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Gen(t)
number
of bacteria
log2N
log10N
Gen(t)
0(0’) 1 or 20
0
0
1(20’)2 or 21
1
.301
2(40’)4 or 22
2
.602
3(60’)8 or
23
3
.903
4 ...
16 or 24
4
...
5 ...
32 or 25
5
…
n
...
n (t)
2n
number of bacteria
0(0) 1
N0
n (t) 2n N0 2n
Nt = N0 2n
Vedi dip. lin.
f(t)
1
2
3
4
5
Conta cellulare totale con la camera di Petroff-Hausser
o con il Coulter Counter (pref. dimens.eucar.)
1 mm
6
Cellule biomassa
proteine DNA ecc
Il concetto di crescita bilanciata
time
Dry weight - Cell mass
determination. Sensitivity: ~ 109
cells/mg; tedious; timeconsuming.
* Filter cells from a known
volume of culture.
* Wash to remove medium
components.
* Dry.
* Weigh.
Nota: Le misure di assorbanza riflettono la massa, ma anche
il numero, la forma, la complessità
delle cellule
7
Le conte vitali e il concetto di CFU
8
Le conte vitali e il concetto di CFU
9
Le conte vitali e il concetto di CFU
10
Fattori ambientali determinanti per la crescita: soluti ed attività dell’acqua, pH,
pressione, temperatura, ..
Applicazioni industriali di enzimi termoresistenti………...
11
Fattori ambientali e crescita
1-acqua
I microbi si alimentano sull' acqua libera e non possono accedere
all' acqua segregata da altre molecole. I gruppi idrossilici dei
polisaccaridi, carbossilici e aminici delle proteine ad esempio
legano l’acqua
L' attività dell' acqua (aw) è la misura di quanto l' acqua è legata
strutturalmente o chimicamente, in una sostanza o cellula.
aw = P/P0
P=pressione vapore del campione
P0=press. Vap. di acqua pura
Moltiplicando la attività dell’acqua per 100 abbiamo l’umidità
relativa dell’atmosfera in equilibrio col campione.
R.H. (%) = 100 x aw
Salando, essiccando e zuccherando un alimento ne diminuiamo P e quindi
aw (aw e pressione osmotica sono inversamente correlati)
12
La pressione osmotica
I batteri resistono a notevoli press osmotiche grazie alla forza
meccanica della parete ( si contrappone alla pressione
idrostatica in un ambiente ipotonico)
I protozoi contraggono un vacuolo che convoglia l’acqua
attirata per osmosi espellendola dall cellula
13
sintesi di soluti
compatibili con le attività
cellulari:colina, betaina,
prolina, glicerolo,
glutamico ecc
possibilità di fare
selezioni per
osmotolleranti come gli
stafilococchi (crescono
sulla cute)->terreni con
7-8% sali
-->gli alofili, richiedono
alto sale
possono accumulare
enormi quantità di sali
intracellulari (es.
potassio) e hanno
modificazioni strutturali
di mbr pareti e proteine
(archea)
Il pH: i batteri di solito sono neutrofili, i
funghi acidofili moderati.
Meccanismi: antiporti
ioni/H+,H+ATPasi,nuove proteine
Terreni di selezione; uso di tamponi
pH int ca.7
Gli ambienti iperosmotici
14
[O2], ecc..
