the
__________.
a. wide variety of virus families that can cause
influenza
b. many animal and human carriers
c. frequency of
mutations in viral genes for envelope spikes
d. lack of available
immunization
e. ability of influenza viruses to be transmitted
via contaminated public water supplies
c. frequency of mutations in viral genes for envelope spikes
A 90-year-old patient is diagnosed with pneumonia. Microscopic
examination shows a bacterial agent that lacks cell walls. What is the
etiological cause of the patient’s pneumonia?
a. Streptococcus
pneumoniae
b. Mycoplasma pneumoniae
c. respiratory syncytial
virus (RSV)
d. Haemophilus influenza
e. Staphylococcus pneumoniae
b. Mycoplasma pneumoniae
The DTaP immunization is for __________.
a. dermatomycoses,
tetanus, and Pontiac fever
b. diphtheria, tetanus, and
pertussis
c. dermatomycoses, TB, and pertussis
d.
diphtheria, tetanus, and parainfluenza
e. diphtheria, TB, and
pneumococcal pneumonia
b. diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis
Which of the following descriptions does NOT pertain to mycoplasmal
pneumonia?
a. alveoli do not fill up with fluid
b. cannot be
treated with penicillin
c. usually a life-threatening illness in
adolescence
d. also called walking pneumonia
e. gradual
onset of fever and cough
c. usually a life-threatening illness in adolescence
An 85-year-old man has been experiencing weight loss, night sweats,
and a dry cough for several months; recently, he has begun coughing up
sputum with tinges of blood in it. Following a chest X-ray showing
some white spots on his lungs, an AFB stain and culture were ordered,
and both were positive for the presence of AFB. He has been PPD
positive since his twenties. Which of the following most accurately
describes his current situation?
a. reactivation
tuberculosis
b. primary tubercular infection
c. latent
tubercular infection
d. primary tubercular disease
e. histoplasmosis
a. reactivation tuberculosis
A patient has a rapid onset of fever, chills, labored breathing, and
sore throat. He recently returned from Mexico, where he drank local
water and stayed in an air-conditioned room. Several weeks ago, he
purchased a parrot. After a physical exam, his physician prescribes
tetracycline. What is the cause of the patient's illness?
a.
Chlamydia psittaci
b. Mycoplasma pneumoniae
c. Coccidioides
immitis
d. Legionella pneumophila
e. Haemophilus influenzae
a. Chlamydia psittaci
Some respiratory diseases are best diagnosed by a gram-stained smear
and/or culture, while others are best diagnosed by specific antigen
testing or by detecting IgM antibodies. Which of the following
respiratory diseases is best diagnosed by doing a specific IgM
titer?
a. Mycoplasma pneumoniae
b. legionellosis
c.
diphtheria
d. tuberculosis
e. influenza
a. Mycoplasma pneumoniae
All of these statements are true of tuberculosis EXCEPT:
a.
infection has been greatly reduced due to mass immunization.
b.
once phagocytized, the bacteria can survive inside the phagocytic
cells.
c. it is transmitted by contact with infected
humans.
d. TB bacteria can survive for months on
sputum-contaminated materials.
e. extremely dangerous multiple
drug-resistant strains have emerged
a. infection has been greatly reduced due to mass immunization.
All of these descriptions pertain to Mycoplasmal pneumonia EXCEPT
that __________.
a. it is usually a life-threatening illness in
adolescence
b. the etiologic agent has a “fried-egg” appearance
on agar plates
c. it also called walking pneumonia
d. it
cannot be treated with penicillin
e. symptoms include a low-grade
fever and cough
a. it is usually a life-threatening illness in adolescence
All of these statements are true of diphtheria EXCEPT:
a.
patients can be cured using only antibiotics.
b. it is prevented
by immunization with diphtheria toxoid.
c. symptoms include a
tough grayish membrane in the throat.
d. it is caused by a
gram-positive, non-endospore-forming rod.
b. it is prevented by immunization with diphtheria toxoid.
