Prescott's Microbiology
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781259281594
Author: Joanne Willey, Linda Sherwood Adjunt Professor Lecturer, Christopher J. Woolverton Professor
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 6.4, Problem 1MI
Why is a lysogen considered a new or different strain of a given bacterial species?
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Chapter 6 Solutions
Prescott's Microbiology
Ch. 6.2 - MICRO INQUIRY Which capsids are icosahedral? Which...Ch. 6.2 - MICRO INQUIRY Are the capsomers at the vertices of...Ch. 6.2 - MICRO INQUIRY Why is T4 said to have binal...Ch. 6.2 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 1. How are viruses similar...Ch. 6.2 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 2. What is the difference...Ch. 6.2 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 3. Compare the structure of...Ch. 6.2 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 4. What is an envelope?...Ch. 6.2 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 5. All four nucleic acid...Ch. 6.2 - Retrieve, Infer, Apply 6. The RNA genomes of some...Ch. 6.3 - MICRO INQUIRY Which of these mechanisms involves...
Ch. 6.3 - MICRO INQUIRY Why do the empty capsids remain...Ch. 6.3 - Explain why the receptors that viruses have...Ch. 6.3 - What probably plays the most important role in...Ch. 6.3 - How do you think the complexity of the viral...Ch. 6.3 - In general, DNA viruses can be much more dependent...Ch. 6.3 - Consider the origin of viral envelopes and suggest...Ch. 6.3 - Why are the proteins involved in virion assembly...Ch. 6.4 - Why is a lysogen considered a new or different...Ch. 6.4 - Define the terms lysogeny, temperate phage,...Ch. 6.4 - What advantages might a phage gain by being...Ch. 6.4 - Describe lysogenic conversion and its...Ch. 6.4 - How does a latent infection differ from a chronic...Ch. 6.4 - What is a cytocidal infection? What is a...Ch. 6.4 - Define the following terms: tumor, neoplasia,...Ch. 6.4 - Distinguish the mechanism by which dsDNA viruses...Ch. 6.5 - Prob. 1MICh. 6.5 - Prob. 1RIACh. 6.5 - Given that viruses must be cultivated to make...Ch. 6.7 - What are viroids and why are they of great...Ch. 6.7 - How does a viroid differ from a virus? From a...Ch. 6.7 - What is a prion? In what way does a prion differ...Ch. 6.7 - Prob. 4RIACh. 6 - Many classification schemes are used to identify...Ch. 6 - The origin and evolution of viruses is...Ch. 6 - Consider the separate stages of an animal virus...Ch. 6 - Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a...Ch. 6 - Syn5 is a virus that infects photosynthetic...
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- Cytopathic effects (CPE) are visible changes in cells due to: A)viral infection B)mutations C)bacterial infections D)the cell's genes are being expressedarrow_forwardWhich of the statements is TRUE about conjugation? a) Plasmid DNA is transferred from a donor (F+) cell b) It may only be performed by competent cells c) DNA is always integrated into recipient chromosome d) It may be specialized or generalizedarrow_forwardTrue or false Oncogenes are gene that are normally not found in a cell and must be introduced into the DNA by some mechanism, such as a viral infection.arrow_forward
- Does bacterial transformation occur naturally?arrow_forwardChemical mutagens often cause oxidation or deamination of DNA bases. This can lead to cancer by causing: A) Activation of replication. B) Activation of transcription. C) Non Watson-Crick base pairing. OD) Changes to cytochrome P450 enzymes. OE) Activation of translation.arrow_forwardUsually, bacteria only make tryptophan when tryptophan is absent or available in low concentration. However, a particular bacterial mutation makes tryptophan all the time whether or not tryptophan is present. What could explain this phenotype? A) the terminator hairpin is unable to form B) the antiterminator hairpin is unable to form C) trpE is mutated D) trpD is mutated E) trpA is mutatedarrow_forward
- If a mutation occurs in the DNA of cells, the mutation will be passed onto the organism's offspring. A) Brain B) Sex Skin D) Somaticarrow_forwardCommon vectors used to transfer a piece of DNA into a cloning host are ________. A) artificial chromosomes B) bacteriophages C) All of the choices are correct D) viruses E) plasmidsarrow_forwardWhich of the following enzyme is responsible for making a DNA copy from RNA?a) Reverse transcriptaseb) DNA polymerasec) RNA polId) RNA polIIarrow_forward
- Which is used for cloning eukaryotic genes but not prokaryotic genes?a) Restriction enzymesb) DNA ligasec) Reverse transcriptased) Vectore) Selectable markerarrow_forwardIn terms of microbial pathogenicity, molecular Koch's postulates are a set of experimental criteria that show: A microbe is the aetiological agent of a disease A gene encodes a product that contributes to disease A gene encodes a product that contributes to immunity to a disease A mutation does not contribute to diseasearrow_forwardA cell is produced with a mutation that causes it produce a completely defective TFIIH. What does this likely mean for the fate of the cell? A) The cell's copied DNA may contain more errors. B) the cell cannot make RNA C) Producing RNAs will be slower because the polymerase will fall off the DNA more often. D) The cell cannot replicate its DNAarrow_forward
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