15
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An Overview of Metabolism
• metabolism
– total of all chemical reactions occurring in
cell
• catabolism
– breakdown of larger, more complex
molecules into smaller, simpler ones
– energy is released and some is trapped and
made available for work
• anabolism
– synthesis of complex molecules from simpler
ones with the input of energy
16
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Sources of energy
electrons released
during oxidation
of chemical
energy sources
must be accepted
by an electron
acceptor
microorganisms
vary in terms of the
acceptors they use
Figure 9.1
17
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Electron acceptors for
chemotrophic processes
Figure 9.2
18
exogenous electron acceptors
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Chemoorganotrophic
metabolism
• fermentation
– energy source oxidized and degraded
using endogenous electron acceptor
– often occurs under anaerobic
conditions
– limited energy made available
19
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Chemoorganotrophic
metabolism
• aerobic respiration
– energy source degraded using oxygen
as exogenous electron acceptor
– yields large amount of energy,
primarily by electron transport activity
20
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Chemoorganotrophic
metabolism
• anaerobic respiration
– energy source oxidized and degraded using
molecules other than oxygen as exogenous
electron acceptors
– can yield large amount of energy (depending
on reduction potential of energy source and
electron acceptor), primarily by electron
transport activity
21
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Overview of aerobic
catabolism
• three-stage process
– large molecules (polymers) small
molecules (monomers)
– initial oxidation and degradation to
pyruvate
– oxidation and degradation of pyruvate
by the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA
cycle)
22
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many
different
energy
sources
are
funneled
into
common
degradative
pathways
ATP made
primarily
by
oxidative
phosphorylation
Figure 9.3
23
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Two functions of organic
energy sources
• oxidized to release
energy
• supply carbon and
building blocks for
anabolism
– amphibolic pathways
• function both as
catabolic and
anabolic pathways
Figure 9.4
24
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The Breakdown of Glucose
to Pyruvate
• Three common routes
– glycolysis
– pentose phosphate pathway
– Entner-Doudoroff pathway
25
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The Glycolytic Pathway
• also called Embden-Meyerhof
pathway
• occurs in cytoplasmic matrix of both
procaryotes and eucaryotes
26
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addition of phosphates
“primes the pump”
oxidation step –
generates NADH
high-energy molecules –
used to synthesize ATP
by substrate-level
phosphorylation
Figure 9.5
27
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Summary of glycolysis
glucose + 2ADP + 2Pi + 2NAD+
2 pyruvate + 2ATP + 2NADH + 2H+
28
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The Pentose Phosphate
Pathway
• also called hexose monophosphate
pathway
• can operate at same time as glycolytic or
Entner-Doudoroff pathways
• can operate aerobically or anaerobically
• an amphibolic pathway
29
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oxidation
steps
produce
NADPH,
which is
needed for
biosynthesis
Figure 9.6
30
sugar
transformation
reactions
produce
sugars
needed
for
biosynthesis
sugars can
also be
further
degraded
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Figure 9.7
31
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Summary of pentose
phosphate pathway
glucose-6-P + 12NADP+ + 7H2O
6CO2 + 12NADPH + 12H+ Pi
32
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The Entner-Doudoroff
Pathway
• yield per
glucose
molecule:
– 1 ATP
– 1 NADPH
– 1 NADH
Figure 9.8
33
reactions of
glycolytic
pathway
reactions of
pentose
phosphate
pathway
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Fermentations
• oxidation of
NADH produced
by glycolysis
• pyruvate or
derivative used as
endogenous
electron acceptor
• ATP formed by
substrate-level
phosphorylation
34
Figure 9.9
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homolactic
fermenters
heterolactic
fermenters
food
spoilage
yogurt,
sauerkraut,
pickles, etc.
Figure 9.10
35
alcoholic
fermentation
alcoholic
beverages,
bread, etc.
