Microbe Mission B/C
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
1a. What are obligate intracellular parasites?
1b. Name two cellular examples.
1c. For the two examples, describe how they enter a host cell.
1b. Name two cellular examples.
1c. For the two examples, describe how they enter a host cell.
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
yang573 wrote:1a. What are obligate intracellular parasites?
1b. Name two cellular examples.
1c. For the two examples, describe how they enter a host cell.
1a. Obligate intracellular parasites are microbes that can not reproduce outside of a host cell 1b. I believe rickettsia and chlymidia 1c. Rickettsia are arthropod borne and chlamydia is sexually transmitted?
aeshs ‘22
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
For 1c, I was looking for how the bacteria enter a host cell. Specifically Rickettsia and Chlamydia induce phagocytosis but avoid destruction within the cell.The48thYoshi wrote:1a. Obligate intracellular parasites are microbes that can not reproduce outside of a host cell 1b. I believe rickettsia and chlymidia 1c. Rickettsia are arthropod borne and chlamydia is sexually transmitted?
The48thYoshi wrote:What is the disease mechanism of Dutch Elm
The two pathogenic species of [i]Ophiostoma[/i] germinate in the xylem and steal nutrients from the host tree.
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
yang573 wrote:For 1c, I was looking for how the bacteria enter a host cell. Specifically Rickettsia and Chlamydia induce phagocytosis but avoid destruction within the cell.The48thYoshi wrote:1a. Obligate intracellular parasites are microbes that can not reproduce outside of a host cell 1b. I believe rickettsia and chlymidia 1c. Rickettsia are arthropod borne and chlamydia is sexually transmitted?The48thYoshi wrote:What is the disease mechanism of Dutch ElmThe two pathogenic species of [i]Ophiostoma[/i] germinate in the xylem and steal nutrients from the host tree.
For my question, I has looking for
The fungus resides in the xylem and the tree kills itself when it blocks its own xylem tissue to prevent the fungus from spreading
aeshs ‘22
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
I'll jump in: what are five specific (think molecular) adaptations of hyperthermophilic archaea?
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
I did have to Google some of this but oh well, the more you know, the more you know!allopathie wrote:I'll jump in: what are five specific (think molecular) adaptations of hyperthermophilic archaea?
1. Heat-stable enzymes (eg. polymerases)
2. High levels of saturated FAs in membrane
3. Ether instead of ester linkages
4. Many HSPs
5. Tetraether monolayers Okay, I had to search a lot of this up... archaea are hard...
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EMORY UNIVERSITY '22
SONT 2017 5th Place Medalist [Microbe Mission]
"One little Sciolyer left all alone,
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Congratulations to WW-P South/Grover for winning 2nd/1st place at NJ States!
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
New question, I guess:whythelongface wrote:I did have to Google some of this but oh well, the more you know, the more you know!allopathie wrote:I'll jump in: what are five specific (think molecular) adaptations of hyperthermophilic archaea?
1. Heat-stable enzymes (eg. polymerases)
2. High levels of saturated FAs in membrane
3. Ether instead of ester linkages
4. Many HSPs
5. Tetraether monolayers Okay, I had to search a lot of this up... archaea are hard...
list all of the different types of RNA
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
NeilMehta wrote: New question, I guess:
list all of the different types of RNA
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA), Messenger RNA (mRNA), tranfer RNA (tRNA).
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) should also be included, but it's kind of moot.
WEST WINDSOR-PLAINSBORO HIGH SCHOOL SOUTH '18
EMORY UNIVERSITY '22
SONT 2017 5th Place Medalist [Microbe Mission]
"One little Sciolyer left all alone,
He went out and hanged himself and then there were none."
Congratulations to WW-P South/Grover for winning 2nd/1st place at NJ States!
EMORY UNIVERSITY '22
SONT 2017 5th Place Medalist [Microbe Mission]
"One little Sciolyer left all alone,
He went out and hanged himself and then there were none."
Congratulations to WW-P South/Grover for winning 2nd/1st place at NJ States!
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Re: Microbe Mission B/C
Good point. There's really a lot of different RNA types though: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RNAswhythelongface wrote:Small interfering RNA (siRNA) should also be included, but it's kind of moot.