An 81-year-old female has a mass in her lower-left lung. Her
tuberculin skin test is negative. Microscopic examination of her lung
biopsy reveals large, ovoid cells. The patient has __________.
a.
histoplasmosis
b. tuberculosis
c. streptococcal
pneumonia
d. psittacosis
a. histoplasmosis
Which of these answers describes normal microbiota of the respiratory
system?
a. The normal microbiota does not include potentially
pathogenic microorganisms.
b. Most of the normal microbiota are
found in the lower respiratory tract.
c. The respiratory normal
microbiota include multiple types of protozoa.
d. Microbial
antagonism maintains a balance among the normal microbiota.
a. The normal microbiota does not include potentially pathogenic microorganisms.
A 35-year-old male is hospitalized for cough, fever, and shortness of
breath. He is HIV-positive. Bronchial washings reveal cysts. What is
the etiology?
a. Pneumocystis
b. Streptococcus
c.
Mycobacterium
d. Mycoplasma
a. Pneumocystis
The following sequence occurs during the initiation of tuberculosis.
What is the first step?
a. The tubercle liquefies.
b. The
tubercle ruptures.
c. Additional macrophages migrate to the lungs
in response to chemotactic factors.
d. Mycobacteria reproduce in macrophages.
d. Mycobacteria reproduce in macrophages.
Chapter 25
Chapter 25
Which of the following does NOT pertain to dental caries?
a.
Plaque contributes to dental caries.
b. Acidic microbial products
cause erosion of tooth enamel.
c. It is a bacterial disease of
the mouth.
d. Normal mouth microbiota act as first-line
nonspecific defenses.
e. Increase in dietary sugar causes
increased risk for tooth decay.
d. Normal mouth microbiota act as first-line nonspecific defenses.
Which of the following does NOT pertain to Streptococcus
mutans?
a. It is a Gram-positive coccus.
b. It is the major
causative agent of dental caries.
c. Cells lyse on contact with
fluoride.
d. It is capable of fermenting sugars.
e. It
produces acidic metabolic byproducts
c. Cells lyse on contact with fluoride.
You see flagellated cells in a microscopic examination of feces from
a patient with diarrhea. You conclude that the etiology
is__________.
a. Cyclospora
b. Giardia
c.
Cryptosporidium
d. Entamoeba
e. Taenia
b. Giardia
Which of the following does NOT pertain to Staphylococcus aureus,
which causes food poisoning?
a. It is resistant to high osmotic
pressure.
b. Its growth can be prevented by refrigeration of
foods.
c. It is resistant to drying and radiation.
d. It is
transmitted by contaminated drinking water.
e. It produces enterotoxins.
d. It is transmitted by contaminated drinking water.
Bacillary dysentery __________.
a. causes “rice water
stools”
b. occurs after ingestion of bacterial toxins present in
contaminated foods
c. does not respond to antibiotic
therapy
d. is caused by bacteria that are part of the normal
enteric microbiota
e. is caused by members of the Shigella genus
e. is caused by members of the Shigella genus
Beef is checked for cysticerci to prevent transmission of
__________.
a. Enterobius vermicularis
b. Taenia
saginata
c. Echinococcus granulosus
d. Salmonella
enterica
e. Cryptosporidium parvum
b. Taenia saginata
Staphylococcal food poisoning is most likely to result from
__________.
a. consumption of staphylococcal enterotoxin in
potato salad that has been left at room temperature
b.
consumption of staphylococcal enterotoxin in improperly canned
vegetables
c. consumption of Staphylococcus aureus spores in a
Caesar salad
d. consumption of Staphylococcus aureus cells in
contaminated deli meats
e. consumption of fresh vegetables that
were contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus cells
a. consumption of staphylococcal enterotoxin in potato salad that has been
Which of the following is NOT characteristic of mumps?
a. It
commonly infects salivary glands.
b. Though rare, it may cause
sterility in males.
c. An effective attenuated vaccine (MMR) is
available.
d. It is spread via the fecal-oral route.
e.
