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O

  • objective lenses on a light microscope, the lenses closest to the specimen, typically located at the ends of turrets
  • obligate aerobe organism that requires oxygen for growth
  • obligate anaerobe organism that dies in the presence of oxygen
  • obligate intracellular pathogen microorganism that cannot synthesize its own ATP and, therefore, must rely on a host cell for energy; behaves like a parasite when inside a host cell, but is metabolically inactive outside of a host cell
  • observational study a type of scientific study that involves measurement of study subjects on variables hypothesized to be associated with the outcome of interest, but without any manipulation of the subjects
  • ocular lens on a microscope, the lens closest to the eye (also called an eyepiece)
  • oil immersion lens a special objective lens on a microscope designed to be used with immersion oil to improve resolution
  • Okazaki fragment short fragment of DNA made during lagging strand synthesis
  • oligopeptide peptide having up to approximately 20 amino acids
  • oligotroph organism capable of living in low-nutrient environments
  • opacity the property of absorbing or blocking light
  • operator DNA sequence located between the promoter region and the first coding gene to which a repressor protein can bind
  • operon a group of genes with related functions often found clustered together within the prokaryotic chromosome and transcribed under the control of a single promoter and operator repression sequence
  • ophthalmia neonatorum inflammation of the conjunctiva in newborns caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae transmitted during childbirth
  • opisthotonos characteristic symptom of tetanus that results in uncontrolled muscular spasms and backward arching of the neck and spine
  • opportunistic pathogen microorganism that can cause disease in individuals with compromised host defenses
  • opsonin any molecule that binds to and coats the outside of a pathogen, identifying it for destruction by phagocytes (examples include antibodies and the complement proteins C3b and C4b)
  • opsonization process of coating a pathogen with a chemical substance (an opsonin) that allows phagocytic cells to recognize, engulf, and destroy the pathogen more easily
  • optimum growth pH the pH at which an organism grows best
  • optimum growth temperature the temperature at which a microorganism’s growth rate is highest
  • optimum oxygen concentration the ideal concentration of oxygen for a particular microorganism
  • oral herpes an infection caused by herpes simplex virus that results in cold sores, most commonly on and around the lips
  • oral thrush Candida infection of the mouth
  • orchitis inflammation of one or both of the testes
  • organic molecule composed primarily of carbon; typically contains at least one carbon atom bound to one or more hydrogen atoms
  • organotroph chemotroph that uses organic molecules as its electron source; also known as chemoheterotroph
  • origin of replication specific nucleotide sequence where replication begins
  • oropharynx area where air entering mouth enters the pharynx
  • osmosis diffusion of water across a semipermeable membrane
  • osmotic pressure the force or pressure generated by water diffusing across a semipermeable membrane, driven by differences in solute concentration across the membrane
  • osteomyelitis inflammation of bone tissue
  • otitis externa an infection of the external ear canal, most commonly caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa ; often called swimmer’s ear
  • otitis inflammation of the ear
  • otitis media with effusion accumulation of fluid inside the middle ear with or without infection
  • Ouchterlony assay test in which antigen and antisera are added to neighboring wells in an agar gel, allowing visualization of precipitin arcs
  • outer membrane a phospholipid bilayer external to the peptidoglycan layer found in gram-negative cell walls
  • oxazolidinones class of synthetic protein synthesis inhibitors that interfere with formation of the initiation complex for translation and prevent translocation of the growing protein from the ribosomal A site to the P site
  • oxidation reaction chemical reaction that removes electrons (often as part of H atoms) from donor molecules, leaving them oxidized
  • oxidative phosphorylation mechanism for making ATP that uses the potential energy stored within an electrochemical gradient to add P i to ADP
  • oxygenic photosynthesis type of photosynthesis found in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, and in which H 2 O is used as the electron donor to replace an electron lost by a reaction center pigment, resulting in oxygen as a byproduct

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Source:  OpenStax, Microbiology. OpenStax CNX. Nov 01, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12087/1.4
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