100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

MIBO 3500 FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
46
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
28-12-2025
Written in
2025/2026

MIBO 3500 FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

Institution
MIBO 3500
Course
MIBO 3500











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
MIBO 3500
Course
MIBO 3500

Document information

Uploaded on
December 28, 2025
Number of pages
46
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

MIBO 3500 FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS & ANSWERS


Microbial size definition - Answers -organisms and acellular agents too small to be
seen by the unaided eye

contradictions to this definition - Answers --supersize microbial cells
-microbial communities
-viruses

You are caring for a patient actively infected with
Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Size of contaminated respiratory droplets are 1000- 5000 nm in size. Standard surgical
masks are designed to block particles larger than 5 μm. Will wearing a
standard surgical mask be an effective form of
protection? - Answers -No, the mask protects against microbes that are 1-5
nanometers, and the tuberculosis particles are larger than 5 nanometers

Robert Hooke - Answers --built first compound microscope to observe mole and cork
-published Micrographia
-coined the term "cell"

Antoine van Leeuwenhoek - Answers --built single lens magnifiers
-first to observe single-celled microbes, called them "small animals"

Francesco Redi - Answers -performed an experiment disproving spontaneous
generation in which he had meat in a container with no cover, one with a paper cover,
and one with a gauze cover

Lazzaro Spallanzani - Answers -disproved spontaneous generation by boiling broth and
either covering it or not covering it. Observed microbial presence in broth that had no
cover only

Louis Pasteur - Answers -disproved spontaneous generation using broth and bottle-
neck experiment

spontaneous generation - Answers -living organisms can arise from non-living matter

Germ theory - Answers -the theory that many diseases are caused by microbes (chain
of infection, pure culture, colonies)

Chain of infection - Answers -transmission of infectious microbes

Pure culture - Answers -culture from a single parental cell

,Colonies - Answers -distinct populations each grown from a single cell

Robert Koch - Answers -Developed first guidelines (postulates) to establish a link
between a specific microbe and disease

Koch's postulates (4) - Answers -1) Microorganism must be present in every case of
the disease and absent from healthy organisms
2) Microbe must be isolated/grown in pure culture
3) Same disease must result when microbe is inoculated in healthy host
4) Same microorganism must be able to be isolated from the host in which inoculation
caused disease

Florence Nightingale - Answers -the first to use medical statistics to demonstrate the
significance of mortality due to disease

Alexander Fleming - Answers -discovered that Penicillium mold generated a substance
that can kill bacteria

Howard Florey and Ernst Chain - Answers -purified penicillin, first commercial antibiotic
to save lives

Sergei Winogradsky - Answers -among the first to study microbes in natural habitats,
discovered lithotrophis, and developed enrichment cultures. ALso build Winogradsky
column

Resolution - Answers -the ability to distinguish small objects close together

Magnification - Answers -enlarged image of an object

Contrast - Answers -the difference in color intensity between an object and its
background

4 types of light microscopes - Answers -bright-field
dark-field
phase-contrast
fluorescence

Compound microscope - Answers -a microscope that forms an image from more than
two lenses

Images produced by bright field microscopes are real or virtual? - Answers -virtual

Bright-field microscopy - Answers --used to see small bacteria but cannot be used to
see smaller microbes like viruses. Shows cells in colorless fashion. Staining of cells
usually kills them and ligt refraction is also problematic

,Refraction - Answers -bending of light as it passes through an object that slows its
speed

Dark-field microscopy - Answers --dark field optics enable microbes to be visualized as
halos of light against darkness
-allows detection of narrow cells (0.1 nano) that are unresolved by bright-field
microscopy

Phase-contrast microscopy - Answers -refractive differences in cell components are
transformed into differences in light intensity

Fluorescence microscopy - Answers -For specimens with added dye, or naturally
photosynthetic microbes, this way shows bright colored image of object, protein, or
structure. Widely used in medical microbiology and ecology

Fluorophores - Answers -chemical compounds that absorb/emit light of specific
wavelengths, can be a dye or a protein

Why do researchers stain microbes? - Answers --increases visibility
-preserves sample
-highlights morphological features

Heat fixation - Answers -uses flame to preserve internal and external morphology but
inactivates enzymes

Chemical fixation - Answers -uses ethanol, preseves morphology of microbe but may
also inactivate enzymes

basic dyes - Answers -have a POSITIVE charge and bind to negatively charged
molecules, such as nucleic acids or bacterial surfaces

3 basic dyes - Answers --methylene blue
-crystal violet
-safranin

Acidic dyes - Answers -have a negative charge that binds to positively charged
molecules, such as tissue

2 acidic dyes - Answers -eosin and nigrosin

simple stains - Answers -add color to the cells but not background

Differential staining definition and 3 types covered in class - Answers -stains one kind
of cell but not another
-gram
-acid fast

, -endospore

Gram staining - Answers -differential staining based on cell wall properties

Acid-fast staining - Answers -differential staining based on lipid content in cell walls

Endospore staining - Answers -differential staining based on vegetative and dormant
spores

Peptidoglycan - Answers -rigid structure that lies just outside of plasma membrane

Gram + bacteria have (thick/thin or no) peptidoglycan layers - Answers -thick

Gram stain procedure (long) - Answers -1) Add crystal violet, turning all bacteria purple.
2) Add iodine, which traps crystal violet in thick pep layers of gram + bacteria. All
bacteria is still purple.
3) Wash sample with alcohol, removing purple color from gram - bacteria; gram =
remains purple.
4) Add safranin, which does not affect gram + bacteria, but turns gram _ bacteria red

Electron microscopy - Answers -electrons are used instead of light beam. Beam
wavelength is extremely short, allowing great resolution.

Bacilli rods - Answers –




Paired cocci - Answers –

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
GEEKA YALA UNIVERSITY
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
2001
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
1445
Documents
47105
Last sold
1 day ago

3.8

342 reviews

5
170
4
61
3
44
2
16
1
51

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions