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Microbiology Final Exam Medical Bacteriology 12-2007 Taxonomy/Morphology Major Divisions of Microorganisms (Cell Types): 1.) Describe the major features of Prokaryotes: 2.) Describe the major features of Eukaryotes: 3.) Describe the major features of Viruses: 1.) Within the Whittaker & Woesian classification system, there are 3 _____. Name them: 2.) Which of the domains are prokaryotic? 3.) Which are eukaryotic? 4.) Within each domain, there are 7 sublevels of classification, name them in order: 5.) Which of those should ALWAYS be underlined OR italicized? 6.) Properly write the following genus and species: ESCHERICHIA COLI 7.) Which shape are the following: cocci, bacilli, curved? 1.) What are tetrads? 2.) What are Sarcina? 3.) What are Palisades? I tried to underline whatever she had underlined, but probly missed lots… Good Luck, as always!!! ☻ ↑ = increasing/hi ↓ = decreasing/lo 1.) ~name = “pro” (before) + “karyos” (nucleus) = no nucleus ~NO nuclear membrane ~Haploid (single) circular chromosome IN cytoplasm ~Cell walls of peptidoglycan ~Replicate by binary fission ~Includes bacteria & archea ~70S ribosome ~No mitochondria 2.) > name = “eu” (true) + “karyos” (nucleus) = true nucleus >Contain membrane bound organelles >Chromosomes physically separate from cytoplasm (nucleus) >Diploid chromosome (2 chromosomes) >Replicate by mitotic division >80S ribosome >Includes fungi, parasites, & protozoans 3.) ~NOT prokaryotes (but are microorganisms) ~Acellular, often referred to as particles (can’t live w/o host) ~Genetic material either DNA or RNA (not both) ~DO NOT replicate (disassemble, make copies, reassemble) Domains – Archea, Bacteria, Eukarya Prokaryotic = Archea & Bacteria Eukaryotic = Eukarya (Duh!) Domain – Kingdom – Phylum – Class – Order – Family – Genus – species (Dumb Kings Play Chess On Funny Green Squares) 5.) Genus and species 6.) Escherichia coli or Escherichia coli *Notice 1st letter of genus capital, species all lower case 7.) Cocci = round Baccili = rods Curved = comma-shaped 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 1.) Arrangements of bacterial cells – cocci in groups of 4 2.) Cocci in groups of 8, 16, 32, etc... (I would like to know who sits n counts em?!?! ) 3.) Irregular rods that remain hinged @ one end (typical of corynebacteria) Appendages: 1.) There are 4 types of flagella, describe each: Monotrichous, Amphitrichous, Lophotrichous, Peritrichous 2.) What is the difference between flagella and endoflagella? 3.) Which type can go in “reverse” 4.) What are Fimbirae? 5.) What are Pili? 6.) T or F? The Pili are longer and less numerous than the fimbirae. 7.) Pili are found almost exlusively in _____ bacteria. 1.) Monotrichous = single, polar flagellum Amphitrichous = flagella @ BOTH ends Lophotrichous = multiple, polar flagella (@ one end) Peritrichous = multiple flagella over entire surface of bacterial cell 2.) Endoflagella are on INSIDE of the cell and they provide movement in spirochetes. (Flagella are on outer surface of cell and provide locomotion) 3.) Endoflagella 4.) Used for Attachment – often compared to bristles (short & numerous) 5.) Sex pilus – used for exchange of genetic information via process called conjugation (rigid and tubular/hollow) 6.) True! 7.) Gram-NEGATIVE bacteria Cell Envelope (outer, protective “wrapping”): 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) There are 2 types of cell envelopes, name them: Which maintains cell shape? Which is mainly for adherence? Which protects from osmotic pressure? T or F? ALL bacteria contain a Capsule/Glycolax? T or F? ALL bacteria contain a Cell Wall? Which has 2 types, Gram-positive & Gramnegative? Gram (+) vs. Gram (-): tell whether each cell type have the below feature… *KNOW* 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) Capsule Outer Membrane LPS - lipopolysaccaride (endotoxin) Teichoic Acid Periplasmic Space Peptidoglycan – they both have it, but which type has a “thick” (20-80nm) peptidoglycan layer and which type has a “thin” (10nm) one? 7.) T or F? LPS is exotoxic b/c it is a potent stimulator of the immune system. Definitions of above features: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) What is an Outer Membrane? Describe the LPS (lipopolysaccaride): Describe Teichoic Acid & Lipoteichoic Acid: Where is the periplasmic space? What is the peptidoglycan? What is the Cytoplasmic/Cell membrane? Which bacteria type(s) have it? 7.) Which of the above is known as the inner membrane in gram negative bacteria? 1.) Capsule/Glycolax (outer layer of lg. polymers, usually polysaccarides) & Cell Wall 2.) Cell Wall 3.) Capsule/Glycolax 4.) Cell Wall 5.) False! Some DO NOT have one. 6.) True!! 7.) Cell Walls 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) Some (+) & (-) have a capsule Gram (-) only Gram (-) only Gram (+) only Gram (-) only “Thick” = gram (+) “Thin” = gram (-) 7.) False! It is endotoxic b/c it is a potent stimulator of the immune system (she might try to trick us w/ this on the exam…) 1.) Bi-layer membrane external to peptidoglycan. Major proteins are porins, which allow passage of hydrophilic molecules in & out of cell [gm(-) only] 2.) On external side of outer membrane of gm(-). Composed of Lipid A (toxic), Core polysaccharide, O antigen (antigenic) 3.) Teichoic = Embedded in peptidoglycan & is toxic Lipoteichoic = is anchored in the cytoplasmic membrane Both ONLY in gm(+) 4.) Area between cytoplasmic membrane & outer membrane of gm(-) bacteria. Thin layer of peptidoglycan in this space. 5.) Meshwork of polysaccarides, rigid. Present in BOTH gm(-)&(+), but much thicker in gm(+) 6.) Lipid bilayer (phospholipids), selectively permeable functions in: electron transport, nutrient uptake, energy production, nutrient & waste transport. 7.) Cytoplasmic/Cell Membrane (b/c they have additional membrane) Cytoplasmic Structures: 1.) What is a Nucleoid? 2.) What are Plasmids? 3.) What are 3 things that Plasmids can ‘do’ that makes them so special? (why so advantageous) 4.) What is the main function of ribosomes? 5.) How do bacterial (prokaryotic) ribosomes differ from ours (eukaryotic)? 6.) ____ are a target for antibiotics b/c of their unique structure compared to ours. 7.) What are Endospores? 8.) Give 2 examples of medically important endospores: 1.) Contains chromosome for a bacteria [remember, bacteria (prokaryotes) have NO nuclear membrane] 2.) Small pieces of double-stranded DNA (usually xtrachromosomal, but can insert into chromosome) 3.) ~Can replicate independently of the chromosome ~Can be transferred from one bacteria to another ~Can be passed to offspring 4.) Provide platform for protein synthesis 5.) Bacterial are smaller (70S) that ours (80S). 6.) Ribosomes 7.) Dormant, non-vegetative form of certain gm(+) bacteria. Have complete genetic info. Extremely resistance to harsh extremes (heat, cold, desiccation, pH, chemicals). Germinate to become vegetative when conditions favorable. 8.) Bacillus (Anthrax) & Clostridium Prokaryote, Eukaryote, Virus Summary: *KNOW* 1.) Which contain organelles? 2.) Which contain no nuclear membrane? 3.) Which have a haploid chromosome? 4.) Which have a diploid chromosome? 5.) Which are often referred to as “particles”? Why? 6.) Which have 70S ribosomes? 7.) Which have 80S ribosomes? 8.) Which can contain either DNA or RNA as their genetic material? Can they contain both? 9.) Fungi are in which category? 10.) Bacteria are in which category? 11.) Which cannot multiply without a host? 1.) Eukaryotes 2.) Prokaryotes (b/c they have no nucleus) 3.) Prokaryotes 4.) Eukaryotes 5.) Viruses (b/c acellular & cannot live w/o host) 6.) Prokaryotes 7.) Eukaryotes 8.) Viruses, No! can’t have both!! 9.) Eukaryotes (also includes parasites & protozoans) 10.) Prokaryotes (also includes archea) 11.) Viruses Bacterial Descriptions Summary: *KNOW* 1.) Lipid A and O antigen are part of what? Which one is toxic and which is antigenic? 2.) What is also known as endotoxin? Why? 3.) Name 3 features seen in BOTH gm(-)&(+): 4.) Name the features unique to gm(-) bacteria: 5.) Name those unique to gm(+) bacteria: 6.) The Peptidoglycan layer is found within what? 7.) The ______ is also called the inner membrane in gram __ bacteria. 8.) Endospores can only be gram ___ bacteria. 9.) ____ contains the chromosomes in a bacterium. 10.) ____ contains the chromosomes in a eukaryote. 1.) Part of LPS on outer membrane of gm(-) bacteria Lipid A = toxic ; O antigen = antigenic 2.) LPS (b/c potent stimulator of immune system) 3.) Capsule, Peptidoglycan, and Cytoplasmic/Cell Membrane 4.) Outer Membrane, LPS, and Periplasmic Space 5.) Teichoic Acid & Lipoteichoic Acid 6.) Periplasmic space 7.) Cytoplasmic/Cell Membrane ; negative 8.) Gram Positive!!! 9.) Nucleoid 10.) Nucleus *Do not mix them up!!! Cultivation 1.) Each species has a temperature range in which it grows best, which type include human & animal pathogens b/c they like temps around 20º-40ºC? 2.) Which type causes food to spoil in your fridge b/c they like temps around 10º-20ºC? 3.) Response to O2 greatly depends on the presence or absence of which enzymes? *KNOW* 4.) Name the species which require O2 for growth: 5.) Name the species which O2 is toxic: 6.) Which species can switch between aerobic & anaerobic types of metabolism? (best w/ aerobic, however) 7.) Which type uses strictly Anaerobic metabolism, & doesn’t care if O2 present or not (insensitive to O2)? 