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methyl red test – detects pH change in media caused by
mixed acid fermentation
36
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Butanediol fermentation
Voges-Proskauer test –
detects intermediate acetoin
Methyl red test and VogesProskauer test important for
distinguishing pathogenic
members of
Enterobacteriaceae
37
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Fermentations of amino
acids
• Strickland
reaction
– oxidation of
one amino
acid with use
of second
amino acid
as electron
acceptor
Figure 9.11
38
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The Tricarboxylic Acid
Cycle
• also called citric acid cycle and Kreb’s
cycle
• completes oxidation and degradation of
glucose and other molecules
• common in aerobic bacteria, free-living
protozoa, most algae, and fungi
• amphibolic
– provides carbon skeletons for biosynthesis
39
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energy drives
condensation
high-energy of acetyl
molecule
group with
oxaloacetate
oxidation
steps – form
NADH and
FADH2
oxidation and
decarboxylation steps
complete
oxidation and
degradation
substratelevel
phosphorylation
40
also form
NADH
Figure 9.12
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Summary
• for each acetyl-CoA molecule
oxidized, TCA cycle generates:
– 2 molecules of CO2
– 3 molecules of NADH
– one FADH2
– one GTP
41
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Electron Transport and
Oxidative Phosphorylation
• only 4 ATP molecules synthesized
directly from oxidation of glucose to
CO2
• most ATP made when NADH and
FADH2 (formed as glucose
degraded) are oxidized in electron
transport chain (ETC)
42
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The Electron Transport
Chain
• series of electron carriers that
operate together to transfer
electrons from NADH and FADH2 to
a terminal electron acceptor
• electrons flow from carriers with
more negative E0 to carriers with
more positive E0
43
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Electron transport chain…
• as electrons transferred, energy released
• some released energy used to make ATP
by oxidative phosphorylation
– as many as 3 ATP molecules made per
NADH using oxygen as acceptor
• P/O ratio = 3
– P/O ratio for FADH2 is 2
• i.e., 2 ATP molecules made
44
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large difference in
E0 of NADH and
E0 of O2
large amount of
energy released
Figure 9.13
45
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Mitochondrial ETC
Figure 9.14
46
electron transfer accompanied by
proton movement across inner
mitochondrial membrane
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Procaryotic ETCs
• located in plasma membrane
• some resemble mitochondrial ETC,
but many are different
– different electron carriers
– may be branched
– may be shorter
– may have lower P/O ratio
47
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ETC of E. coli
branched pathway
upper branch –
stationary phase and
low aeration
lower branch – log
phase and high
aeration
Figure 9.15
48
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ETC of Paracoccus
denitrificans - aerobic
Figure 9.16a
49
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ETC of P. denitrificans anaerobic
Figure 9.16b
50
example of anaerobic respiration
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Oxidative Phosphorylation
• chemiosmotic hypothesis
– most widely accepted explanation of
oxidative phosphorylation
– postulates that energy released during
electron transport used to establish a
proton gradient and charge difference
across membrane
• called proton motive force (PMF)
51
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PMF drives ATP synthesis
• diffusion of protons back across
membrane (down gradient) drives
formation of ATP
• ATP synthase
– enzyme that uses proton movement
down gradient to catalyze ATP
synthesis
52
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movement of
protons
establishes
PMF
Figure 9.17
53
ATP synthase
uses proton
flow down
gradient to
make ATP
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Figure 9.19a
54
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Figure 9.19b
55
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Inhibitors of ATP synthesis
• blockers
– inhibit flow of electrons through ETC
• uncouplers
– allow electron flow, but disconnect it from
oxidative phosphorylation
– many allow movement of ions, including
protons, across membrane without
activating ATP synthase
• destroys pH and ion gradients
– some may bind ATP synthase and inhibit its
activity directly
56
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Importance of PMF
Figure 9.18
57
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The Yield of ATP in
Glycolysis and Aerobic
Respiration
• aerobic respiration provides much more
ATP than fermentation
• Pasteur effect
– decrease in rate of sugar metabolism when
microbe shifted from anaerobic to aerobic
conditions
– occurs because aerobic process generates
greater ATP per sugar molecule
58
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59
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ATP yield…
• amount of ATP produced during
aerobic respiration varies depending
on growth conditions and nature of
ETC
• under anaerobic conditions,
glycolysis only yields 2 ATP
molecules
60
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Anaerobic Respiration
• uses
electron
carriers
other than
O2
• generally
yields less
energy
because E0
of electron
acceptor is
less positive
than E0 of
O2
61
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An example
• dissimilatory nitrate reduction
– use of nitrate as terminal electron
acceptor
– denitrification
• reduction of nitrate to nitrogen gas
• in soil, causes loss of soil fertility
62
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Catabolism of
Carbohydrates and
Intracellular Reserves
• many different carbohydrates can
serve as energy source
• carbohydrates can be supplied
externally or internally (from
internal reserves)
63
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Carbohydrates
• monosaccharides
– converted to
other sugars that
enter glycolytic
pathway
• disaccharides and
polysaccharides
– cleaved by
hydrolases or
phosphorylases
64