Complications include meningitis, inflammation of the ovaries, and pancreatitis
d. It is spread via the fecal-oral route.
Which of the following is NOT true of salmonellosis?
a. It is
transmitted via contaminated poultry, eggs, and other foods.
b.
An estimated 2 to 4 million cases occur in the United States per
year.
c. Antibiotic therapy is required for all patients.
d.
The bacteria invade intestinal mucosa and can readily multiply in
macrophages.
e. Pet reptiles, including turtles and iguanas, are
frequently carriers.
c. Antibiotic therapy is required for all patients.
All of the following cause diarrhea EXCEPT __________.
a.
Shigella spp.
b. Salmonella enterica
c. Giardia
lamblia
d. Yersinia enterocolitica
e. Enterobius vermicularis
e. Enterobius vermicularis
Which of the following can be prevented by cooking food?
a.
tapeworms
b. E. coli hemorrhagic colitis
c.
salmonellosis
d. trichinosis
e. All of the listed choices
can be prevented by cooking food.
e. All of the listed choices can be prevented by cooking food.
Which of the following is NOT true of typhoid fever?
a. It is
caused by Salmonella typhi.
b. Most cases reported in the United
States are acquired during foreign travel.
c. Fluid and
electrolyte replacement are the primary treatments.
d. Recovered
patients may become chronic carriers.
e. Humans are the only
source of infection.
c. Fluid and electrolyte replacement are the primary treatments.
The majority of traveler's diarrhea cases are caused by
__________.
a. Yersinia enterocolitica
b. Escherichia
coli
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Vibrio vulnificus
e.
Bacillus cereus
b. Escherichia coli
Which of the following does NOT pertain to E. coli?
a. All
pathogenic strains invade mucosal cells and cause lesions.
b.
Some strains are normal microbiota of human intestines.
c.
Certain strains have a plasmid for enterotoxin production.
d.
Presence in a water supply indicates fecal contamination.
e. E.
coli O157:H7 acquired a toxin gene from Shigella.
a. All pathogenic strains invade mucosal cells and cause lesions.
Which answer is true of hepatitis A but NOT hepatitis B?
a.
causes liver inflammation
b. available vaccine
c.
fecal-oral; spread via water and food
d. chronic carriers and
blood transmission
e. leads to increased risk of liver cancer
c. fecal-oral; spread via water and food
Which of the following pairs is NOT a correct match?
a.
hepatitis A; chronic form of hepatitis
b. hepatitis B; chronic
infections increase risk of liver cancer
c. hepatitis C;
transmitted via blood transfusions
d. hepatitis D; can cause
disease only as a co-infection with hepatitis B
e. hepatitis E;
outbreaks in Asia and Africa associated with contaminated water
a. hepatitis A; chronic form of hepatitis
An epidemiologist is involved in a hepatitis outbreak in a community.
She traces the source of all cases to food served in a local
restaurant. What health recommendations should be made to customers
who ate at the restaurant?
a. Customers should be offered passive
immunization with immune globulin.
b. Customers should be offered
the inactivated hepatitis A vaccine.
c. Customers should be
treated with lamivudine.
d. Customers should be treated with a
broad-spectrum antibiotic.
e. Customers should be treated with interferon
a. Customers should be offered passive immunization with immune globulin.
An open cut on a dental hygienist's hand is exposed to blood from a
patient's mouth. All of the following are potentially bloodborne
pathogens to which she may have been exposed EXCEPT
__________.
a. hepatitis A
b. hepatitis B
c. hepatitis
C
d. hepatitis D
e. HIV
a. hepatitis A
Some gastrointestinal diseases are diagnosed using a culture, others
by direct antigen detection methods, and still others by measuring a
specific IgM titer. Which of the following diseases is detected by
doing an IgM titer?
a. hepatitis A
b.
cryptosporidiosis
c. staphylococcal enterotoxicosis
d.
