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History of Microbiology 1 What Is a Microbe? n 6 major groups studied by microbiologists ¨ Prokaryotes n Bacteria ¨ Eukaryotes n Algae n Archaea n Protists n Fungi ¨ Viruses Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 2 Microbes Shape Human History n Microbes ¨ Destroy affect food availability crops, but preserve food n Bread, wine, cheese n Chocolate! n Microbial diseases change history ¨ Black plague in Europe ¨ Smallpox in Americas Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 3 Discovery of Microbes n Light microscope invented in 1600s ¨ Quality improved continuously n Mid-1600s: Robert Hooke observes small eukaryotes n 1676: van Leeuwenhoek discovers bacteria Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 4 Antonie van Leeuwenhoek – Microscopes Lazzaro Spallanzani – Tried to disprove the Theory of Sponanteous Generation Louis Pasteur – discovered anaerobes, disproved spontaneous generation, fermentation done by microbes Microbes Are Living Organisms n Microbes arise only from other microbes ¨ No spontaneous generation ¨ 1688: Redi shows that flies do not spontaneously generate ¨ 1861: Pasteur shows that microbes do not grow in liquid until introduced from outside No growth Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Flask neck broken, bacteria fall into and grow in medium 13 Joseph Lister – Sterile surgery techniques, inspired by Louis Pasteur’s work on diseases in wine Germ Theory of Disease n Observations: ¨ Germs can infect and grow on food. n Hypothesis: ¨ Can germs infect and grow on people? ¨ That is, do germs cause disease? n Hypothesis is testable: ¨ Are germs found in infected tissue? ¨ Can transmission of germs cause disease? Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 16 Germ Theory of Disease n Pasteur’s Theory: ¨ Transmission disease n All of germs causes Scientific Theories: ¨ Explain many known observations ¨ Provide framework for understanding n For example, transmission of rabies n Where ¨ Can be tested further n Do ¨ A do diseases come from? germs cause anthrax? scientific theory is NOT a “guess” Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 17 Robert Koch – His postulates helped elucidate the microbial cause of many infectious diseases Koch’s Postulates n Provides means of testing hypothesis: ¨ n “Does this germ cause that disease?” Organism must meet 4 criteria: 1. Microbe always present in diseased n 2. Microbe grown in pure culture n 3. No other microbes present Introduce pure microbe into healthy individual n 4. Absent in healthy Individual becomes sick Same microbe re-isolated from now-sick An Evolving Science individual © Microbiology: 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 19 Corollary to Germ Theory n Stop ¨ Kill germ transmission, stop disease spread germ, prevent disease n Antiseptics ¨ 1865: Antiseptic surgery § Joseph Lister n Antibiotics ¨ 1929–1941: Penicillin § Alexander Fleming ¨ Many newer antibiotics ¨ Bacteria become resistant Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 21 Corollary to Germ Theory n Stop germ transmission, stop disease spread ¨ Stop spread of germs n Epidemiology, ¨ Resistant n 1798: public health measures individuals prevent spread of germs Vaccination with cowpox prevents smallpox ¨ Turkish physicians, Lady Montagu, Edward Jenner Microbiology: An Evolving Science © 2009 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 22 Louis Pasteur – developed a method to attenuate microorganisms to make vaccines Paul Ehrlich – discovered the first antibiotic compounds, used to treat syphilis Alexander Fleming – Isolated penicillin, the first antibiotic produced by another organism (mold)