BIOL. 2421

Fall 2015 STUDY GUIDE FOR QUIZZES AND LAB PRACTICALS

EXERCISES

MEDIA & STERILIZATION

broths vs. agar media - types

agar

autoclave procedure and parameters for sterilization

complex vs. synthetic media

ASEPTIC TRANSFER TECHNIQUES

instruments used for transfer

aseptic technique

streak technique and why done that way

BACTERIAL COLONY MORPHOLOGY

major characteristics of colonies

DILUTION TECHNIQUES & PIPETTING

solving dilution problems

use (and reading) of the pipette

ISOLATION OF AN ANTIBIOTIC PRODUCER FORM SOIL

How do you go about isolating an antibiotic producer? What do you look for?

What microorganisms commonly produce antibiotics?

MICROSCOPE

parts and functions

features: parfocal lens alignment

resolution and resolving power

refraction, refractive index, and oil immersion

magnification

3 types of light microscopy

MAKING SMEARS FOR STAIN PREPARATION

making a smear

simple vs. differential stain

types of dyes - acidic vs. basic - why they bind to the cell

STANDARD PLATE COUNTS (Isolation from a sponge)

determination of bacterial counts in a specimen

procedure for types of isolation techniquesBpours, spreads, and streak plates

pros and cons of each technique

EMB uses

interpretation of lactose fermenters and WHY

CNA BLOOD AGAR types of hemolysis (see throat exercise)

visualization of different hemolytic reactions

GRAM STAIN

reagents & procedure

interpretation of reaction, shape, and arrangement

why incorrect results


IDENTIFICATION OF STAPH

media for Staph—SM110, hemolysis, coagulase, oxidase, catalase, DNAse, OF-glucose, MSA

Intepretation of above tests…+ and – results

types of hemolytic reactions

testing for Staph – tests used, how read

What test results are expected with the pathogenic Staph aureus species?

ANAEROBES

ways to culture according to oxygen needs

candle jar vs. GasPak/anaerobic container

thioglycollate broth

classification of microbes according to oxygen needs

O-F GLUCOSE

purpose of test

indicator

interpretation: oxidative, fermentative, inert

SPORE STAIN

reagents & interpretation

example of a spore former

ACID-FAST STAIN

reagents & interpretation of reaction

example of an acid-fast bacterium

CAPSULE STAIN interpretation

MOTILITY

flagella stain interpretation

example of flagellation types

TTC motility media how to ID motility, indicator in medium

hanging drop true vs. false motility (Brownian movement)

how performed

BACTERIAL NUMBERS

Purpose of and use of SpectropVis (computer spec)

use of a graph to quesstimate bacterial counts

calculation of number of cells in a sample

DIFFERENTIAL BIOCHEMICAL TESTS

reason for each test what is happening in the medium

+ and - test reaction pH indicator in medium

Reagent/ reagent, if needed end products being tested for


catalase test

oxidase test

lipid hydrolysis

starch hydrolysis

carbohydrates (sugar discs/phenol red broths)

mannitol salt

DNAse

coagulase

IMVIC tests: indole, methyl red, Voges-Proskauer, citrate

SIM: hydrogen sulfide, indole, motility

motility agar

ONPG (β- galactosidase)

urea hydrolysis

nitrate reduction

decarboxylase test

deaminase test

gelatin hydrolysis


API pros and cons

ANTIBIOTIC SUSCEPTIBILITY

zones of inhibition

determination of S, R, and I (with a chart)

ANTIMICROBIALS

interpreting effectiveness of antiseptics, disinfectants, etc.

YOGURT & MEAD PRODUCTION

microorganisms involved

the fermentation reaction

procedures

ORAL BIOFILMS

biofilms and importance to industry and medicine

differences in bacterial counts and types between plaque and toothbrush

purpose of each type of medium and how interpreted

URINE CULTURES

determination of UTI/numbers

how to take a proper specimen

media used to find bacteria in urine

DNA RESTRICTION & GEL ELECTROPHORESIS

overall summary of procedures

how endonucleases used

interpretation

uses

WATER ANALYSIS & PETRIFILMS

petrifilms and interpretation

determination of coliform presence and importance

YEASTS & MOLDS

structural differences between yeasts and molds - morphology

asexual vs. sexual spores for yeasts and molds

the major classes of fungi - differentiation and examples

representative groups of fungi as distinguished on microscope

PROTOZOA

representative groups of protozoa as distinguished on microscope

general features of protozoa as a whole and each class

BACTERIOPHAGES

the major points in technique and reasoning

lytic vs. lysogenic infection

determination of number of viruses/ml

HELMINTHS

representative groups of worms as distinguished on microscope

general features of worms in each phylum: platyhelminthes vs. nematodes

the 2 classes of platyhelminthes: cestodes vs. trematodes

ALGAE

representative groups of algae as distinguished on microscope

general features of algae as a whole and of each class


BIOL. 2421

Fall 2004 STUDY GUIDE FOR WEEKLY QUIZZES AND LAB PRACTICALS

ANTIGEN-ANTIBODY TESTS

Testing for pathogenic Staph aureus

Testing for beta-hemolytic Strep:

Mono-spot test: infectious mononucleosis antibodies: testing and interpretation