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Microorganism Test Review

Microorganism Test Review. By Ken Pitts. Bacteria were the first. To be eukaryotic organisms organisms to appear in the fossil record To have mitochondria To have chloroplasts. Prokaryotes are represented by. Humans and dogs Protists and Fungi Reptiles and amphibians Bacteria and Archea.

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Microorganism Test Review

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  1. Microorganism Test Review ByKen Pitts

  2. Bacteria were the first • To be eukaryotic organisms • organisms to appear in the fossil record • To have mitochondria • To have chloroplasts

  3. Prokaryotes are represented by • Humans and dogs • Protists and Fungi • Reptiles and amphibians • Bacteria and Archea

  4. Gram staining, methods of obtaining energy, & type of cell walls are ways to • Classify bacteria • Classify viruses • Classify protists • Tell if a virus is a bacteria

  5. Organism # 1 is definitely • Spirilla bacteria • Bacilli bacteria • Cocci bacteria • Influenza

  6. Organism # 2 is definitely • Spirilla bacteria • Bacilli bacteria • Cocci bacteria • Influenza

  7. Organism # 3 is definitely • Spirilla bacteria • Bacilli bacteria • Cocci bacteria • Influenza

  8. If organism # 2 were in a long chain, it would be called • staphylobacillus • streptobacillus • diplobacillus • bacillus

  9. If organism # 1 were in a long chain of pink bacteria, it would be called • Gram positive streptococcus • Gram negative streptococcus • Gram negative staphylococcus • Gram positive staphylococcus

  10. Prokaryotes • Are often multicellular • Lack a cell membrane • Always have mitochondria • Lack a nucleus and membrane bound organelles

  11. A single chromosome is contain in the cytoplasm • of protists • of bacteria • of animals • of plants

  12. Prokaryotes: Eukaryotes:: • Large : Small • Complex : Simple • Mitosis: Binary Fission • Circular chromosomes: Linear Chromosomes

  13. Prokaryotes: Eukaryotes:: • Large : Small • Simple : Complex • Mitosis: Binary Fission • Linear chromosomes: Circular Chromosomes

  14. Prokaryotes: Eukaryotes:: • Small: Large • Complex : Simple • Mitosis: Binary Fission • Linear Chromosomes : Circular chromosomes

  15. Prokaryotes: Eukaryotes:: • Nuclei: Nuclear area • Ribosomes: Ribosomes • Mitosis: Binary Fission • Linear Chromosomes : Circular chromosomes

  16. Cell nuclei, multiple chromosomes, and membrane bound organelles are • Not found it animals • Found in eukaryotes but not prokaryotes • Not found in plants • Found in bacteria but not viruses

  17. A cell wall and a cell membrane are • Not found around plant cells • Found surrounding animal cells • Found around human cells • Found around bacterial cells

  18. Bacteria and eukaryotes have • Endoplasmic reticulum • Mitochondria • Nuclei • DNA

  19. Harsh environmental conditions can be survived by bacterial • flagella • cilia • cell walls • endospores

  20. Bacterial flagella can be used to • Make them transparent • Create movement • Make them smell better • Resist to drying

  21. Harsh environmental conditions can be survived by bacterial • flagella • cilia • cell walls • endospores

  22. Which of the following would be the most unsuitable for bacterial growth? • 35 degrees C • 15 degrees C • 100 degrees C • 110 degrees C

  23. Conjugation can be used by bacteria to • Transfer new genetic material between them • Create a sperm or an egg cell • Stimulate the cells to divide by mitosis • Feed each other nutrients the other one doesn’t have

  24. Organisms that are capable of harming other living organisms are • Heterotrophs • Autotrophs • Decomposers • Pathogens

  25. Cell wall production in bacteria can be stopped by • Anti-inflammatories • Anti-depressants • Antibiotics • Anti-cell wall nuking devices loaded onto tanks, aircraft, and satellites

  26. Viruses cannot reproduce by themselves, are not made up of cells, and cannot carry out metabolism. In other words, • They are not very good at a party • They are eukaryotes • They are prokaryotes • They are not living

  27. Viruses are active within living cells, therefore they • Are living • Are studied in biology • Are eukaryotic • Are always prokaryotic

  28. A protein coat surrounds the RNA or DNA of • A bacteria • A prokaryote • A eukaryote • A virus

  29. The viral protein coat surrounding its nucleic acid is the • Prophage • Capsule • Capsid • Cell wall

  30. Cytoplasm, ribosomes, and mitochondria are not found in • Viruses • Bacteria • Prokaryotes • Animal cells • Plant cells

  31. Scientist began studying viruses because • They were curious • They were the smallest form of life on earth • They had cool geometric shapes • They caused disease

  32. Retroviruses use reverse transcriptase because they inject • DNA that needs transcribed to RNA • RNA that needs transcribed to DNA • RNA that needs translated to RNA • DNA that kicks the cell backwards

  33. A protein coat surrounding a nucleic acid core is a • Typical cell set up • Typical bacteria set up • Typical eukaryotic set up • Typical virus set up

  34. 3 is likely to be protein • 3 is likely to be a nucleus • 3 is likely to be a nucleic acid • 3 is likely to be left outside the cell after viral injection

  35. 1 is likely to be protein • 1 is likely to be a nucleus • 1 is likely to be a nucleic acid • 1 is likely to be inside the cell after viral injection

  36. 4 is likely to be protein • 4 is likely to be a RNA • 4 is likely to be a DNA • 4 is likely to be a nucleus

  37. 5 is likely to be protein • 5 is likely to be a cell membrane • 5 is likely to be a DNA • 5 is likely to be a cell wall

  38. 2 is likely to be protein • 2 is likely to be a cell membrane • 2 is likely to be a DNA • 2 is likely to be a cell wall

  39. Viruses • Are capable of metabolism • Are cellular • Have nuclei and organelles • Reproduce only in living cells

  40. Host cells in animals have specific receptors for protein on viruses, so they • Can be infected by all animal viruses • Can be infected only by viruses specific to them • Can be infected by plant and bacteriophage viruses • Cannot be infected by any viruses

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