20.
Match the following microscopic techniques with their respective functions

Microscopic technique Functions
1. Phase contrast microscopy
2. Fluorescent microscopy
3. Transmission electron microscopy
4. Bright field microscopy
5. Dark field microscopy
6. Scanning electron microscopy
a. View gram / Lumen microbial cells
b. View nano-sized details of section through interior of bacteria
c. View internal structure of unstained living cells
d. View antibody tagged cells
e. View translucent microbes
f. View nano-sized details of exterior of bacteria

Options:

  • (A) 1-c; 2-d; 3-b; 4-a; 5-e; 6-f
  • (B) 1-d; 2-c; 3-a; 4-b; 5-e; 6-f
  • (C) 1-c; 2-d; 3-a; 4-b; 5-f; 6-f
  • (D) None of these

    Correct Answer: (A) 1-c; 2-d; 3-b; 4-a; 5-e; 6-f

    Option A perfectly matches each microscopic technique to its primary function for microbial visualization, as phase contrast reveals live cell internals, fluorescence detects tagged antibodies, TEM images bacterial interiors at nanoscale, bright field suits stained microbes, dark field highlights translucent specimens, and SEM details exteriors.

    Technique Breakdown

    1. Phase contrast microscopy (c. View internal structure of unstained living cells)
    This converts phase shifts from refractive index differences into amplitude contrasts, enabling visualization of organelles and dynamics in live, unstained microbes without dyes.

    2. Fluorescent microscopy (d. View antibody tagged cells)
    Fluorophores on antibodies or probes emit light at specific wavelengths when excited, allowing precise detection of tagged cellular components like proteins in microbes.

    3. Transmission electron microscopy (b. View nano-sized details of section through interior of bacteria)
    Electrons transmit through ultrathin sections, revealing internal ultrastructure at ~0.1 nm resolution for bacterial organelles and viruses.

    4. Bright field microscopy (a. View gram / Lumen microbial cells)
    Standard light passes through stained samples (e.g., Gram stain), providing high contrast for bacterial morphology and Gram reactions in routine exams.

    5. Dark field microscopy (e. View translucent microbes)
    Oblique illumination scatters light from specimen edges against a dark background, making unstained, low-contrast microbes like spirochetes visible.

    6. Scanning electron microscopy (f. View nano-sized details of exterior of bacteria)
    Electron beam scans surfaces, detecting secondary/backscattered electrons for 3D topography at ~10 nm resolution on bacterial exteriors.

    Option Analysis

    Option (A): Correct—all pairings align with standard functions.
    Option (B): Wrong—swaps phase contrast (not for tags) and TEM (not for Gram).
    Option (C): Wrong—misassigns TEM to Gram and duplicates SEM (f).
    Option (D): Incorrect, as A is valid.

    Microscopy Techniques in Microbiology

    Microscopic techniques matching functions is key for GATE Life Sciences, distinguishing phase contrast for live cells from fluorescence for tagged antibodies and electron methods for nanoscale bacteria details. This MCQ tests core principles in microbial visualization.

    Functions Comparison Table

    Technique Key Function Resolution Sample Type GATE Relevance
    Phase Contrast Internal unstained living cells  0.2 μm Live microbes Live dynamics
    Fluorescent Microscopy Antibody tagged cells  0.2 μm Fluorescent labels Protein localization
    TEM Bacterial interior sections  0.1 nm Ultrathin sections Ultrastructure
    Bright Field Gram/Lumen stained cells  0.2 μm Stained microbes Routine identification
    Dark Field Translucent microbes  0.2 μm Unstained live Spirochetes, low contrast
    SEM Bacterial exterior details  10 nm Coated surfaces Surface morphology

    Exam Applications

    Bright field dominates Gram staining, while phase contrast and dark field excel for live microbes; electron microscopy unlocks nano-details unmatched by light methods. Master these for microbiology MCQs.

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