Chapter 1 Introduction to Microbes
Across
- 2. Bacteria, Archaea, Protozoa,Fungi,Helminths, Algae, Viruses, Prions
- 4. Delivers the correct amino acids for a protein assembly and behaves almost like an enzyme
- 6. What is a type of fungi used in bread and alcohol production that makes use of microbes.
- 8. Microbes that cause disease
- 9. Small and includes Prions and Viruses
- 11. Describes the state of a protein when it's native state is disrupted through heat, acid, alcohol, and some disinfectants
- 12. The belief that living things arise only from other living things of the same kind
- 14. Smaller than prokaryotes, infectious proteins, little is known about them ie. mad cow, kuru, scrapie
- 18. Complex compounds found in cell membranes and as animal hormones
- 20. A major structural component of ribosomes
- 22. The first of observe cells under microscope
- 23. An energy storage molecule
- 24. Single-Celled or Multicellular and has a nucleus
- 25. Bigger than Acellular microorganisms and include Eukaryotes, Bacterium/Archaeon
- 26. Smaller than Prokaryotes, needs to infect cells to propagate, composed of a small about of hereditary material ie. Covid-19, Flu
- 27. This is a historical use of microbes to treat wounds and lesions
- 28. A product of photosynthesis
- 29. Pasteur Studied the role of microorganisms in fermentation, heavily involved in vaccine development and developed pasteurization
Down
- 1. Defines bacteria and archaea and has NO nucleus
- 3. Important storage lipid and is composed of a glycerol bound to three fatty acids
- 5. Found in the cell walls of bacteria that contribute to their disease-causing potential like in TB and leprosy (mycolic acid)
- 7. a specialized area of biology that deals with mostly living things too small seen without magnification
- 8. Polymers composed of 50 amino acid monomers at the minimum
- 10. Polymers composed of the monomers glycerol and fatty acids
- 13. State The functional three-dimensional form of a protein
- 15. This use of microbes clean up human-created contamination
- 16. What reproduces rapidly, grown quickly in large populations, cannot be seen directly, viewed through microscopes and are analyzed through measures of biochemistry?
- 17. Small simple sugars that makeup bigger ones (polysaccharides)
- 19. Provides the info for the order and type of amino acids in a protein
- 21. Large polymers composed of smaller units called monomers