Microbes, Human Welfare and Disease Spontaneous Generation

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Presentation transcript:

Microbes, Human Welfare and Disease Spontaneous Generation Welcome to Jeopardy! Introduction Microbes, Human Welfare and Disease Types of Microbes Spontaneous Generation Germ Theory of Disease Drugs $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 Final Round Question

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $100 Question Viruses differ from bacteria in that a. Viruses do not have any nucleic acid b. Viruses cause disease c. Viruses contain DNA and RNA simultaneously d. Viruses are not composed of cells

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $100 Question Viruses differ from bacteria in that a. Viruses do not have any nucleic acid b. Viruses cause disease c. Viruses contain DNA and RNA simultaneously d. Viruses are not composed of cells ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $200 Question Identify this microbe: A. Algae B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Protozoa

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $200 Question Identify this microbe: A. Algae B. Protozoa C. Archaea D. Fungi ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $300 Question What are the three Domains of Life? Indicate all that apply. A. Eukaryota B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Viruses E. Bacteria F. Helminths

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $300 Question What are the three Domains of Life? Indicate all that apply. A. Eukaryota B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Viruses E. Bacteria F. Helminths ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $400 Question Which microbe contains peptidoglycan in their cell walls? A. Plants B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Viruses E. Bacteria F. Helminths

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $400 Question Which microbe contains peptidoglycan in their cell walls? A. Plants B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Viruses E. Bacteria F. Helminths ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $500 Question Which microbes are studied in a mycology course? A. Plants B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Viruses E. Bacteria F. Helminths

Topic 1: Types of Microbes $500 Question Which microbes are studied in a mycology course? A. Plants B. Fungi C. Archaea D. Viruses E. Bacteria F. Helminths ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $100 Question Anton van Leeuwenhoek performed experiments to disprove the Theory of Spontaneous Generation. A. True B. False

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $100 Question Anton van Leeuwenhoek performed experiments to disprove the Theory of Spontaneous Generation. A. True B. False Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $200 Question In the past, people believed that maggots arose from rotting meat. A. True B. False

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $200 Question In the past, people believed that maggots arose from rotting meat. A. True B. False Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $300 Question Who performed the following experiment?

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $300 Question Who performed the following experiment? ANSWER: Francesco Redi BACK TO GAME

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $400 Question Who performed the following experiment?

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $400 Question Who performed the following experiment? ANSWER: Louis Pasteur BACK TO GAME

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $500 Question Where are the microbes located in the following?

Topic 2: Spontaneous Generation $500 Question Where are the microbes located in the following? ANSWER: A. BACK TO GAME

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $100 Question Which of Pasteur’s experiments changed the way people viewed microbes-from insignificant creatures to living organisms that could seriously affect other living organisms? A. Boiling broth solutions B. Developing the rabies vaccine C. Developing aseptic techniques D. Wine disease

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $100 Question Which of Pasteur’s experiments changed the way people viewed microbes-from insignificant creatures to living organisms that could seriously affect other living organisms? A. Boiling broth solutions B. Developing the rabies vaccine C. Developing aseptic techniques D. Wine disease ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $200 Question Who developed the following:

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $200 Question Who developed the following: ANSWER: Robert Koch BACK TO GAME

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $300 Question What is happening in step 2a?

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $300 Question What is happening in step 2a? Answer: Pure cultures with only one species of bacteria are being grown. BACK TO GAME

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $400 Question Who developed the first vaccine against small pox using cow pox? A. Carl Woese B. Alexander Fleming C. Louis Pasteur D. Edward Jenner

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $400 Question Who developed the first vaccine against small pox using cow pox? A. Carl Woese B. Alexander Fleming C. Louis Pasteur D. Edward Jenner Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $500 Question Who began using phenol to prevent contamination during surgery? A. Paul Erlich B. Robert Hooke C. Joseph Lister D. Robert Koch