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) Mesophiles *KNOW* Psychrophiles *should probly know me too* Superoxide dismutase & Catalase Obligate Aerobes (need O2 as final e- acceptor) (has both enzymes) 5.) Obligate Anaerobes (live by anaerobic respiration or fermentation) note: some can tolerate O2, but never use it for growth 6.) Facultative Anaerobes (has both enzymes) 7.) Aerotolerant Anerobobes Define the following: 1.) Acidophiles 2.) Give an example of an Acidophile: 3.) Neutrophiles 4.) Alkaliphiles 5.) Human pathogens fall in which category above? 6.) Halophiles 7.) Generation time 8.) List 4 things that can affect generation time: 1.) Prokaryotes grow by _______. 2.) Describe Binary Fission: 3.) The growth of bacteria is broken up into four phases, name and describe each: 4.) T or F? After period of time in the death phase, the population eventually reaches zero and is extinct. Welcome to the “Media” Center: (focus on their unique characteristics!) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) Describe Nutrient (general purpose) media: Describe Selective media: Describe Differential media Describe Selective and Differential media: Give an example of a Selective & Differential media. 6.) Describe Enrichment: Measuring Growth: 1.) Describe Optical Density: 2.) Describe Colony Forming Units (CFU’s): 3.) Which equates to the number of living cells in the culture? 4.) Which utilizes light refraction? 5.) Which one counts both live and dead cells? 6.) Which involves liquid media? 7.) Which involves solid media? 8.) ___ is the most important step in I.D of a pathogen. 9.) List 3 things to consider when collecting specimen: “Acid-loving” – prefer pH around 2-3.5 Thiobacillus (requires low pH for growth) “Neutral-loving” – prefer pH around 6-8 “Basic-loving” – prefer pH around 8.5-10.5 Neutrophiles (b/c the human body pH is around 7 or neutral) 6.) “Salt-loving” – require some NaCl for growth 7.) The time it takes for a population to double in number. (vary from 20 minutes to weeks) 8.) ~Availability of nutrients ~Physical environment (overcrowding) ~Build up of waste products ~Environmental factors (O2, temp, pH, salt, etc…) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 1.) Binary Fission (1 2 4 8 16 32…) 2.) The circular DNA molecule is replicated; then the cell splits into 2 identical daughter cells (each containing complete copy of original DNA). 3.) Lag Phase: the adjustment period (occurs while they acclimate to their new environment). Cells are Metabolically active, but growth is slow. Log Phase: Exponential growth. Nutrients are plentiful & wastes are minimal. Stationary Phase: Growth slows & levels off (# of new cells = # of dying cells) Death Phase: More cells dying than dividing. Dividing cells mostly recycling & using products from dead cells. 4.) False! Doesn’t go to zero b/c constant recycling keeping the population alive 1.) Provides enough nutrients for most bacteria to grow. Does NOT enhance or suppress growth. 2.) Inhibits growth of certain bacteria. Done by addition of certain compounds. 3.) Distinguishes between species of bacteria (does NOT inhibit growth). Components added that cause changes in medium or appearance of colonies that have grown. 4.) Selective in that it inhibits growth of certain types of bacteria & Differential b/c it includes components that allow bacterial colonies to be distinguished. 5.) MacConkey Agar – inhibits growth of gm(+) while distinguishing between lactose-fermenting & non-lactosefermenting gm(-) colonies that have grown. 6.) Contains additives that enhance growth of certain types of bacteria. Useful when bacteria present in relatively small #’s 1.) Measures the turbidity (liquid becomes cloudy) 2.) Count the number of individual colonies present on solid agar 3.) CFU’s 4.) Optical Density 5.) Optical Density (cannot distinguish between live & dead cells in the liquid turbidity) 6.) Optical Density 7.) CFU’s 8.) Specimen Collection (if you screw up here, everything else is gonna be messed up!) 9.) ~must be from actual site of infection ~contamination by human cells/normal flora @ minimum ~collect any specimen before admin. of therapy Cultivation Summary: *KNOW* 1.) Which temperature class includes human & animal pathogens? (prefer 20º- 40ºC) 2.) Tell what “relationship” each has with O2: (a)Obligate Aerobes (b)Obligate Anaerobes (c)Facultative Aerobes (d)Aerotolerant Aerobes 3.) In this growth phase, there is exponential growth: 4.) In this growth phase, growth is slow b/c the cells are getting used to a new environment: 5.) In this phase, more cells are dying than dividing: 6.) In this phase, # of dividing cells = # of dying cells: 7.) Which media type can enhance growth? 8.) Which media type can inhibit growth? 9.) T or F? Bacterial growth measured by population. 1.) Mesophiles (“they love ME”) 2.) (a) Requires O2 b/c uses O2 as final e- acceptor (b) O2 is toxic for them (c) Can switch between both aerobic and anaerobic (d) Strictly Anaerobic metabolism, but doesn’t matter if O2 is present. 3.) Log Phase 4.) Lag Phase 5.) Death Phase 6.) Stationary Phase 7.) Enrichment (can enhance certain bacteria types) 8.) Selective (can inhibit certain bacteria types) 9.) True! (NOT individual cells) Define Metabolism. Which metabolism types generate energy? Which type requires energy? Which metabolism type(s) uses free O2 as the final electron acceptor? *KNOW* 5.) Which type(s) uses oxygen-containing salts as the final electron acceptor? *KNOW* 6.) Which is catabolism is the absence of O2? 1.) Regulation of catabolism & anabolism to maintain stability of cell 2.) Catabolism, Aerobic Respiration (24 ATP), Anaerobic Respiration (22 ATP), Fermentation (0 ATP, but uses partial oxidation of metabolites to produce energy), and Respiratory Chain/Electron Transport Chain. 3.) Anabolism (“building up”) 4.) Aerobic Respiration (produces much more ATP) 5.) Anaerobic Respiration 6.) Fermentation Carbohydrate Metabolism: 1.) Bacteria oxidize ____ as their main energy source. 2.) What is glycolysis? 3.) T or F? Glycolysis requires oxygen. 4.) How do we make energy after glycolysis produces 2 pyruvic acid molecules? 5.) What is the net gain from each pyruvic acid molecule? This is through what? 6.) What is the major generator of energy? 7.) T or F? Like glycolysis & TCA, the Respiratory Chain uses substrate-level phosphorylation. 8.) Fermentation occurs under anaerobic conditions utilizing ___ as the final electron acceptor. 1.) Carbohydrates (glucose most common, but many other substrates can be used) 2.) Conversion of glucose 2 pyruvic acid molecules = net gain of 2 ATP through substrate-level phosphorylation. 3.) False! Does not require it! 4.) They enter the TCA (tricarboxylic acid) cycle! 5.) 1 ATP, 3CO2 through Substrate-level phosphorylation (just like glycolysis) 6.) The Electron Transport Chain or Respiratory Chain (“processing mill” for e-‘s and H atoms) 7.) FALSE! It uses oxidative phosphorylation. 8.) Organic molecules (methanol, lactic acid) Metabolism Summary: *KNOW* 1.) Glycolysis nets 2 ATP’s via ______. 2.) T or F? Oxygen is the final electron acceptor for anaerobic respiration. 3.) T or F? Oxygen is the final electron acceptor for aerobic respiration. 4.) T or F? Aerobic respiration produces more ATP than Anaerobic & Fermentation combined. 5.) ______ process uses oxidative phosphorylation. 6.) T or F? Oxygen in the final electron acceptor during fermentation. 7.) T or F? Fermentation produces ATP. LAST EMAILED HERE!!! 1.) substrate-level phosphorylation (when it converts glucose into 2 molecules of pyruvic acid) 2.) FALSE!! Oxygen-containing salts are the final eacceptor 3.) True!! 4.) True!! (anaerobic produces way less ATP than aerobic and fermentation produces no ATP) 5.) Respiratory Chain/Electron Transport Chain 6.) False!! – it is an anaerobic process which uses organic molecules as final e- acceptor. 7.) False!! It regenerates NAD+ for use in glycolysis so more ATP can be generated Metabolism - we learned all of this in biochem so I am gonna keep it short: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) Bacterial Genetics: Define/Describe the following: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) Chromosome/Genome Gene Codon Cistron Operon Wild-type T or F? A mutation is any change in the genotype that results in a changed phenotype. 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) When the genome is duplicated, it is called what? What is transcription, generally? What is translation, generally? When making proteins, the mRNA is read how? Each codon specifies what? Transcription (DNA mRNA) takes place where? Translation (mRNA protein) takes place where? There are 2 sites in the translating ribosome, name each and tell what attaches to each: 9.) The amino acids are added to the chain via a ____ bond. *KNOW* 1.) Double stranded DNA encoding the total content of organisms genetic information 2.) The fundamental unit of heredity w/in a chromosome 3.) Specific sequence of 3 nucleotides in mRNA that constitutes the genetic code for particular amino acid 4.) Region of the DNA that encodes a single polypeptide (protein) 5.) A group of 2 or more genes that are transcribed from a single promoter. Usually the genes w/in an Operon are functionally related. 6.) Starting material of a known genotype (full repertoire of organism’s genes). Any derivation from wild-type is considered a mutation. 7.) False! It is any change in the genotype [may or may not change the phenotype (observable characteristics)] 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) 9.) Replication Synthesizing RNA from the DNA template. Synthesizing proteins using the mRNA template. In groups of 3 nucleotides known as codons. A specific amino acid to be added to the growing peptide (protein) chain. In the nucleus On the ribosomes. P-site (peptide) & A-site (aminoacyl) – tRNA (w/ its matching amino acid) 1st attaches to P-site, then the amino acid is transferred to the A-site and the peptide chain now has 1 more amino acid attached. Peptide Bond Mutations: 1.) T or F? Mutations are always spontaneous. 