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Bacterial Growth and Nutrition • • • • Bacterial nutrition and culture media Chemical and physical factors affecting growth The nature of bacterial growth Methods for measuring population size http://diverge.hunter.cuny.edu/~weigang/Images/0611_binaryfission_1.jpg 1 The First Law of Thermodynamics • Energy cannot be created or destroyed. – It is interchangeable with matter. – Chemical energy; nuclear energy: E = mc2 • In order to grow, bacteria need a source of raw materials and energy – Source can be the same (e.g. glucose) or different (e.g. carbon dioxide and sunlight). – Living things can’t turn energy into raw materials, only use it to assemble raw materials. – Bacteria can’t grow on nothing! 2 Where do raw materials come from? • Bacteria acquire energy from oxidation of organic or inorganic molecules, or from sunlight. • Growth requires raw materials: some form of carbon. • Autotrophs vs. heterotrophs – Auto=self; hetero=other; troph=feeding. – Autotrophs use carbon dioxide – Heterotrophs use pre-formed organic compounds (molecules made by other living things). – Humans and medically important bacteria are heterotrophs. 3 Essentials of Bacterial nutrition 4 • Macronutrients: needed in larger amounts – Needed in large quantities: CHONPS • Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorous, and sulfur. H and O are common. Sources of C, N, P, and S must also be provided. – Macronutrients needed in smaller amounts: • Mineral salts such as Ca+2, Fe+3, Mg+2, K+ • Micronutrients = trace elements; – needed in very tiny amounts; e.g. Zn+2, Mo+2, Mn+2 Element % dry wgt Source Carbon 50 organic compounds or CO2 Oxygen 20 H2O, organic compounds, CO2, and O2 Nitrogen 14 NH3, NO3, organic compounds, N2 Hydrogen 8 H2O, organic compounds, H2 Phosphorus 3 inorganic phosphates (PO4) Sulfur 1 SO4, H2S, So, organic sulfur compounds Potassium 1 Potassium salts Magnesium 0.5 Magnesium salts Calcium 0.5 Calcium salts Iron 0.2 Iron salts http://textbookofbacteriology.net/nutgro.html 5 Chemical form must be appropriate • Not all bacteria can use the same things – Some molecules cannot be transported in – Enzymes for metabolizing it might not be present – Chemical may be used, but more expensive – These differences are used for identification • Some chemicals are inert or physically unusable – Relatively few bacteria (and only bacteria) use N2 – Diamonds, graphite are carbon, but unusable – P always in the form of phosphate 6 Make it, or eat it? 7 • Some bacteria are remarkable, being able to make all the organic compounds needed from a single C source like glucose. • For others: – Vitamins, amino acids, blood, etc. added to a culture medium are called growth factors. – Bacteria that require a medium with various growth factors or other components and are hard to grow are referred to as fastidious. Feast or famine: normal is what’s normal for you: Oligotrophs vs. copiotrophs • Oligo means few; oligotrophs are adapted to life in environments where nutrients are scarce – For example, rivers, other clean water systems. • Copio means abundant, as in “copious” – The more nutrients, the better. – Medically important bacteria are copiotrophs. – Grow rapidly and easily in the lab. 8 Responses of microbes to nutritional deficiency • Extracellular molecules collect nutrients – Siderophores, hemolysins collect iron – extracellular enzymes break down polymers • Cells enter Semi-starvation state: – slower metabolism, smaller size. • Sporulation and “resting cells”: – cells have very low metabolic rate – Some cells change shape, develop thick coat – Endospores form within cells; very resistant. – Spores are for survival, triggered by low nutrients 9 Endospore formation http://www.microbe.org/art/endospore_cycle.jpg 10 Responses of microbes to other environmental stresses 11 • Compatible solutes: small neutral molecules accumulated in cytoplasm when external environment is hypertonic. • Heat shock proteins and other stress proteins – Bacteria express additional genes that code for protective proteins. http://www.thermera.com/ima ges/Betaine.gif Culture Medium 12 • Defined vs. Complex – Defined has known amounts of known chemicals. – Complex: hydrolysates, extracts, etc. • Exact chemical composition is not known. • Selective and differential – Selective media limits the growth of unwanted microbes or allows growth of desired ones. – Differential media enables “differentiation” between different microbes. – A medium can be both. Defined Medium for Cytophagas/Flexibacters Component K2HPO4 KH2PO4 MgCl2 NaHCO3 {CaCl2 {BaCl2.2H2O Na acetate FeCl.7H2O RNA alanine arginine aspartic acid glutamic acid grams 0.10 0.05 0.36 0.05 1 ml* 0.01 0.2 ml* 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.30 0.55 glycine histidine isoleucine leucine lysine phenylalanine proline serine threonine valine 0.02 0.20 0.30 0.20 0.40 0.30 0.50 0.30 0.50 0.30 13 Physical requirements for growth • Prefixes and suffixes: • Bacteria are highly diverse in the types of conditions they can grow in. – Optimal or required conditions implied by “-phile” meaning “love” • Some bacteria prefer other conditions, but can tolerate extremes – Suffix “-tolerant” • Note the difference! http://www.kodak.com/global/images/en/health/filmImaging/thermometer.gif 14 Oxygen: friend or foe? 15 • Early atmosphere of Earth had none – First created by cyanobacteria using photosynthesis – Iron everywhere rusted, then collected in atmosphere • Strong oxidizing agent • Reacts with certain organic molecules, produces free radicals and strong oxidizers : – Singlet oxygen, H2O2(peroxide), O3- (superoxide), and hydroxyl (OH-) radical. Protections of bacteria against oxygen 16 – Bacteria possess protective enzymes, catalase and superoxide dismutase. – Catalase breaks down hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen gas. – Superoxide dismutase breaks superoxide down into peroxide and oxygen gas. – Anaerobes missing one or both; slow or no growth in the presence of oxygen. Fe3+ -SOD + O2- → Fe2+ -SOD + O2 Fe2+ -SOD + O2- + 2H+ → Fe 3+ -SOD + H2O2 Relation to Oxygen 17 • Aerobes: use oxygen in metabolism; obligate. A: aerobe B: microaerophile • Microaerophiles: require oxygen (also obligate), but in small amounts. • Anaerobes: grow without oxygen; SEE NEXT •Capnophiles: require larger amounts of carbon dioxide than are found normally in air. Anaerobes grow without O2 18 • Classifications vary, but our definitions: – Obligate (strict) anaerobes: killed or inhibited by oxygen. – Aerotolerant anaerobes: do not use oxygen, but not killed by it. C: could be facultative – Facultative anaerobes: can or aerotolerant. D: strict anaerobe grow with or without oxygen