Jawetz Microbiology Mcq Apr 2026
A) PYR positive – fibrinogen binding protein B) Optochin resistant – pneumolysin C) Bacitracin sensitive – M protein D) Hippurate hydrolysis – CAMP factor E) Lancefield group D antigen – cytolysin Answer: A – The organism is Enterococcus faecalis (bile-esculin +, 6.5% NaCl +). Among enterococci, E. faecalis is PYR positive (distinguishes from E. faecium sometimes). Key virulence for endocarditis includes aggregation substance and gelatinase. Option A’s “fibrinogen binding protein” refers to microbial surface component recognizing adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs). CAMP factor is Strep. agalactiae . Hippurate hydrolysis is S. agalactiae . 4. Anaerobes – Deep Concept A diabetic foot ulcer culture grows foul-smelling, gram-negative bacilli, resistant to kanamycin and vancomycin, but sensitive to metronidazole. Which enzyme system is directly inhibited by metronidazole in this organism?
A) HSV-1 – trigeminal ganglia – sunlight/UV B) VZV – dorsal root ganglia – emotional stress C) EBV – B lymphocytes – plasmapheresis D) CMV – salivary gland endothelial cells – trauma E) HHV-6 – microglia – rituximab therapy Answer: A – HSV-1 reactivation is classically triggered by UV light, fever, stress. VZV reactivation (shingles) often has no clear trigger but can be stress/age-related; sunlight is not classic. EBV latency in B cells; reactivation more with immunosuppression. CMV latency in monocytes; plasmapheresis not a trigger. HHV-6 in microglia; reactivation post-transplant, not rituximab specifically. 8. Spirochetes – Diagnostic Pitfall A patient with a painless genital ulcer and inguinal lymphadenopathy has a darkfield microscopy positive for spirochetes. However, the RPR is negative. Which of the following best explains this seronegative primary syphilis? jawetz microbiology mcq
A) Prozone phenomenon due to high antibody titer B) Infection with Treponema pallidum subspecies endemicum C) Simultaneous HIV infection causing B-cell dysfunction D) Early chancre (less than 1-2 weeks duration) E) Prior treatment with azithromycin Answer: D – RPR (nontreponemal) becomes positive 1–2 weeks after chancre appears. Very early primary syphilis can be RPR-negative but darkfield-positive. Prozone (A) occurs with high antibody titers causing false negative in undiluted serum, but usually in secondary syphilis. HIV (C) can cause false negatives or delayed seroreactivity, but the classic teaching is “too early.” 9. Mycobacteria – Cell Wall Function A patient with cavitary lung disease has an acid-fast bacillus that fails to grow on Lowenstein-Jensen medium at 37°C but grows rapidly at 30°C on Middlebrook 7H11. Which cell wall component accounts for this temperature restriction, and what is the organism? A) PYR positive – fibrinogen binding protein B)