2.) Agents that induce a mutation, such as chemicals are known as _____. 3.) Define a Substitution/Point Mutation 4.) Define an Inversion 5.) Define an Insertion 6.) Define a deletion Results of Mutations: Describe the following 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) Silent Mutation Missense Mutation Nonsense Mutation Framshift 1.) False! Sometimes mutations can be induced (example: exposure to chemicals, etc…) 2.) Mutagens 3.) 1 nucleotide replaced by another (1for1) 4.) Adjacent nucleotides change positions (switch) 5.) 1 or more nucleotides are added 6.) 1 or more nucleotides are removed 1.) Nucleotide changes, but the amino acid stays the same. (remember, in the genetic code, there is more than 1 codon per amino acid) = minor change in genotype, no change in protein function. 2.) Changes the amino acid (but does NOT create a stop codon). May or may not affect the function of the protein, depending on mutation. 3.) Creates a stop codon. May or may not affect the function of the protein (probably will hinder it) depending on where stop codon appears. 4.) Nucelotides are inserted/deleted but NOT in groups of 3 (thus alters the reading frame). Nearly always results in non-functional protein (b/c every triplet is altered downstream of the mutation). Elements of Genetic Transfer: Describe each 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) Plasmids T or F? Bacteria require plasmids for their survival Transposons T or F? Both Plasmids & Transposons are capable of self-replication. 5.) T or F? Both Plasmids & Transposons carry adaptive genetic elements (example: resistance). 6.) Bacteriophages (a.k.a phages) Mechanisms of Genetic Transfer: 1.) What is Conjugation? 2.) In order for conjugation to occur, the donor cell must have what? Describe it: 3.) There are 2 types, name & describe each: 4.) What is Transformation? 5.) When a bacteria ____ it is said to have been transformed. 6.) What is competence? *note: Hfr stands for high frequency b/c when F plasmid integrated into donor cell’s chromosome, there is higher frequency that transfer of chromosomal elements will also occur. Mechanisms of Genetic Transfer: cont… 7.) What is Transduction? 8.) In order for transduction to occur, the participating bacteria (both donor & recipient) must ______. 9.) There are 2 types of transduction, describe the 1st type, Generalized Transduction: 10.) What’s the difference between a bacteriophage and a Transducing Particle? (these are the 2 types of particles that form during Transduction) 11.) T or F? Whether a bacteriophage or Transducing particle bind to a bacterium, the bacterium is considered “infected”. 12.) Describe the 2nd type, Specialized Transduction: Mutation Summary: *KNOW* 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) 9.) Mutations always affect genotype or phenotype? ____ occurs on ribosomes. In translation, amino acids brought in by the tRNA are joined to the other amino acids by a ____ bond. If a bacterium takes up and incorporates free DNA from the environment easily, it has high _____. When this bacterium takes up and incorporates a piece of free, environment DNA it has been _____. When DNA transfer mediated by bacteriophage, it is called what? During Conjugation, does the donor or recipient cell have to contain the F plasmid in order to undergo conjugation? Which of the above transfer types require that the both the donor and recipient bacterium be of the same species? List the main differences between the 2 types of transduction: 1.) Self-replicating dsDNA molecules (can be extrachromosomal or integrated into chromosome) 2.) False! They are not required, but they sure help! They may confer specific phenotypic traits (example: antibiotic resistance, enzymes, etc…) 3.) Segments of dsDNA that can move from 1 place on a chromosome to another OR can remove itself from chromosome and integrate into plasmid. 4.) False! Transposons only have genes for self-mobilization, NOT self-replication. They can move alone, but must enter chromosome or plasmid for their genes to be expressed (replicated). 5.) True! (so they are both very advantageous) 6.) Viruses of bacteria (every known bacterium is parasitized by phages). 1.) Unidirectional transfer of DNA by direct contact between 2 cells through a pilus. 2.) F plasmid (cell termed F+) – F plasmid is extrachromosomal and only contains genetic info for synthesis & assembly of F pilus (has no other chromosomal info). 3.) F Factor Transfer – where ONLY the F plasmid is transferred to recipient cell. Hfr Transfer – where the F plasmid has been integrated into the donor chromosome. When the conjugation occurs it transfers some of the chromosomal DNA as well. 4.) Uptake & incorporation of free/”naked” DNA from the environment into genome. DNA usually from lysed bacteria. 5.) Takes up the free DNA (transformation) 6.) The ability of a bacterium to take up this free DNA from the environment (varies, but usually greatest in Log phase) 7.) 8.) DNA transfer mediated by a bacteriophage MUST be of the same species (due to specificity of Bacteriophages/viruses for their bacteria) 9.) Random fragments of disintegrating bacterial DNA from virally infected bacterial cell are accidentally packaged into some of the new phage particle. When this new phage particle infects another bacterium, it can transfer this DNA to the new bacterium’s genome. 10.) Bacteriophage contain its own DNA only (just like a virus), while Transducing Particle contains bacterial DNA only. 11.) False! NOT considered infected if Transducing Particle binds b/c this particle contains ONLY bacterial DNA (from the same species bacterium), therefore, NOT virus-like, NOT “infected”. 12.) Only occurs when bacteriophage DNA has become integrated into bacterial host cell chromosome. When the bacteriophage removes its own DNA from the bacteria, it also removes some bacterial DNA. Therefore, this bacterial DNA becomes packaged in ALL new phage particles. These transducing particles contain BOTH phage & bacterial DNA. Particle = Recombinant Phage. 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) Genotype Translation Peptide bond Competence Transformed (b/c underwent transformation) Transduction (remember, bacteriophage = virus) Donor cell (if it has it, donor cell is called F+) Transduction (due to specificity of bacteriophages) 9.) ~Generalized produces 2 particles (one w/ ONLY phage DNA, other w/ ONLY bacterial DNA), Specialized only produces 1 particle (mixed phage AND bacterial DNA) ~Generalized only some of phage particles get the bacterial DNA, Specialized ALL of the new phage particles will contain the bacterial DNA ~Generalized involves random fragments of disintegrating bacterial DNA, Specialized involves integration into an infected/host bacterium’s chromosome Normal Flora: 1.) What is normal flora? 2.) T or F? Normal flora are never pathogenic. 3.) On a cell-for-cell basis, microbes outnumber human cell __:__. 4.) T or F? Normal flora is the same for everyone. 5.) T or F? Normal flora is passed to the fetus after 18 weeks gestation. 6.) Name 3 main bacterium that colonize after birth? 7.) Do bottle-fed and breast fed infants acquire the same flora? 1.) What other factors, other than infant feeding method, contribute to colonization or alteration in normal flora? 2.) T or F? Normal flora is involved in both maintenance of health and causation of disease. 3.) Give 2 examples of how normal flora can cause disease: 4.) Give 3 examples of how they promote our good health: Normal Flora by Region: *KNOW* 1.) Normal flora of the Skin include: (4) 2.) T or F? These skin flora grow ‘best’ in the warm, moist areas of the axilla, groin, & between the toes. 3.) Normal flora of the Conjunctiva (eye) include: (2) 4.) Why is the eye more difficult to colonize than the skin? 5.) Normal flora of the Nasal Cavity include: (3) 6.) Normal flora of the Nasopharynx include: (4) Normal Flora by Region: cont… *KNOW* 1.) Normal flora of the Oropharynx include: (2) 2.) If ____ is found in the oropharynx of a child, it indicates oral sexual contact & is grounds for child abuse investigation. 3.) Normal flora of the Mouth include: (7) 4.) Normal flora of the Stomach include: (2) 5.) Normal flora of the Sm. Intestine include: (3) 6.) Normal flora of the Lg. Intestine include: (6) 7.) ____ has the largest microbial population in body. 1.) Collection of bacteria, fungi, protists, viruses, & archea found routinely in specific site of body. 2.) FALSE! Normally they are not, but under certain circumstances it can be. Also, in some people, normally pathogenic microbes are normal flora. 3.) 10:1 Ewwww!!! 4.) False! Varies by age, sex, stress, diet, genetics (Suum quique – to each his own) 5.) False! Fetus has no flora! Colonization by flora begins w/in 12 hours of parturition (birth?). 6.) Staphylococci, Streptococci, & Lactobacilli 7.) Nope, Bottle-fed = a mix of coliforms (E. coli, Klebieslla, Enterobacter, & Citrobacter species) Breast-fed = Bifidobacterium (protects from some intestinal pathogens) 1.) Teething, puberty, Menstruation, Menopause 2.) True!! 3.) ~Can be pathogenic if immunocompromised ~Can become pathogenic when introduced into new sites within the body. 4.) >Occupy attachment sites to prevent colonization by pathogenic bacteria (Colonization Resistance) >Important for stimulating host defenses >Nutritional functions (synthesize & secrete vitamins B & K) 1.) Staphyloccus epidermis & aureas, Corynebacterium, Propionibacterium 2.) True! 3.) Staphylococcus & Viridans Streptococci 4.) B/c tears contain bactericidal enzyme (lysozyme) 5.) Staphylococcus epidermis & aureas, Cornebacterium *so similar to skin flora 6.) Streptococci (*most common), Neisseria meningitidis (main carrier site for this organism), Haemophilus influenae (main carrier site…), Streptococcus pneumoniae (main carrier site…) 1.) Haemophilus influenzae, Assorted & minor species of Streptococci 2.) Neisseria gonorrhoeae 3.) Streptococcus salivarus, mutans, & sanguis, Gingival crevices are perfect for: Bacteroides, Lactobacillus, Fusobacterium, & Actinomyces 4.) Helicobacter pylori & Lactobacillus 5.) Peptostreptococcus, Prevotella, & Porphyromonas 6.) Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Escherichia, Enterococcus, Fusobacterium, Lactobacillus 7.) Colon!! (flora can be up to 30% fecal volume) Normal Flora by Region: cont… *KNOW* 1.) ____ & ____ are the most predominant, but rarely cause disease. 2.) ____ & ____ are relatively minor populations, but they are 2 of the most common causes of intraabdominal infections. 3.) Normal flora of the Urethra include: (3) 4.) Normal flora of the Vagina (infant) include: (1) 5.) Normal flora of the Vagina (children) include: (3) 6.) Normal flora of the Vagina (adults) include: (3+) 7.) Normal flora of the Vagina (post-menopause) include: Normal Flora Summary: *KNOW* 1.) What is Colonization Resistance? 2.) What is the most common normal flora in the nasopharynx? 3.) Staphylococcus is especially important, why? 4.) Where, in the human body, is Staphylococcus considered as predominant normal flora? 5.) The main carrier site for N. meningitidis, H. influenzae, and S. pneumoniae is ______. 6.) Streptococci are normal flora in what parts of the human body? 7.) Lactobacillus is normal flora in what parts of the body? Pathogenesis: 1.) T or F? Colonization is the same thing as infection. 2.) Define Colonization 3.) Define Incubation Period 4.) Define Infection 5.) Define Pathogenesis 6.) Define Pathogenicity 7.) Define Virulence 8.) Define Virulence Factor 1.) List & briefly describe the 6 steps involved in pathogenesis: (establishment of infectious disease) 2.) There can be 2 types of Encounters, Endogenous or Exogenous, describe each: 1.) Eubacterium & Bifidobacterium 2.) E. Coli & Bacteroides fragilis 3.) Lactobacillus, Non-hemolytic Streptococci, Coagulase-negative Staphylococci 4.) ↓ pH due to maternal estrogen - Lactobacillus 5.) Higher pH b/c ↓ estrogen – Corynebacterium, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus 6.) pH declines as estrogen ↑ - Lactobacillus, Gardnerella, Mycoplasma & Ureaplasma, Childhood flora still persists 7.) pH rises due to ↓ estrogen – Childhood flora become dominant & adult flora persists. 1.) The protection we get from normal flora via their ability to block attachment sites and prevent colonization by pathogenic bacteria. 2.) Streptococci 3.) b/c it is a dangerous human opportunistic pathogen 4.) Skin, Conjunctiva, Nasal Cavity (epidermis only), Urethra (coagulase-negative), Vagina (children) 5.) Nasopharynx 6.) Nasopharynx, Oropharynx, Mouth, Urethra (nonhemolytic), Vagina (children) 7.) Gingival crevices (mouth), Stomach, Lg. intestine, Urethra, and is dominant is infant & adult vagina 1.) False! Colonized = No disease yet Infected = colonization results in disease. 2.) The presence & persistence of microorganisms in/on particular site of body. 3.) Time interval between infection & appearance of 1st sign or symptom 4.) Colonization by microorganisms that results in disease. 5.) Process or mechanisms in the dev’pmnt of disease 6.) The capacity to cause disease 7.) The degree to which a pathogen can cause disease or damage, a qualitative measure of Pathogenicity, measured by # of organisms req’d to cause disease. 8.) Bacterial constituents that promote infection 1.) ~Encounter: agent & host meet ~Entry: agent enters the host ~Spread: agent spreads from the site of entry ~Multiplication: agent multiplies once on host (almost always must ↑ in # before they can cause infection) ~Damage: the agent, the host’s response to the agent, or both cause tissue damage ~Outcome: the infectious agent wins, the host wins, or they learn to coexist 2.) Endogenous Encounter = disease results from agents already present in/on body (normal flora). Exogenous Encounter = agent present within the environment. Agent acquired through air, water, food, insect bites, etc… 1.) There can also be 2 kinds of Entry, Ingress or Penetration, describe each: 2.) There are also 2 types of Spreading, Lateral Propagation or Dissemination, describe them: 3.) What 2 things affect the spread of bacteria? Factors that affect outcome: 1.) How does the Portal of Entry affect the outcome? 2.) How does the Virulence of the Organism affect the outcome of it is a True Pathogen? 3.) What if it is an Opportunistic Pathogen? 4.) How does the Condition of the Host affect the outcome? 1.) Ingress Entry = No epithelial barriers crossed (disease can result w/o entry into deeper tissue) Entry gained through inhalation or ingestion. Penetration Entry = entry into deeper tissues by crossing an epithelial barrier (some carried across by insect bite, cut, organ transplant, some on their own, especially single layer mucous membranes) 2.) Lateral Propagation = stays near site of entry, only spreads to contiguous tissues (ex: Gangrene) Dissemination = spread to distant sites. 3.) ~Anatomical Factors (ex: kids ears make them more susceptible to ear infections) ~Active Participation by Microbe (ex: flagella, enzymes to breakdown clots, etc…) 1.) If microbe enters host through a portal that does not support it, then disease does not occur. Also, some agents cause different diseases depending on where they enter. (ex: Staph. in GI causes food poisoning but in respiratory. system causes pneumonia.) 2.) Capable of causing disease even in healthy individuals (proper portal of entry still required) 3.) Only cause disease when host defenses are compromised, OR the microbe gained access to tissues in body where doesn’t normally reside. 4.) Many factors such as age (weak immune system in the very old & young), immunodeficiencies, and overall health affect hosts ability to defend against infection. 1.) Disease severity depends on both the ____ & the _____. *KNOW* 2.) Virulence is determined by what 3 things? 3.) Virulence is measured by what 2 things? *KNOW* 4.) What is found within the “Pathogenicity Island” and what is it? 1.) Virulence of the organism ; susceptibility of host 2.) ~Infectivity (ability to overcome host defenses) ~Invasiveness (ability to multiply & spread) ~Pathogenic potential (ability to damage host) 3.) Infectious Dose (ID50) – the number of organisms required to cause infection in 50% of experimentally infected animals or cultured cells. Lethal Dose (LD50) – the number of organisms required to kill 50% of experimentally infected animals of cultured cells. 4.) Chromosomal virulence genes (genes that encode for features to help them evade host defenses) may be found there. Is a discrete region of the genome. 1.) T or F? All virulence genes are found within the “Pathogenicity Island” 2.) Define Tropism. 3.) There are 3 virulence factors that promote colonization & invasion. Name & describe each: 1.) False! They may be, but they may also be throughout the genome or on a plasmid or phage. 2.) Preference for a certain tissue over another 3.) ADHERENCE – bacteria use fimbriae & pili to bind to specific host cell receptor. This determines Tropism & species specificity (ex: pathogenic to humans but not dogs) Capsules also used for adherence but don’t req. specific receptors. May have other adhesins that are not fimbriae & pili. INVASION – described later MOTILITY – can use both flagellar & nonflagellar means to move (ex: E. coli use flagella) 1.) There are 2 ways (Active or Passive) in which a bacteria can invade a host, describe both: 2.) Which of the Invasion Types are usually “professional” phagocytic cells? 3.) Which are usually “nonprofessional” phagocytic cells? 4.) T or F? All bacteria must invade host tissues, either active or passively, in order to cause disease. 5.) Invasins are in which category? Virulence Factors to Promote Survival: 1.) Name some virulence factors that bacteria have against Non-specific host defenses: (4) Examples of Virulence Factors: 1.) Give an example of a bacterium which prevents the migration of phagocytes & how it’s done. 2.) Give 2 examples of how bacteria survive within a phagocyte. 3.) Give 3 examples of how bacteria can evade complement. Examples of Virulence Factors cont…: 4.) Give 2 examples of how bacteria can survive in hostile environments: 1.) Active = bacterial surface proteins that promote invasion of the host cell Passive = host cell surface molecules facilitate invasion into the cell 2.) Passive = Professional (usually) 3.) Active = Unprofessional (usually) 4.) False! Some bacteria cause disease through secretion of toxins without further invasion. 5.) Active (they are mostly “nonprofessional”) 1.) ~Inhibition of phagocytes [Prevent the migration of phagocytes to site of infection, Killing phagocytes, Avoiding phagocytes (capsules provide physical barrier to prevent phagocytosis)] ~Surviving within Phagocytes (some agents enjoy the “protection” offered by living in these cells b/c protected from complement & antibodies, plus large supply of nutrients) ~Evading Complement ~Survival in Hostile Environments 1.) Streptococcus pyogenes produces an enzyme (C5a peptidase) that degrades complement protein 5a. Since 5a attracts phagocytes, degrading it reduced the # of phagocytes @ site of infection. 