Topic 3: Germ Theory of Disease $500 Question Who began using phenol to prevent contamination during surgery? A. Paul Erlich B. Rober Hooke C. Joseph Lister D. Robert Koch ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 4: Drugs $100 Question Who developed the first synthetic drug? A. Paul Ehrlich B. Robert Hooke C. Joseph Lister D. Robert Koch

Topic 4: Drugs $100 Question Who developed the first synthetic drug? A. Paul Ehrlich B. Robert Hooke C. Joseph Lister D. Robert Koch Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 4: Drugs $200 Question What was the name of this first synthetic drug and what disease did it treat? A. Sulfonamide-Pneumonia B. Salvarsan-Syphilus C. Joseph Lister-MRSA D. Semmelweis-Sepsis

Topic 4: Drugs $200 Question What was the name of this first synthetic drug and what disease did it treat? A. Sulfonamide-Pneumonia B. Salvarsan-Syphilus C. Joseph Lister-MRSA D. Semmelweis-Sepsis Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 4: Drugs $300 Question Who discovered penicillin? A. Paul Ehrlich B. Louis Pasteur C. Joseph Lister D. Alexander Fleming

Topic 4: Drugs $300 Question Who discovered penicillin? A. Paul Ehrlich B. Louis Pasteur C. Joseph Lister D. Alexander Fleming ANSWER BACK TO GAME

Topic 4: Drugs $400 Question In the following picture, A. is … A. HIV B. Protozoa C. Mold D. Helminths

Topic 4: Drugs $400 Question In the following picture, A. is … A. HIV B. Protozoa C. Mold D. Helminths Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 4: Drugs $500 Question Why is it so difficult to target viruses with antimicrobial drugs? A. Antibiotics only come from bacteria and fungi B. Antivirals are narrow spectrum C. Viral cells are too similar to human cells D. Viruses are inside of the human host cells

Topic 4: Drugs $500 Question Why is it so difficult to target viruses with antimicrobial drugs? A. Antibiotics only come from bacteria and fungi B. Antivirals are narrow spectrum C. Viral cells are too similar to human cells D. Viruses are inside of the human host cells Answer BACK TO GAME

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $100 Question Bacteria are essential for the existence of all life on Earth. What is an essential function performed by bacteria for life to continue on Earth?

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $100 Question Bacteria are essential for the existence of all life on Earth. What is an essential function performed by bacteria for life to continue on Earth? ANSWER: Bacteria decompose organic material and recycle elements into forms living organisms can use BACK TO GAME

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $200 Question Which one of the following describes ‘bioremediation’.   A) Preventing contamination B) Using Bacillus thuringiensis to control insects C) Inserting DNA into humans using viruses D) Using microbes to restore stability to disturbed or polluted environments E) None of the above

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $200 Question Which one of the following describes ‘bioremediation’.  ANSWER A) Preventing contamination B) Using Bacillus thuringiensis to control insects C) Inserting DNA into humans using viruses D) Using microbes to restore stability to disturbed or polluted environments E) None of the above BACK TO GAME

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $300 Question What are some examples of how the following are beneficial?

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $300 Question What are some examples of how the following are beneficial? ANSWER: Normal microbiota prevent the overgrowth of harmful microbes in our body, produce some vitamin Bs and K BACK TO GAME

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $400 Question What is the picture depicting?

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $400 Question What is the picture depicting? ANSWER: Biofilm BACK TO GAME

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $500 Question What emerging infectious organism is shown in this picture?

Topic 5: Microbes, Human Welfare,and Disease $500 Question What emerging infectious organism is shown in this picture? ANSWER: Ebola BACK TO GAME

Final Round Question In nature, many microbes live in communities that stick together. Examples are on pond rocks & on your teeth. They can clog water pipes and grow on medical implants such as catheters. They are very difficult to remove with antibiotics. What is this aggregation of microbes called?

Final Round Question Answer BIOFILM BACK TO GAME