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Glossary
Below we have provided a glossary list from A to Z. Please feel free to browse them for your reference. Just click on the alphabetical links below. From Acremonium to Zygosporium.

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A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

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Actinomycetes A heterogeneous group of morphologically diverse but usually filamentous gram-positive bacteria. They are typically saprobes (in soil) but there are a few pathogenic species that infect humans, animals and plants (e.g., Nocardia, Streptomyces).

Aerobic Bacteria – Solely depends on aerobic respiration (free oxygen) and cannot grow in the absence of oxygen to generate ATP.

AIHA – American Industrial Hygiene Association

Ambient Air – Outdoor air surrounding an object.

Amerospores – Small clear (hyaline) spores that range in size from 3-5 um. When noted microscopically with such methods as spore traps, amerospores cannot be differentiated from Aspergillus/Penicillium conidia or from a myriad of other fungal spore types.

Amplification – Growing microorganisms to greater numbers on laboratory agar medium or on inanimate materials.

Anaerobic Bacteria – Microorganisms that are unable to use oxygen to grow and may even be harmed or killed by molecular oxygen.

Antibiotic – A substance produced by microorganisms which inhibits or kills another living microorganism; it refers to substances produced by various species of mould and Actinomycetes.

Antigen – A foreign substance when introduces into the tissues of a vertebrate animal stimulates the production of an antibody.

Antibody – An immunoglobulin (protein) produced by lymphocytes (animal host) in response to a foreign antigen (e.g. bacteria, viruses, or other antigenic substance).

Ascomycota – The largest group of fungi characterized by the formation of asci.

Ascospore – A sexual spore produced in a sac-like structure called an ascus and is characteristic of the phylum Ascomycota.

Asthma – A respiratory disorder of the bronchial tubes or airways; symptoms associated with obstructive airflow characterized by recurring attacks of dyspnea (shortness of breath), wheezing, cough, and tightening of chest. Episodes may be precipitated by inhalation of allergens (e.g. mould) or pollutants (e.g. smoke), infection, cold air, vigorous exercise, or emotional stress.

 

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Bacillus A common rod-shaped bacterial cellular morphology (e.g. Bacillus anthracis – anthrax).

Bacteria – Microscopically single-celled microorganisms of the class Schizomycetes. The genera vary morphologically, being spherical (coccus), rod-shaped (bacilli), spiral (spirochetes) or comma-shaped (vibrios). The bacteria may be differentiated by the gram stain method (gram-positive or gram-negative).

Basidiomycota – A group fungi characterized by the formation of basidia.

Basidiospore – A type of sexual spore formed externally on a basidium and is characteristic of the phylum Basidiomycota (e.g., mushrooms, smuts, rusts).

Bioaerosol – An airborne organic contaminant that is either generated by or is itself a living organism; examples of bioaerosols are fungi, bacteria, pollen.

 

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Coccus A common spherical shaped bacterial cellular morphology.

Conidia – Specialized asexual spore generally formed at the apex or side of a specialized sporogenous cell. Conidia are the asexual spores of the Ascomycota and the Basidiomycota.

 

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Dematiaceous Presence of dark pigmentation within the hyphae or the spores of fungi.

Dust Mite –
Microscopic arachnid; ALLERGEN, allergenic proteins derived from dust mites.

 

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EMLAP Environmental Microbiology Laboratory Accreditation Program, is designed specially for laboratories involved in analyzing microbiological samples to evaluate exposures in a variety of workplaces.

EMPAT – Environmental Microbiology Proficiency Analytical Testing Program designed by AIHA to evaluate environmental laboratories that isolate and identify microorganisms.

Endotoxin – Substance containing lipopolysaccharide complexes found in the cell wall of bacteria; principally gram-negative bacteria; believed to play important role in many complications of sepsis such as toxic shock syndrome, DIC, and thrombocytopenia.

Eukaryotic

An organism whose cells possess true nuclei with a level of cellular organization more complex than that of a prokaryotic organism.

 

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Fungi Filamentous moulds that produce fluffy, cottony, wooly or powdery colonies above the culture medium.

 

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Genus Comprises different species that have several important features in common but differ sufficiently to still maintain their status as individual species.

Gram-Negative Bacteria – Stain a pink to red color due to difference in constituents of bacterial cell walls.

Gram-Positive Bacteria – Stain a blue to purple color due to difference in constituents of bacterial cell walls.

 

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HEPA Filter High-Efficiency-Particulate-Air Filter; designed to remove organisms larger than 0.3 µm from isolation rooms, operating rooms, and biological safety cabinets.

HVAC – Heating, Ventilation, Air Conditioning Unit

Hyaline – Colorless, transparent; e.g., conidia/spore as it relates to moulds.

Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis – (allergic alveolitis) an inflammatory form of interstitial pneumonia that results from an immunologic reaction in hypersensitive individuals. The allergic reaction may be provoked by a variety of microorganisms such as moulds and bacteria.

Hyphae – Tube like projections on basic structural units of mold.

 

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Legionnaire’s DiseaseFebrile and acute bacterial pneumonia with numerous clinical presentations chiefly caused by the Legionella pneumophila.

 

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Moulds (Fungi) that produce cottony, wooly, fluffy, powdery aerial growths above the culture medium.

Mycotoxins – Low-molecular-weight secondary metabolic products of filamentous fungi that may affect exposed persons in a variety of ways.

 

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Nosocomial Hospital-acquired infections

 

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Photosynthesis Process by which green plants and certain other organisms use energy of light to convert carbon dioxide and water into simple sugar glucose.

Prokaryotic – Organism whose cells do not possess true nucleus.

 

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Relative HumidityRH, Ratio of the amount of water in the air at a given temperature to the maximum amount it could hold at that temperature; expressed as a percentage.

 

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SaprophyticMicroorganisms that obtain nutrition from dead organic matter and usually do not cause disease in the animal host.

Slime Moulds – Non-phototrophic eukaryotic microbes that have similarity to both fungi and protozoa. Slime moulds live primarily on decaying plant matter such as leaf litter, logs and soil.

Species – Collection of microbial strains that share many common physiological and genetic features and as a group differ notably from other species.

Spore – Small, usually single-celled reproductive body that is highly resistant to dehydration and heat and is capable of growing into a new organism, produced especially by certain bacteria, fungi, algae and nonflowering plants.

 

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Taxonomy Science of classification.

 

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VirusComposed of nucleic acid genome surrounded by a protein coat; strict intracellular parasites, reproducing or replicating only within a host cell.

VOC – Volatile Organic Compounds; chemicals containing carbon are called organic. Volatile means they evaporate or get into the air easily which makes them more likely to be inhaled. VOCs are produced by many species of bacteria and fungi and are often accompanied by a foul odor.

 

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Yeasts unicellular organisms that reproduce by blastoconidia formation (budding) and sexually by the production of ascospores or basidiospores; produce moist, creamy, opaque or pasty colonies on agar media.

 

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Zygomycetes A class of fungi that reproduce sexually by fusion of gametangia to form zygospores.

Zygospores – Latent spores, contained in a zygosporangium that results from the fusion of two gametangia.

 

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