2.) ~Listeria monocytogenes produces enzyme Listeriolysin O, allows it to escape phagosome before it fuses w/ lysosome ~Produce enzymes (catalase & superoxide dismutase) that detoxify reactive oxygen species created by phagocyte. 3.) >M protein of streptococcus pyogenes prevents the binding of complement proteins. >LPS of gm(-) bacteria binds sialic acid to the O antigen, effectively preventing formation of C3 convertase (C4b2b) so complement cascade cannot proceed. >Gm(-) bacteria can change length of their O-antigen, making it longer & obstructing the cell surface, making it difficult for the MAC to form. 4.) ~Production of enzyme Urease to degrade urea to ammonia + CO2 + H20, to raise pH & make environment more hospitable. (ex: stomach) ~Acquire iron from iron-depleted environment Siderophores are bacterial proteins that have higher affinity for free iron than hemoglobin does. Lactoferrin binding proteins & Transferrin binding proteins are bacterial binding proteins that bind to host proteins and “steal” their iron. Virulence Factors that Promote Survival cont…: 1.) Name some Virulence Factors that bacteria have against Specific Host Defenses: (5) Examples of Virulence Factors cont…: 1.) Provide 2 examples of how bacteria prevent antibody binding. 2.) Define the 2 types of Removal or Alteration of an Antigen by a bacterium: (Antigenic Variation & Phase Variation) Virulence Factors that Promote Damage to Host Cell: 1.) What are “Spreading Factors”? 2.) There are 3 specific Spreading Factors which promote damage to the host cell. Name & describe each: 3.) Along w/ Spreading factors, bacteria contain Membrane Disrupting Exotoxins. They do what? 4.) Specifically, what do Hemolysins do? 5.) What do Leukocidins do? 6.) What does Streptolysin do? Virulence Factors that Promote Damage to Host Cell: 1.) Agents also contain A-B Exotoxins to promote damage to the host. These A-B Exotoxins contain what? 2.) Describe “Simple” A-B Toxins 3.) Describe “Compound” A-B Toxins 4.) What does the “A Domain” of the molecule contain? *KNOW* 5.) What does the “B Domain” of the molecule contain? *KNOW* 6.) What do Neurotoxins target? (always the B domain that gives them this specificity) 7.) What about Cytotoxins? 8.) What about Enterotoxins? 1.) ~Prevent antibody binding (capsules provide physical barrier so Abs cannot bind their targets) ~Antigenic disguise (bacteria coat themselves w/ host proteins or host polysaccharides.) ~Removal or Alteration of Antigen (2 types, defined below) ~Destruction of Ab molecules ~Immunosupression 1.) ~Capsules = physical barrier ~Protein A of staphylococcus aureus binds Fc portion of antibodies 2.) Antigenic Variation = change of amino acid composition so the antigen is no longer recognized or bound by Ab’s made earlier. Phase Variation = turning off the gene so the antigen is no longer made & is therefore no longer a target. 1.) Spreading factors are enzymes which breakdown tissues allowing the bacteria to enter new areas: 2.) ~Hyaluronidase – produced by streptococci spp. digests hyaluronic acid (the “glue” that holds certain tissues together), allowing pathogen to move between cells. ~Coagulase – this enzyme accelerates clotting of blood providing protective barrier around the pathogen. ~Streptokinase & Staphylokinase – enzymes dissolve blood clots, allowing pathogen to spread. 3.) Damage cellular membranes, causing cells to lyse 4.) Destroy red blood cells (produced by staphylococci) 5.) Lyse phagocytes (produced by staphylococci) 6.) Lyse phagocytes & destroys red blood cells (produced by streptococci) 1.) 2 domains 2.) Are a single polypeptide w/ 2 domains 3.) Consist of separate polypeptides that make up the 2 domains. 4.) Contains the enzymatic activity & determines the mechanism of action. [Domain A = Activity & mechanism of Action] 5.) Contains the binding properties & therefore determines cell specificity. [Domain B = Binding properties] 6.) Target neuronal cells (disrupt neurotransmitter signals). 7.) Kill cells by inhibiting protein synthesis 8.) Affect cells w/in intestinal tract, usually causing diarrhea. (ex: cholera toxin) Virulence Factors that Promote Damage to Host Cell: 1.) Define Endotoxin: 2.) What part of the Endotoxin [Gm(-) LPS] contains the toxic activity? 3.) Other than Exo & Endo Toxins, bacteria can also contain Superantigens. What are these? 4.) How do they work? Steps of an Infectious Disease: 1.) Put the following steps in proper order: Acute Stage, Convalescent Stage, Incubation Period, Prodormal Period. 2.) Define Each: 1.) This term ONLY refers to Gram-Negative LPS. All other toxins are referred to as Exotoxins. 2.) Lipid A [Lipid A = toxic Activity] 3.) Bacterial proteins capable of activating large numbers of T-cells without specificity for the antigen. 4.) They “trick” the T-cells into thinking they have been properly activated by its antigen. The antigen binds both the MHC Class II molecule on the antigen-presenting cell & the T-cell receptor forming a bridge, causing T-cell to “think” it is activated, results in release of lg. amounts of IL-2 1.) 1st: Incubation Period 2nd: Prodormal Period 3rd: Acute Stage 4th: Convalescent Stage 2.) 1st = time between infection by pathogen & the onset of symptoms (pathogen is multiplying) 2nd = first, non-specific symptoms appear (fever, headache, fatigue) Usually not diagnostic. 3rd = period of characteristic clinical manifestations (full effect of the pathogenic effects) 4th = The recovery period. (some people become carriers w/ no symptoms, others develop chronic/latent infections that resurface later) 1.) Types of Infections: Define each 2.) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 3.) Localized Systemic Focal Primary Secondary Acute Chronic Pathogenesis Summary: *KNOW* 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) T or F? If someone is infected, they are colonized. The capacity of a bacterium to cause disease? What is a qualitative measure of Pathogenicity? Bacterial constituents that promote infection? A pathogen that infects via inhalation or ingestion gained which type of entry?(ingress or penetration) 6.) Severity of a disease depends on what 2 things? 7.) If a Bacterial surface protein helps it invade tissues it is known as? 8.) Part w/in bacterial exotoxin that determines cell specificy. 9.) Part within bacterial exotoxin that determines the mechanism of action of bacteria. 10.) Infection type that is rapid onset, sever but short-lived. 11.) Infection type that is slow to progress and not completely cleared from the host. 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) Infection does NOT have to be at the portal of entry, but although it spread beyond the initial entry point, the infection is limited to specific location or tissue. Organisms spread to several sites, fluids, or tissues. Spread usually occurs via bloodstream. Organisms from a localized infection are carried to other specific tissues. The initial infection caused by particular organism. A subsequent infection. Does NOT need to be same site as primary infection. MAY be result of DIFFERENT infectious agent. Generally indicate depressed or altered host defenses. Rapid onset, generally more severe, short lived. Organism is cleared from the host. Slower to progress, may persist for a lifetime. Can be mild to very severe. Tend to have “flare-ups”, especially during times of stress/compromised immune system. Organism is NOT completely cleared from host, but may kept @ minimal # to prevent symptoms. 1.) True! You must be colonized in order for it to result in a disease. (but colonized ≠ infected) 2.) Pathogenicity 3.) Virulence 4.) Virulence Factors 5.) Ingress (did NOT cross any epithelial barriers) 6.) ~Virulence of the organism ~Susceptibility of the host 7.) Active Invasion 8.) B-Domain (contains binding properties) 9.) A-Domain (contains enzyme activity) 10.) Acute 11.) Chronic Epidemiology: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) Define Epidemiology Define Carrier Define Etiologic Agent Define Reservoir Define Vector Define Vehicle Classifications of Infectious Diseases: Define them 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) Sporadic Outbreak Endemic Epidemic Pandemic Methods of Transmission: 1.) Direct Contact requires what? 2.) There are 2 types, Horizontal & Vertical, describe each: 3.) Indirect contact can be via a ____ or a _____. 4.) Give some examples of Vehicles (non-living): 5.) Indirect contact from a Vector (living) can also be Direct or Indirect. Describe both: 6.) Which type of Vector Transfer, Direct or Indirect is the pathogen usually a part of the vector’s life cycle? 1.) If an infectious disease is acquired during a hospital stay it is called _____. 2.) List the most common bacteria that are responsible for nosocomial infections: (5) *KNOW* 1.) The study of the distribution & determinants of health-related states in specific populations & application of this study to control health problems. 2.) An infected individual who is a potential source of infection (there can be chronic & acute carriers) 3.) Entity responsible for the disease 4.) The primary habitat in which agent is normally found & from which infection may result. 5.) Living transmitters of the pathogen 6.) Non-living transmitters of a pathogen. 