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MIC 205A EXAM 4 QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT ANSWERS

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MIC 205A EXAM 4 QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT ANSWERS ...

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MIC 205A
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Uploaded on
May 6, 2025
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2024/2025
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MIC 205A EXAM 4 QUESTIONS WITH
CORRECT ANSWERS


Dancing with Microbes - ANSWER -Microbes are ubiquitous

-Microbes are breathed in, ingested, and picked up on skin

-Most do not harm us, many are beneficial

-Some colonize on skin and mucous membrane, most ingested microbes die in stomach
or excreted

-Some shed with dead epithelial cells

-Relatively few microbes evade defense and cause diseases -> distinct characteristics
allow avoidance of some body defenses

Normal microbiota - ANSWER -Not harmful

-Organisms that routinely reside on body's surfaces

-Relationship is delicate balance; some can cause disease if there is an opportunity
(weakness or defects n innate or adaptive defenses can leave individuals vulnerable to
invasion -> malnutrition, cancer, AIDS or other disease, surgery, wounds, genetic
defects, alcohol or drug abuse, and immunosuppressive therapy)

-Permanently colonize the host

Symbiosis - ANSWER -Different organisms living together

-Mutualism - ANSWER -Kind of symbiosis

-Both partners benefit

-Example: in large intestine, some bacteria synthesize vitamin K and B vitamins, which
host can absorb; bacteria are supplied with warmth, energy sources

Commensalism - ANSWER -Kind of symbiosis

-One partner benefits without harming the other partner

-Many microbes living on skin neither harmful nor helpful, but obtain food and
necessities from host

Parasitism - ANSWER -Type of symbiosis

-One organism benefits at expense of other

,-All pathogens are parasites, but medical microbiologists often reserve for eukaryotic
pathogens (for example, protozoa, helminths)

Opportunistic pathogens - ANSWER -Take advantage of weakened immune system

Microbiota/Microbiome - ANSWER -A collection of microbes in a given ecological niche

-Important to human health

-Relatively little is known

-Human Microbiome Project studying microbiota using metagenomics, analysis of DNA
without culturing

Transient microbiota - ANSWER -May be present for days, weeks, or months

-Inhabit temporarily

Composition of the Normal Microbiota - ANSWER -37 trillion human cells

-100 trillion bacteria, 70-80% non-culturable

-Estimated bacterial species: 5,000-35,000 in intestine, 300-500 in mouth, 120 species
on skin

-160-fold more gene in gut microbiome than in human genome

-We get our microbiomes at birth, during breast feeding, and from food and the
environment

-Obese people have more Firmicutes while lean people have more Bacteroides

-Weight loss changes microbiota to resemble that of lean people

-Composition different among individuals and over time

-Changes with physiological state and life style of host

Normal Microbiota and Your Health - ANSWER -Microbial antagonism or competitive
exclusion: occupying sites of attachment; nutrient competition; antibiotic compounds
(bacteriocins); alter environment (lower pH)

-Training adaptive immune system (hygiene hypothesis): activate B and T cells; develop
tolerance to routine microbes in guts, food, and on other mucosal membranes ->
insufficient exposure to microbes leads to allergies; antibodies against normal
microbiota also bind to pathogens; mice in microbe-free environment have
underdeveloped MALT

-Aiding digestions (break down of fibers)

-Producing required compounds (Vitamins K and B, fatty acids)

,-Upsetting microbiota balance can lead to infection (Vulvovaginal candidiasis when
Lactobacillus inhibited by antibiotics; Clostridium difficile and diarrhea when oral
antibiotics inhibit intestinal microbiota and allow overgrowth of C. difficile)

Colonization - ANSWER -Establishment and multiplication of microbes at a given niche

Infection - ANSWER -Colonization of an organism by pathogens, not always lead to
diseases

-Can be used to refer to pathogen

-Can be subclinical: no or mild symptoms

Disease - ANSWER -An abnormal state in the physiology of an organism

Signs - ANSWER -Objective, measureable evidence

-Rash, pus formation, swelling, temperature

Symptoms - ANSWER -Subjective effects experienced by patient

-Pain, nausea

Infectious disease - ANSWER -Infectious disease yields noticeable impairment

-Caused by microbial infection

-Primary infection: initial infection

-Damage can predispose individual to developing a secondary infection (respiratory
illness impairing mucociliary escalator)

Pathogenicity - ANSWER -The ability to cause disease

Virulence - ANSWER -The degree of pathogenicity

Virulence factors - ANSWER -Microbial traits contributing to disease development

Pathogenic Microbes = Diseases? - ANSWER -Percentage of humans colonized by
common pathogens: 33% Mycobacterium tuberculosis, 50% H. pylori, 50% S. aureus

-Symptomless Carriers: apparently healthy individuals capable of spreading infectious
agents for long periods of time

Disease Development: Disease Triangle - ANSWER -Hosts

-Environment

-Pathogens

-Disease in middle

, Characteristics of Infectious Diseases - ANSWER -Communicable/Contagious diseases:
easily spread

-Infectious doses: Number of initial microbes often determines the outcome of an
infection; number of microbes necessary to establish infection

-ID50 is number of cells that infects 50% of population

-Shigellosis results from 10-100 ingested Shigella

-Salmonellosis results from as many as 10^6 ingested Salmonella enterica serotype
Enteritidis

-Difference partially reflects ability to survive stomach acid

-LD50

-Skin needs less endospores of B. anthracis -> inhalation -> ingestion



Incubation period - ANSWER -Time between infection and onset

-Varies considerably: few days for common cold to even years for leprosy

-Depends on growth rate, host's condition, infectious dose



Illness - ANSWER -Signs and symptoms of disease

-May be preceded by prodromal phase (vague symptoms; a phase of early, mile, and
vague symptoms after incubation period)



Convalescense - ANSWER -Recuperation, recovery from disease



Acute infections - ANSWER -Symptoms develop quickly, last a short time (strep throat)

-Incubation period -> illness -> convalescence

-Illness is short term because the pathogen is eliminated by the host defenses; person is
usually immune to reinfection



Chronic infections - ANSWER -Develop slowly, last for months or years (tuberculosis)

-Incubation period -> illness (long lasting)

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