Helicobacter peptic ulcer disease
e. enterohemorrhagic E. coli infection
a. hepatitis A
Diarrhea caused by Clostridium difficile __________.
a. is
transmitted by human carriers
b. is treated with oral rehydration
therapy
c. is commonly known as traveler's diarrhea
d. can
result in life-threatening inflammation of the colon
e. can cause
stomach ulcers
d. can result in life-threatening inflammation of the colon
Chapter 26
Chapter 26
Which of the following pairs is NOT a correct match?
a. dysuria;
painful urination
b. cystitis; inflammation of urethra
c.
glomerulonephritis; inflammation of kidney glomerular
capillaries
d. pyelonephritis; inflammation of kidneys
e.
prostatitis; inflammation of prostate
b. cystitis; inflammation of urethra
Which of the following statements does NOT pertain to urinary tract
infections (UTIs)?
a. Urethral infections easily spread to the
bladder.
b. They typically begin in kidneys and descend to the
bladder and urethra.
c. Incomplete or infrequent emptying of the
bladder increases risk of infection.
d. An enlarged prostate
gland increases the incidence of infection.
e. The shorter
urethra in females increases the risk of cystitis.
b. They typically begin in kidneys and descend to the bladder and urethra.
Which microorganism is responsible for approximately 75% of all UTIs
and half of the nosocomial infections of the urinary tract?
a.
Escherichia coli
b. Candida albicans
c. Staphylococcus
epidermidis
d. Streptococcus faecalis
e. Trichomonas vaginalis
a. Escherichia coli
A 22-year-old female college student visits the campus health center,
complaining of low pelvic pain, dysuria, and hematuria. A clean-catch
urine specimen is collected and upon culture, it grows more than
100,000 colony-forming units per millimeter of a catalase-positive,
coagulase-negative, gram-positive cocci. What is the most likely
identification of this etiologic agent?
a. Staphylococcus
saprophyticus
b. Streptococcus pyogenes
c. Streptococcus
faecalis
d. Candida albicans
e. Staphylococcus aureus
a. Staphylococcus saprophyticus
Non-gonococcal urethritis is commonly caused by __________.
a.
Chlamydia trachomatis
b. Escherichia coli
c. Streptococcus
faecalis
d. Staphylococcus saprophyticus
e. Trichomonas vaginalis
a. Chlamydia trachomatis
Which of the following does NOT pertain to leptospirosis?
a. It
is caused by a spirochete.
b. It is a zoonotic disease.
c.
Penicillin A is the preferred drug for treatment.
d. It has an
incubation period of 1 to 2 weeks, with sudden onset of headaches,
chills, and fever.
e. It is transmitted via contact with urine
and urine-contaminated water or soil.
c. Penicillin A is the preferred drug for treatment.
Which of the following does NOT pertain to vaginitis?
a.
increased frequency in menopause patients
b. increased frequency
in pregnant patients
c. always sexually transmitted
d.
diabetes mellitus and use of contraceptive pills increase risk
e.
usually caused by opportunistic microbes
c. always sexually transmitted
All of the following are potentially predisposing conditions for
vaginitis EXCEPT __________.
a. increased sugar concentration in
the vagina
b. a vaginal pH of 4.5 or lower
c. treatment with
broad-spectrum antibiotics
d. estrogen imbalance
e. decrease
in lactobacilli population
b. a vaginal pH of 4.5 or lower
A clinical microbiologist detects clue cells from a vaginal swab of a
patient. These cells are diagnostic of infection associated with
__________.
a. Staphylococcus aureus
b. Trichomonas
vaginalis
c. Gardnerella vaginalis
d. Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
e. Chlamydia trachomatis
c. Gardnerella vaginalis
A 23-year-old woman comes to the emergency room complaining of low
abdominal pain and a fever. As she walks into the examination room,
she is slightly stooped over and says that even walking is painful.
She indicates that intercourse has been painful for the past week and
evidence of purulent vaginal discharge is noted during a pelvic exam.
What is the most likely diagnosis?
a. bacterial vaginosis
b.
HPV infection
c. syphilis
d. pyelonephritis
e. pelvic
inflammatory disease
e. pelvic inflammatory disease
Which of the following does NOT correctly represent a stage of
syphilis?
a. latent stage: no symptoms but can persist for
life
b. incubation: 3- to 5-day incubation period
c. primary
stage: chancre at initial site
d. secondary stage: skin lesions
on palm and any surface area of the body
e. tertiary stage:
cardiovascular and neurological damage
b. incubation: 3- to 5-day incubation period
Which of these statements about gonorrhea is true?
a. Most
isolates of Neisseria gonorrhoeae are susceptible to
penicillin.
b. Infections with Neisseria gonorrhoeae give rise to
long-lasting immunity.
c. Infection with Neisseria gonorrhoeae is
associated with the development of cervical cancer.
d. Most women
infected with Neisseria gonorrhoeae experience headaches and
nausea.
e. Neisseria gonorrhoeae can disseminate from the genital
area to the joints, causing arthritis.
e. Neisseria gonorrhoeae can disseminate from the genital area to the joints, causing arthritis.
A patient has an STI characterized by sporadically recurring,
painful, fluid-filled blisters in the genital area. A Gram stain and
bacterial culture indicate the presence of normal bacterial
microbiota. What is the most likely etiologic agent?
a. Chlamydia
trachomatis
b. Neisseria gonorrhoeae
c. human papilloma
virus (HPV)
d. herpes simplex (HSV)
e. Treponema pallidum
d. herpes simplex (HSV)
Which of the following statements does NOT pertain to genital
warts?
a. They can cause irritation and intense itching.
b.
They are caused by a disease of the tropics that is uncommon in the
United States.
c. They are caused by papillomaviruses.
d.
They are associated with increased risk of cervical carcinoma.
e.
They are sexually transmitted.
. They are caused by a disease of the tropics that is uncommon in the United States.
All of the following methods are used for diagnosis of syphilis
EXCEPT __________.
a. darkfield microscopy
b. rapid plasmid
reagin (RPR) test
c. VDRL test
d. Gram staining
e.
fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption (FTA-ABS) test
d. Gram staining
Which of the following is NOT a disease of the reproductive
system?
a. syphilis
b. gonorrhea
c. cystitis
d.
genital herpes
e. candidiasis
e. candidiasis
A mother infected with gonorrhea has transmitted the disease to her
infant as he passed through the birth canal. This infection in the
infant is called __________.
a. gonorrheal endocarditis
b.
gonorrheal meningitis
c. pharyngeal gonorrhea
d. gonorrheal
arthritis
e. ophthalmia neonatorum
e. ophthalmia neonatorum
Which of the following statements is NOT true of pelvic inflammatory
disease?
a. Barrier contraceptives and spermicide use may prevent
infection.
b. The most common causative agents are Neisseria
gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis.
c. It may involve
infection of the uterus, cervix, uterine tubes, or ovaries.
d. It
may result in infertility.
e. Most infections are resolved
without treatment.
e. Most infections are resolved without treatment.
A 20-year-old male reports to an STI clinic with symptoms of painful
urination. A Gram stain of urethral exudate reveals gram-negative
diplococci inside leukocytes. What is the causative agent of the
patient's symptoms?
a. Neisseria gonorrhoeae
b. Candida
albicans
c. Escherichia coli
d. Treponema pallidum
e.
Chlamydia trachomatis
a. Neisseria gonorrhoeae
All of the following are exclusively sexually transmitted infections
(STIs) EXCEPT __________.
a. nongonococcal urethritis
b.
leptospirosis
c. syphilis
d. chancroid
e. gonorrhea
b. leptospirosis