1.) disease that occurs at irregular intervals & in unpredictable locations 2.) The sudden & unexpected occurrence of disease, focally or in a limited segment of population (ex: 15 cases of meningitis on a college campus) 3.) Disease that is maintained @ a steady frequency over a long period in a particular population or geographic location 4.) A sudden increase in the occurrence of a disease in a population, usually w/in specific geographic region or population. (ex: USA, China, etc…) 5.) The spread of an epidemic over a very large population of geographic region (other continents) 1.) physical contact 2.) Horizontal = (1) person person ex: kissing (2) self self ex: not washing hands Vertical = Parent Child ex: sperm, egg, across placenta, birth canal, breast feeding 3.) Vehicle ; Vector 4.) Waterborne, Airborne, Foodborne, and Fomites (nonliving objects that harbor & transmit disease) 7.) Biological/Direct = Active Transmission of the pathogen! (ex: insect bite) Mechanical/Indirect = Passive Transmission (ex: fly feeds on garbage then lands on your food.) 8.) Biological/Direct Transmission 1.) Nosocomial 2.) ~E. coli ~Klebsiella pneumoniae ~Psuedomonas aeruginosa ~Staphylococci ~Streptococci 3.) Controlling the Spread of Infectious Disease: 1.) What 4 areas may be targeted, depending on which approach will be most effective? Etiology Summary: *KNOW* 1.) A transmitter of a pathogen that is NON-living. 2.) A transmitter of a pathogen that is Living. 3.) T or F? If you get an infectious disease while visiting your friend in the hospital, it was nosocomially transmitted. Diagnostic Techniques: 1.) What are the four approaches to bacteriologic work? 2.) Identify which type of Microscopy each of the following describe: a.) Forms an image w/ a beam of electrons b.) Light passes through the specimen & allows internal details to be observed. c.) Light is reflected off the specimen. d.) Light is passed through the specimen. Used for bacterial staining. e.) UV light used to excite fluorochrome labels or dyes attached to the sample. 1.) Which of the above Microscopy types will show the most detail? 2.) There are 2 basic types of Electron Microscopy. Which type requires that you cut the sample into very thin sections? This same sample is then showered w/ electrons. 3.) Which type requires that the sample be left intact? This sample is also bombarded w/ electrons which get deflected to create a 3-D image. 1.) ~Specific Agent ~Reducing or eliminating the Source ~The Host (reducing # of those susceptible) ~The Spread (reducing/eliminating mode of transmission) 1.) Vehicle (a vehicle, such as a car, is NOT alive) 2.) Vector (kinds sounds like the name Victor, and Victor would be alive) 3.) False! Nosocomial is only during YOUR hospital stay. This type could be from either a Vector or a Vehicle and could have been direct or indirect. 1.) ~Microscopic Observation ~Obtaining a Pure Culture by inoculating it onto/into bacteriologic medium ~Molecular Techniques performed on pure culture ~Identification of organism 2.) Types of Microscopy: a.) Electron Microscopy b.) Phase-Contrast Microscopy (different densities of various internal structures retard the light) c.) Dark Field Microscopy d.) Light Microscopy e.) Fluorescence Microscopy 1.) Electron Miscroscopy 2.) TEM (Transmission) 3.) SEM (Scanning) Staining: Positive & Negative Stains 1.) Which type changes color of the specimen itself? 2.) Which does NOT color the specimen, but changes the background color? 3.) What are the 4 types of Positive stains? 4.) What are the 2 types of Negative stains? 5.) ____ stains can be either Simple or Differential. 6.) Describe a Simple Stain. 7.) What can a Simple Stain distinguish? 8.) Describe a Differential Stain. 9.) What can it distinguish? 10.) Give 2 important examples of Differential stain: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) Positive Staining Negative Staining Gram, Acid Fast, Methylene Blue & Crystal Violet India Ink & Nigrosin Positive! (b/c they both dye the specimen) Utilizes a single dye, Entire specimen stained same color. Size, Shape, arrangement useful in preliminary identification (Basic stuff) 8.) Utilizes 2 different colored dyes. One is Primary dye, other is Counterstain. Cells of different types become different colors. 9.) Shape, Size, Arrangement, Cell Type & some structural components (depends on staining technique employed) 10.) Gram (utilizes differences in cell wall structure) & Acid Fast Staining (differentiates acid fast from non) Bacteriologic Cultures – Name the type described: 1.) Three 10ml (minimum) blood samples in a 24hr period are added to a rich growth medium. 2.) Gram stain is performed & sample is swabbed onto chocolate agar. (Swab of urethral canal, penile or cervix discharge when STD suspected) 3.) Gram stain of centrifuged CSF & swab onto blood & chocolate agar. 4.) Primarily when pneumonia or TB expected. 5.) Sample inoculated directly onto blood agar plate. 6.) Methylene blue stain reveals leukocytes (Gram stains not done due to normal flora) 7.) Variety of techniques used to count the bacteria present. 8.) Samples should be swabbed onto variety of media & grown under both aerobic & anaerobic conditions. Molecular Diagnosis: 1.) Each genus & species of bacteria has some _____, allowing for distinct recognition & identification. 2.) Which method of molecular diagnosis utilizes these specific regions in order to i.d. bacterium? 3.) Describe it: 4.) Which method of molecular diagnosis determined the exact order & identity of bases in the DNA sequence? 5.) Which method rapidly increases the amount of DNA in even a small sample? (this amplified DNA can then be sequenced) 6.) Which method utilizes the recognition & specificity of antigen/antibody interactions? 7.) T or F? In Serologic test, the product being recognized can be either the antigen or the antibody (Ab). Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing – Name the type described: 1.) The highest dilution (lowest qty of drug) required to kill 99.9% of the organism. 2.) The highest dilution (lowest qty. of drug) that is able to inhibit growth of the organism. 3.) Uses discs impregnated w/ specific concentrations of a single antibiotic. Overnight incubation reveals “Zones of Inhibition” 4.) Version of Kirby-Bauer, but this uses paper strips w/ a concentration gradient of the chosen antimicrobial agent along the strip. 5.) Which is considered the “Gold Standard”? 6.) Which test will give you the MIC? 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) Blood Culture Genital Tract Cultures Spinal Fluid Cultures Sputum Cultures Throat Cultures Stool Cultures Urine Cultures (count bacteria present in the urine) 8.) Wound/abscess Cultures (need wide variety of media b/c there is a variety of possible causes for the wound/abscess) 1.) Genetically unique regions 2.) Nucleic Acid Hybridization & Probes 3.) Specific “probes” are incubated w/ the sample & visualized to determine if hybridization occurred (if probe recognized the genetically unique region) Can be seen b/c probes carry Reporter Molecules (fluorescent dyes, radioactive labels, enzyme labels) 4.) DNA Sequencing 5.) PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) 6.) Serologic Tests 7.) True 1.) MBC (Minimum Bactericidal Concentration) 2.) MIC (Minimum Inhibitory Concentration) 3.) Disc-Differentiation Test OR Kirby-Bauer (size of the Zone of Inhibition corresponds to the susceptible, intermediate, or resistant) 4.) E-Test 5.) MIC (BUT rarely used b/c expensive & time consuming) 6.) Well, the MIC test (duh!) & also the E-Test! *In the E-test, the MIC is read at the point where growth intersects with the strip. Diagnostic Techniques Summary: *KNOW* 1.) A type of Electron Microscopy where a LIVE sample can be examined. 2.) Type of Electron Microscopy where the sample MUST be dead. 3.) Type of Electron Microscopy that gives 3-D images. 4.) Gram staining is a type of ______ stain. 5.) Acid Fast staining is a type of ______ stain. 6.) A type of stain that utilizes the differences in cell wall structures. 7.) A type of stain that distinguishes acid-fast bacteria (Myobacterium & Nocardia spp.) from non acid-fast bacteria (almost everything else). 8.) Which Susceptibility Test types will give MIC? Controlling Microbial Growth: Define the following 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) Antiseptic Bactericide Bacteriostatic Disinfectant Sanitizer Sterilization 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) SEM (Scanning) TEM (Transmission) SEM (Scanning) Positive (Differential) Positive (Differential) Gram Stain (type of Positive Differential stain) Acid Fast Stain (type of + Differential stain) MIC & E-Test 1.) Chemical agent that can be safely used externally on living tissue. 2.) Agent that kills bacteria (most DON’T kill spores) 3.) Agent that inhibits the growth of bacteria (does NOT kill) 4.) Chemical agent used on inanimate objects to kill microorganisms 5.) Reduction in the number of pathogenic organisms to point where they no longer pose threat of disease 6.) Chemical agent, typically used on food prep tools n surfaces to reduce number of bacteria to meet accepted public health standards. 7.) Killing or removal of ALL microorganisms (including spores) 1.) Potency of the antimicrobial agent is affected by what 4 things? 2.) Name the 4 areas that these agents target in bacteria: 1.) ~Time (more exposure = more organisms affected) ~pH (↑ ionization = ↑ ability to penetrate cell) ~Temperature (raising temp. 10°C can double death rate for given time period) ~Concentration (↑ concentration can make a bacteriostatic agent bactericidal) 2.) >Cell Wall (block its synthesis or digest it) >Cell Membrane (disrupts its integrity) >Proteins (denature them) >Nucleic Acids (denature, mutate, or damage) 1.) Name the 3 types of physical control: 2.) Name the 1 method for mechanical control: 3.) List the 6 methods for chemical control: 1.) ~Irradiation (UV light sterilizes surfaces, but cannot penetrate, not even a piece of paper) ~Heat (Dry heat, Incineration, Boiling, Autoclaving) ~Pasteurization (kills most vegetative bacterial cells) 2.) Filtration (used for disinfecting agents than cannot b heated. Ex: HEPA filter, liquid membrane filter) 3.) >Chlorine (liquid or gas form) >Iodine (2-2.