Prepare for Portage Learning Microbiology exams with these practice questions and answers. This covers all course modules, lab concepts, and final exam content.

Q: Microorganism

Answer: Single cell (bacteria, archaeons, fungi, protozoa, algae)

Q: Virus

Answer: Not living, not considered microorganisms, considered microbes

Q: Microbes

Answer: Include microorganisms and viruses, can be advantageous or harmful

Q: Cell

Answer: Smallest, most basic biological unit of life

Q: All cells are compromised of

Answer: Macromolecules (building bloacks)

Q: Four main types of macromolecules found ing cells

Answer: Proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and polysaccharides

Q: Proteins

Answer: Comprised of amino acids, facilitate movement of materials, act as enzymes to speed up biochemical processes, structural role

Q: Amino Acid

Answer: Way proteins are formed by varying combinations, 20 different kinds

Q: Each protein

Answer: has its own unique sequence of amino acids

Q: Essential Amino Acids

Answer: human body cannot produce them, they must be taken in from the environment through other sources (food you eat)

Q: Nucleic Acid

Answer: chemical molecules that carry genetic information within the cell

Q: Two types of nucleic acids

Answer: DNA and RNA

Q: DNA

Answer: deoxyribonucleic acid, contains vast amount of hereditary info and is responsible for the inheritable characteristics of living organisms, made from nucleotides

Q: RNA

Answer: ribonucleic acid, responsible for deciphering the hereditary information in DNA and using it to synthesize proteins

Q: Can DNA and RNA be found in the nucleus?

Answer: Yes

Q: Can DNA and RNA leave the nucleus?

Answer: Only RNA. DNA is highly compact in the nucleus

Q: Three parts of a nucleotide

Answer: Nitrogenous base, sugar called deoxyribose, and a phosphate group

Q: Four kinds of nitrogenous bases

Answer: Adenine or guanine (purine bases) and cytosine or thymine (pyrimidine bases)

Q: What forms the backbone of a DNA strand?

Answer: Sugar and phosphate

Q: What base protrudes outward from the deoxyribose sugar?

Answer: Nitrogenous base

Q: Strands from DNA produce a

Answer: double helix (two strands held together by hydrogen bonding)

Q: Adenine and Thymine

Answer: Complimentary bases, form two hydrogen bonds

Q: Guanine and Cytosine

Answer: Complimentary bases, form three hydrogen bonds

Q: RNA contains the _____ ribose rather than deoxyribose

Answer: Sugar

Q: RNA is always ______ stranded

Answer: Single

Q: RNA contains bases

Answer: adenine, guanine, cytosine, uracil (no thymine); U pairs with A, A can still pair with T

Q: 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

Q: Lipids are composed of

Answer: Hydrophobic hydrocarbons

Q: Plama membrane

Answer: restricts movement of materials either in or out of the cell, keep what is needed, prevent escape of essential nutrients

Q: Polysaccharides and Proteins

Answer: are often associated with the membrane and aid in controlling movement of materials in and out of the cell

Q: Lipid Bi-Layer

Answer: Two layers of lipids stacked on top of each other, with the hydrophobic tail regions pointing inward

Q: 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)

Q: 3 groups of Carbohydrates

Answer: Monosaccharide, Disaccharide, Polysaccharide

Q: Monosaccharide

Answer: One single sugar unit; glucose, fructose, and galactose are examples; linear or ring structures

Q: Disaccharide

Answer: Two monosaccharides joined together; sucrose, maltose, lactose; broken into monosaccharides by hydrolysis reactions

Q: Polysaccharide

Answer: 3 or more monosaccharides linked together; glucose molecules important for cellular energy storage

Q: In plants, polysaccharides are called

Answer: Starch

Q: In animals, polysaccharides are called

Answer: Glycogen

Q: 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

Q: Prokaryotic cells

Answer: lack a nucleus

Q: Eukaryotic cells

Answer: have a nucleus

Q: Life can characterized into three categories

Answer: Bateria, archaea, eukarya

Q: Bacteria and Archaea

Answer: Prokaryotic

Q: Bacteria

Answer: large cohort of prokaryotic microorganisms

Q: Coccus

Answer: Round/spherical (streptococcus)

Q: Bacillus

Answer: Rod (e coli)

Q: Vibrio

Answer: Curved rod

Q: Spirillum

Answer: Spiral/corkscrew

Q: Eukarya

Answer: presence of a membrane-bound nuclear region within the cell

Q: Animalia

Answer: multicellular eukaryotic organisms, heterotrophic, ability to move

Q: Heterotrophic

Answer: incapable of producing their own energy

Q: Plantae

Answer: multicellular, can obtain energy from photosynthesis

Q: Fungi

Answer: multicellular or unicellular, heterotrophic, presence of chitin in cell walls, molds, mushrooms, yeast

Q: Protista

Answer: Unicellular, form as colonies, colonies do not form tissue layers and retain the unicellular classification, amoeba, algae, mold

Q: Viruses

Answer: Not considered prokaryotic or eukaryotic, must replicate with host, no metabolism, not cellular, contain a capsid: membrane-like structure that contains genetic material

Q: Cell membrane

Answer: Encloses the main body of the cell, permeable barrier surrounding the cytoplasmic space of a cell

Q: Cell membrane may also be referred to as

Answer: Plasma membrane or the cytoplasmic membrane

Q: Semi-permeable

Answer: allows certain substances to pass through while excluding others, barrier to the outside environment while preventing the intracellular components from being lost

Q: Bilayer (cell membrane)

Answer: Composed for amphipathic phospholipids (water loving heads and water hating tails), tails face inward

Q: Cell membrane has a high level of

Answer: fluidity, lipids can move freely between the two layers, slower at lower temps and faster at high temps

Q: Sterol lipids

Answer: In eukaryotic membrane composition

Q: Cell wall

Answer: Found in bacteria, plants, fungi, and algae and help form the shape of the cell, provide protection

Q: Combination of the cell membrane and the outer membrane are referred to as the

Answer: Cell envelope

Q: Cytoplasm

Answer: Open volume within a cell, comprised mostly of water with dissolved substances

Q: Organelles

Answer: membrane-encolosed structures that perform specific functions

Q: Nucleus

Answer: command center of cell

Q: Nucleolus

Answer: site of ribosome synthesis

Q: Ribosomes

Answer: organelles responsible for protein synthesis, located in the cytoplasm or prokaryotic cells and attached to the ER in eukaryotic cells

Q: Endoplasmic Reticulum

Answer: Series of membrane-enclosed sacs and lumen, smooth ER and rough ER

Q: Golgi complex

Answer: interconnected saves located between the nucleus and cytoplasmic membrane, distribution center of the cell

Q: Lysosomes

Answer: membrane-enclosed organelles that contain enzymes that can degrade unwanted cellular debris, waste disposal system

Q: Mitochondira

Answer: Double membrane-enclosed organelles responsible for generating ATP, power house of cell

Q: Chloroplasts

Answer: double membrane-enclosed organelles specific to algae and plants, animal cells to not contain chloroplasts, site of photosynthesis