MICROBIOLOGY PRACTICE EXAM
QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT
DETAILED ANSWERS | ALREADY
GRADED A+<RECENT VERSION>
1. Virus - ANSWER Not living, not considered microorganisms, considered
microbes
2. Microbes - ANSWER Include microorganisms and viruses, can be advantageous
or harmful
3. Cell - ANSWER Smallest, most basic biological unit of life
4. All cells are compromised of - ANSWER Macromolecules (building blocks)
5. Four main types of macromolecules founding cells - ANSWER Proteins, nucleic
acids, lipids, and polysaccharides
6. Proteins - ANSWER Comprised of amino acids, facilitate movement of materials,
act as enzymes to speed up biochemical processes, structural role
,7. Amino Acid - ANSWER Way proteins are formed by varying combinations, 20
different kinds
8. Each protein - ANSWER has its own unique sequence of amino acids
9. Essential Amino Acids - ANSWER human body cannot produce them, they must
be taken in from the environment through other sources (food you eat)
10. Nucleic Acid - ANSWER chemical molecules that carry genetic information
within the cell
11. Two types of nucleic acids - ANSWER DNA and RNA
12. DNA - ANSWER deoxyribonucleic acid, contains vast amount of hereditary info
and is responsible for the inheritable characteristics of living organisms, made from
nucleotides
13. RNA - ANSWER ribonucleic acid, responsible for deciphering the hereditary
information in DNA and using it to synthesize proteins
14. Can DNA and RNA be found in the nucleus? - ANSWER Yes
15. Can DNA and RNA leave the nucleus? - ANSWER Only RNA. DNA is highly
compact in the nucleus
16. Three parts of a nucleotide - ANSWER Nitrogenous base, sugar called
deoxyribose, and a phosphate group
17. Four kinds of nitrogenous bases - ANSWER Adenine or guanine (purine bases)
and cytosine or thymine (pyrimidine bases)
18. What forms the backbone of a DNA strand? - ANSWER Sugar and phosphate
,19. What base protrudes outward from the deoxyribose sugar? - ANSWER
Nitrogenous base
20. Strands from DNA produce a - ANSWER double helix (two strands held together
by hydrogen bonding)
21. Adenine and Thymine - ANSWER Complimentary bases, form two hydrogen
bonds
22. Guanine and Cytosine - ANSWER Complimentary bases, form three hydrogen
bonds
23. RNA contains the _____ ribose rather than deoxyribose - ANSWER Sugar
24. RNA is always ______ stranded - ANSWER Single
25. RNA contains bases - ANSWER adenine, guanine, cytosine, uracil (no thymine);
U pairs with A, A can still pair with T
26. Lipids form the - ANSWER foundation of the plasma membrane; this surrounds
the cell as a barrier that separates the inside of the cell from the outside surrounding
environment
27. Lipids are composed of - ANSWER Hydrophobic hydrocarbons
28. Polysaccharides and Proteins - ANSWER are often associated with the membrane
and aid in controlling movement of materials in and out of the cell
29. Lipid Bi-Layer - ANSWER Two layers of lipids stacked on top of each other, with
the hydrophobic tail regions pointing inward
, 30. Carbohydrates - ANSWER Made of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen atoms
(CH2O)n (# of carbon and oxygen is always equal with the number of hydrogen
levels doubled; C6H12O6)
31. 3 groups of Carbohydrates - ANSWER Monosaccharide, Disaccharide,
Polysaccharide
32. Monosaccharide - ANSWER One single sugar unit; glucose, fructose, and
galactose are examples; linear or ring structures
33. Disaccharide - ANSWER Two monosaccharides joined together; sucrose,
maltose, lactose; broken into monosaccharides by hydrolysis reactions
34. Polysaccharide - ANSWER 3 or more monosaccharides linked together; glucose
molecules important for cellular energy storage
35. In plants, polysaccharides are called - ANSWER Starch
36. In animals, polysaccharides are called - ANSWER Glycogen
37. Polysaccharides are important in cellular structures because - ANSWER They
form cell walls in plants, sugar in chitin is the structural component of fungal cell
walls
38. Prokaryotic cells - ANSWER lack a nucleus
39. Eukaryotic cells - ANSWER have a nucleus
40. Bacteria and Archaea - ANSWER Prokaryotic
41. Bacteria - ANSWER large cohort of prokaryotic microorganisms