% = antiseptics ; 5% = disinfectant) >Phenolics (denature proteins & disrupt cell membranes. Many toxic, so not antiseptics! >Alcohols (must have water to work properly) >Detergents (surfactants, disrupt cell membranes) >H2O2 (produces toxic oxide radicals. Can be sporicidal @ high concentrations) Controlling Growth Summary: *KNOW* 1.) List the methods that will kill spores: 2.) T or F? Irradiation will ONLY kill bacteria on a surface. 3.) Which is the most commonly uses method for controlling microorganisms? 4.) ___ can be used on humans. 5.) ____ is used on inanimate objects. 6.) T or F? 100% alcohol would be ideal to kill bacteria b/c it is the strongest available. Therapy– Define the following: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) Antibiotic (Narrow Definition) Antibiotic (Broad Definition) Chemotherapeutic Agent Antimicrobial Spectrum of Activity: a.) Broad Spectrum b.) Narrow Spectrum c.) Extended Spectrum 1.) List some properties that are desirable in an antimicrobial agent: (6) 2.) Therapeutic agents attack what 5 areas of bacteria? Agents affecting Cell Wall Synthesis: 1.) List all that do: 2.) What generalizations can we make about some of the drugs in this category? 1.) Sterilization, Irradiation, Autoclaving, Chlorine, Iodine, H2O2 (higher concentrations) 2.) True! (UV will not penetrate ANYTHING, not even a piece of paper) 3.) Heat! 4.) Antiseptics 5.) Disinfectants 6.) False! It would not work properly b/c it does NOT contain water. (must have water to kill properly) 1.) Antimicrobial agents produced by microorganisms that kill or inhibit other microorganisms. 2.) Any chemical or agent (regardless of origin) that has effect of killing/inhibiting growth of other types of cells. 3.) Antimicrobial agents of synthetic origin useful in treatment of microbial or viral disease. 4.) Spectrum of Activity: a.) effective against many types of bacteria b.) effective against a few types of bacteria c.) effective against most Gm(+) & (-) bacteria 1.) ~Selective Toxicity (harms pathogen, not you) ~Solubility in fluids (functions even when highly diluted & remains active once soluble) ~Susceptible organisms don’t readily become resistant ~Should not produce adverse side effects ~Should be bactericidal (not just bacteriostatic) ~Stable (remains active in tissues, not broken down or excreted too quickly) 2.) Affect the Cell Wall, Membrane, Nucleic Acid Synthesis, Protein Synthesis or are Competitive Inhibitors/Metabolic Antagonists. *know which agents do what (detailed below)! 1.) Penicillins (G & V), β -lactamase resistance penicillins, Aminopenicillins, Extended Spectrum penicillins (anti-pseudomonals), Cephalasporins, Carbapenems/Carboxypenems, Monobactams, β lactamase Inhibitors, Non-β-lactam Cell Wall Inhibitors. 2.) ~ALL “penicillins” affect cell wall synthesis ~Anything w/ “β” in the name affect cell wall syn. ~So the only names in this category we actually have to memorize are: Cephalosporins, Carbapenems/Carboxypenems, Monobactams. Agents affecting Cell Wall Synthesis cont…: Tell which agent is being described: 1.) Thiozolide ring joined to a β -lactam ring. 2.) Are β -lactamase sensitive & can penetrate the outer membrane of some gram(-) bacilli. 3.) Nearly all pathogenic staphylococci r resistant. 4.) Are B-lactamase sensitive & used to treat Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections. 5.) Extremely Broad spectrum agents w/ a β-lactam ring. Must be IV admin (low BA). 6.) Narrow Spectrum agents. Active against many Gm(-) aerobic organisms & is essentially resistant to βlactamase/cephalosporinase degredation. 7.) Useful for treating individuals allergic to penicillins. 8.) Semisynthetic derivatives made by adding particular synthetic side chain to a penicillin core. 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) Penicillins (Penicillin G, Penicillin V) Aminopenicillins Penicillins (G & V) Broad Spectrum Penicillins (anti-pseudomonals) Carbapenems/Carboxypenems Monobactams Monobactams Penicillins (G & V) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) Penicillins Cephalosporins Cephalosporins β-lactamase Inhibitors Cephalosporins Penicillins (G & V) Penicillins (G & V) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) β-lactamase Inhibitors β-lactamase Resistant Penicillins Aminopenicillins β-lactamase Inhibitors Carbapenems/Carboxypenems *all have “penem” Extended Spectrum Penicillins Monobactams Non β-lactam cell wall inhibitors Cont… 1.) ONLY effective against Gm(+) bacteria. 2.) Contain a β -lactam ring linked to a 6-member dihydrothiazide ring. 3.) Same mechanism of action as penicillins, but has a broader spectrum than penicillins. 4.) Proteins designed to inhibit or destroy the effectiveness of β lactamase enzymes & are combined w/ a β-lactam antibiotic since they have little antimicrobial activity alone. 5.) Classified into “generations” 6.) Many bacteria are resistant to this drug b/c β-lactamase is capable of hydrolyzing the β-lactam ring, rendering drug ineffective. 7.) They work during the last stage of bacterial cell wall synthesis by interrupting completion of cell wall. Cont… 1.) Consists of Clavulanic Acid, Sulbactam, Tazobactam. 2.) Consists of Oxacillin, Methicillin, Dicloxacillin, Nafcillin, Cloxacillin, Fluclocillin. 3.) Consists of Ampicillin, Amoxicillin, Carbenicillin 4.) Consists of Clavulanic Acid, Sulbactam, Tazobactam 5.) Consists of Imipenem, Meropenem, Ertapenem 6.) Consists of Mezlocillin, Piperacillin, Azlocillin, Carbenicillin, Ticarcillin 7.) Consists of Aztreonam 8.) Consists of Bacitracin, Vancomycin, Fosfomycin Cephalosporins: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) Describe 1st generation cephalosporins: 2nd Generation: 3rd Generation: 4th Generation: 1.) ~Activity & spectrum like penicillins ~PEcK drugs (b/c active against Proteus, E. coli, & Klebsiella pneumoniae) ~Drugs Include: All of the “Ceph” drugs 2.) ~High activity against Gm(-), but Low activity against Gm(+) ~HENPEck drugs (b/c affective against same as generation 1 plus Haemophilus influenzae, Enterobacter aerogenes, & Neisseria. ~Drugs include: see list on pg. 45 3.) ~More active against Gm(-) than 1st or 2nd gen. ~Drugs include: see list on pg. 45 4.) ~Effective against BOTH Gm(-) & (+) ~Drugs include: Cefepime, Cefozopran, Cefoselis, Flomoxef Non B-lactam Cell Wall Inhibitors: 1.) Which can only be used topically? 2.) Which is bactericidal for staphylococci and is restricted to treatment of serious infection by Blactam resistant Gm(+) [staph, strep]. 3.) Which is now a “Restricted Antibiotic”? Why? 4.) Which is used to treat non-complicated UTI’s? Agents that Affect Cell Membrane: 1.) These agents act on _____ and are therefore usually ineffective against Gram __ bacteria. 2.) Name the 2 drugs in this category: 3.) Describe Polymyxin: 4.) Describe Daptomycin: Agents that Affect Nucleic Acid Synthesis: 1.) Name the 2 categories of drugs that do this: 2.) Name the 3 Fluoroquinolones: 3.) Which is generally used in treatment of Gm(-) & (+) bacteria that cause UTI’s.? 4.) Which is generally used in treatment of enterococci, staphylococci & pseudomonas infections? 5.) Which is generally used in treatment of pneumonia, bronchitis, & sinusitis? 6.) Which is used to treat anthrax? 7.) Why are some quinolones useful in treating infections caused by intracellular parasites? 8.) How do the quinolones work? 9.) How does Rifampin work? Agents that Affect Protein Synthesis: 1.) Which bind to the 50S subunit of the bacterial ribosome? 2.) Which bind to the 30S subunit? 3.) T or F? Chloramphenicol is the drug of choice for many infection types. 4.) What is a major problem w/ Clindamycin? 5.) Which is the only common antibiotic that will treat Legionnaire’s disease? 6.) Which is used to treat Respiratory infections caused by MDR Streptococcus pneumoniae? 1.) Bacitracin (due to nephrotoxicity) 2.) Vancomycin (Bacitracin is also bactericidal for staphylococci) 3.) Vancomycin – due to recent emergence of resistant organisms 4.) Fosfomycin 5.) Phosphatidylethanolamines ; Gram(+) – b/c they lack phosphatidylethanolamines. 6.) ~Polymyxin ~Daptomycin 7.) ~Clinically useful compound in Colistin (Polymyxin E) ~Effective against mainly Gm(-) & usually limited to topical use (nephrotoxicity & neurotxicity) ~Inhibits cell membrane phospholipids (increases permeability of cell membrane = loss of metabolites) 8.) ~Depolarizes the membrane of Gm(+) bacteria 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) Quinolones/Fluoroquinolones & Rifampin Sparfloxacin, Norfloxacin & Ciprofloxacin Ciprofloxacin Norfloxacin Sparfloxacin Ciprofloxacin b/c some can penetrate macrophages & neutrophils better than most antibiotics. 8.) Inhibit bacterial DNA synthesis by blocking DNA Gyrase (enzyme which allows DNA to relax for replication) 9.) Inhibits RNA synthesis by binding to RNA Polymerase, preventing transcription. 1.) Chloramphenicol, Clindamycin, Macrolides (Ertythromycin, Azithromycin), Ketek (Telithromycin) & Linezolid [CLEAn Tag = “Clean” part means binds 50S] *note: Ketek not in the memory trick cuz too new. 2.) Aminoglycosides (Gentamycin, Kanamycin, Streptomycin, Spectinomycin, Tobramycin), Tetracyclines (tetracycline & doxycline) [Clean TAg = “Tag” part means binds 30S] 3.) FALSE! NOT anymore. 4.) Causes Antibiotic-associated pseudomembranous colitis. 5.) Macrolides (Erythromycin, Azithromycin) 6.) Ketek (Telithromycin) Agents that Affect Protein Synthesis cont…: 1.) Which group has narrow margin of safety & primarily used to treat infections by aerobic Gm(-) bacteria? 2.) What treats walking pneumonia? 3.) What can treat anthrax & Lyme disease? 