how are metazoans ands some unicellular eukaryotes species defined?
by reproductive isolation.
For microbes including prokaryotes, species definition?
often defined by sequence identity often using 16s RNA. clinicians don’t live by this since often two strains with 99% similarity will have different envelope proteins which causes different disease
what is horizontal gene transfer?
DNA can transfer to different microbes which make species differentiation tough.
ford doolittle, what he do
figured out horizontal gene transfer
what is a species scape?
shows size of organisms relative to amount of organisms. Problem with the one she showed us is is it lacks microbes.
t or f, in 1998 how many predicted microbes where there?
5 ^ 30
true or false, most probable number (MPN) is a way to count dead bacteria in a sample.
false, it counts live bacteria similarly to CFU.
to count dead we use optical density.
real time PCR is a way to measure dead, living, respiratory microbe (anything)
species identification: sample, culture, and make single isolates and identifiction using known techniques
i. e. you culture bacteria, pick a single isolate, and gram stain it, etc.
- con is it must be culturable (very view are)
what is shotgun cloning?
what do we mean by universal primers in shotgun cloning
we most often use 16s rRNA
what are loop regions and stem regions of 16s rRNA?
what are the main reasons 16s rRNA a good universal primer?
when aligning sequences how do we know loop regions vs stem regions?
this alignment can only be truly done once you know the general structure of the RNA theyre derived from
AAAUCCGU
AUCUCCGG
SLL S SSSL
t or f, by aligning sequences you can build a phylogenetic tree
true
who is paul herbert?
he wants to sequence every living thing in the world. He uses two molecular clocks to do this (one is 16s rRNA)
We can also identify microbes (other than culture and using sequencing) by using specific molecular probes in situ.. explain this
We can also identify microbes (other than culture, using sequencing, and molecular probes) by using a denature gel and then electrophoresis… explain this
what is DGGE and TGGE
DGGE -> denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis
TGGE –> temperature graident gel elctrophoresis
What is FAME?
another way to identify bacteria species
stands for fatty acid methyl ester
Why is FAME great for pharmaceutical companies?
they have huge libraries to compare too. Also each sample is very cheap. FAME is not used for local microbiologists.
FAME and DGGE can both look at nanoparticles..
t or f?
what are biology plates?
evaluates respiration of bacteria.
what is the process of biology plates
What is ElISA?
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Uses an antigen/antibody system. fluorescent dye is coupled with these and indicate a positive rxn