4.) Which class that interferes w/ protein synthesis is considered the only bactericidal class? 5.) Which class bacteriostatic, w/ widest activity spectrum? 6.) Which can prevent the formation of the 70S ribosomal complex? (also binds 50S subunit) 7.) Which treats mycoplasma & Chlamydophila infections? 8.) Which binds the 50S subunit in 2 places? 9.) Which can replace Synercid in treatment of penicillinresistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, methicillingresistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), & VRE? Competitive Inhibitors/Metabolic Antagonists: 1.) Name the classes in this category: 2.) Which is an anti-metabolite for the vitamins nicotinamide & pyridoxal? 3.) Which work via competitive inhibition of paminobenzoic acid (PABA) b/c they compete for binding in the synthesis of hihydrofolate (DHT)? 4.) Which work by interrupting the synthetic pathway of tetrahydrofolic acid (THFA)? 5.) Which is unusually effective against myobacteria? (b/c it also inhibits synthesis of mycolic acid) 6.) Which gets its selective toxicity from fact that mammal’s utilize preformed folates from diet? Therapy Summary: *KNOW* 1.) ALL penicillins do what to kill bacteria? 2.) T or F? B-lactamase is a part of antimicrobial agents that makes them more effective. 3.) Generation of cephalosporins that are most active against Gm(-)? 4.) Generation are active against BOTH Gm(-) & (+)? 5.) Generation that closely resembles penicillins? 6.) Generation that’s more active against Gm(-) than Gm(+). 7.) Generation where all drugs start w/ Ceph…? (others are Cef…) 8.) Which of the agents that affect cell membranes can treat Gm (+) bacteria? (& thus MRSA) 9.) Class of drugs more effective @ treating infections caused by intestinal parasites? 10.) Class of drugs more effective @ treating infections caused by intracellular pathogens? 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) 9.) Aminoglycosides Tetracycline Doxycycline Aminoglycosides Tetracyclines (Tetra & Doxycycline) Linezolid (only drug in the Oxazolidinones class) Macrolides (Erythromycin & Azithromycin) Linezolid – helps it avoid resistance Linezolid 1.) ~Sulfonamides ~Trimethoprim ~Isoniazid 2.) Isoniazid 3.) Sulfonamides 4.) Trimethoprim 5.) Isoniazid 6.) Sulfonamides 1.) Affect the Cell Wall 2.) FALSE! It is an enzyme that bacteria have, which allows them to be resistant to many types of antimicrobials (renders drug ineffective). 3.) 3rd generation (more than 1st or 2nd) 4.) 4th generation 5.) 1st generation 6.) 2nd generation [but 3rd generation is even more potent against Gm(-)] 7.) 1st generation 8.) Daptomycin (NOT polymyxin) 9.) Quinolones (& Fluoroquinolones) 10.) Rifampin (b/c can penetrate phagocytic cells) Therapy Summary Cont…: *KNOW* 1.) Agent affecting nucleic acid synthesis that inhibits RNA? 2.) Agent affecting nucleic acid synthesis that inhibits DNA? 3.) T or F? Clindmycin is the drug of choice for treating antibiotic-associated pseudomembranous coltitis. 4.) Agents that affect protein synthesis, which are bactericidal? 5.) Class of antimicrobials with the widest spectrum of activity? 6.) Which binds the 50S subunit in 2 places? 7.) Can replace Synercid in treatment of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, methicilling-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), & Vancomycin-resistant enterococcus faecium & faecalis (VRE)? 8.) Prevents the attachment of the charge tRNA (“blocks docking site”) 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.) 8.) Rifampin (inhibits RNA) Quinolones/Fluoroquinolones False! It CAUSES that!!! ONLY Aminoglycosides Tetracyclines Linezolid Linezolid Tetracyclines Mechanisms of Antimicrobial Resistance – Describe each of the 4 basic mechanisms bacteria use: 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) Decrease Accumulation of Drug in the cell: Changes in the Target for the drug Inactivation of the Drug Modification (by-pass) of the targeted metabolic pathway 1.) Two ways: ~Decreased Penetration of drug into cell: altered cell surface receptor downregulation of gene for cell-surface receptor ~Increased Removal of Drug out of cell: Drug efflux pumps excrete drug out of cell so there is insufficient drug qty to be effective. 2.) Leads to decreased affinity or binding of drug to the target or active site. 3.) Bacteria produce enzymes that permanently alter the structure of the drug (β-lactamases, Penicillinases, Cephalosporinases) 4.) Bacteria produce new enzymes that allow it to circumvent the affected pathway. Activity of other pathways may increase to compensate. 1.) Give an example of a drug that is susceptible to Antimicrobial resistance due to changes in target. 2.) Give an example of some bacteria that possess Penicillinases. 3.) Give an example of some bacteria that possess Cephalosporinases. Vaccines: 1.) ~Erythromycin (bacteria alter their 50S subunit to resist this) ~Penicillin & Streptomycin (bacteria alter their binding proteins to resist these) 2.) Staphylococcus aureus, PPNG (penicillinaseproducing Neisseria gonorrhoerae) 3.) Klebsiella pneumoniae, Streptococcus pneumoniae 1.) similar a vaccine antigen is to the disease-causing form of the organism 2.) Active 1.) The more ____, the better the immune response to the vaccine. 2.) Vaccines give ___ immunity through the stimulation of antibody production. 3.) Describe the main features of Live Attenuated vaccines: 3.) ~Modify disease-causing organism into non-pathogenic form ~Cells are alive so can multiply & emulate actual infection ~CANNOT be given to immunocompromised people (alive) ~Induces Humoral & Cell-mediated Immunity ~Immune response is virtually identical to that produced by natural infection. ~Usually effective w/ 1 dose ~May cause inflammatory response; can revert back to pathogenic wild-type ~Circulating Ab’s can eliminate organism, reduces immunity [so don’t give till 1 yr old b/c of maternal Ab’s (antibodies)] ~Fragile (killed by heat & light) 1.) Describe the main features of Inactivated Vaccines: 2.) There are 2 types of Fractional – protein based vaccines. Name & describe both: 3.) There are also 2 types of Fractional – polysaccharide based vaccines. Name & describe: 1.) ~Composed of EITHER whole organism or fractions of the organism ~Produced Humoral Response ONLY ~B/c organisms is dead, more antigens are required for immunity (usually multiple doses needed or boosters) ~Can be given to immunocompromised people ~Types: (1) Killed Whole Cell (2) Fractional – protein or polysaccharide based (3) Recombinant (genetic engineering) 2.) Subunit = single or multiple antigenic proteins Toxoid = inactivated toxin or only the B subunit (remember: the B subunit = Binding part) 3.) Conjugate = links the non-immunogenic polysaccharide to an antigenic component. Pure = purified polysaccharide (not consistently immunogenic in children less than 2 yrs. Old) General Rules for Vaccination: 1.) ___ are generally NOT affected by circulating Ab’s & can be given to children less than 1 yr. 2.) T or F? Some vaccines are contraindicated with the administration of others on the US. 3.) T or F? Increasing the interval between doses does NOT diminish the effectiveness of a series. 4.) T or F? Decreasing the interval between doses of a multiple dose vaccine does NOT interfere w/ the Ab response & level of immunity. 5.) T or F? If there is an extended interval between doses, you may want to add an extra dose or restart the series. 6.) T or F? The only contraindication for ALL vaccines is allergy to the vaccine or component. 7.) T or F? NEVER mix vaccines in same syringe. 1.) Inactivated vaccines 2.) False! (simultaneous admin. does NOT increase chance for adverse effects nor does it decrease efficacy of the vaccines given) 3.) True! 4.) False! Decreasing the interval may interfere with Ab response and level of immunity 5.) False! EXCEPT Oral Typhoid!!! 6.) True! (pregnancy & immunodeficiency are contraindicated in SOME vaccines) 7.) Kinda tricky…False! CAN ONLY when directed by the FDA to do so. 1.) What is the Vaccine Information Statement? 2.) T or F? It is considered Informed Consent. 3.) T or F? Permanent documentation that is was provided is required. 4.) T or F? A new vaccine, which has not developed a VIS, cannot be given until the VIS is written and can be provided to the patient/guardian. 5.) What is VAERS? 6.) T or F? VAERS wants you to report any medical events occurring after a vaccination even if you are not sure the even was due to the vaccine. 1.) Form that must be provided to the patient or guardian with EACH DOSE. 2.) False! (so no signature needed) 3.) True! (w/ the date given & date of VIS must be recorded in patient’s chart) 4.) False! Even is a new vaccine has no VIS, you can still provide vaccine. 5.) Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System – monitoring system jointly administered by the CDC & FDA. 6.) True! Vaccine Examples: 1.) List some common vaccines that are Live Attenuated. 2.) List some that are Killed Bacteria: 3.) List some that are Toxoid: 4.) List some that are Polysaccaride Conjugate: Vaccine Summary: *KNOW* 7.) T or F? Vaccines give passive immunity. 8.) Vaccine type uses Live organisms? 9.) Vaccine type gives Humoral Immunity ONLY. 10.) Can NOT be given to immunocompromised patients. 11.) Response is virtually identical to that produced during an infection. 12.) Usually required multiple doses. 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) TB, Typhoid, Pertussis (old type) Cholera, Plague Diptheria, Tetanus Meningicoccal meningitis, Pneumonia 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) False! Live Attenuated Inactivated Live Attenuated Live Attenuated Inactivated