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Chapter 5 Microbial Nutrition 1 Nutrient Requirements • Macroelements (macronutrients) – C, O, H, N, S, P, K, Ca, Mg, and Fe – required in relatively large amounts • Micronutrients (trace elements) – Mn, Zn, Co, Mo, Ni, and Cu – required in trace amounts – often supplied in water or in media components 2 All Organisms Require Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Electron Source 3 • Heterotrophs – use organic molecules as carbon sources which often also serve as energy sourc • Autotrophs – use carbon dioxide as their sole or principal carbon source – must obtain energy from other sources 4 Sources of Carbon, Energy and Electrons Table 5.1 5 Nutritional Types of Organisms • based on energy source – phototrophs use light – chemotrophs obtain energy from oxidation of chemical compounds • based on electron source – lithotrophs use reduced inorganic substances – organotrophs obtain electrons from organic compounds 6 Nutritional Types of Microorganisms Table 5.2 7 Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Sulfur • Needed for synthesis of important molecules (e.g., amino acids, nucleic acids) • Nitrogen usually supplied as organic and inorganic N-source (NH3 , NO3-) • Phosphorus usually supplied as inorganic phosphate (H3PO4) • Sulfur usually supplied as sulfate (SO42-) 8 Growth Factors • Organic compounds • Essential cell components (or their precursors) that the cell cannot synthesize • Must be supplied by environment if cell is to survive and reproduce 9 Classes of growth factors • Amino acids – needed for protein synthesis • Purines and pyrimidines – needed for nucleic acid synthesis • Vitamins – function as enzyme cofactors 10 11 Uptake of Nutrients • Some nutrients enter by passive diffusion • Most nutrients enter by: – facilitated diffusion – active transport – group translocation 12 Passive Diffusion • Molecules move from region of higher concentration to one of lower concentration • H2O, O2 and CO2 often move across membranes this way 13 •rate of facilitated diffusion increases more rapidly and at a lower concentration •diffusion rate reaches a plateau when carrier becomes saturated Figure 5.3 14 Facilitated Diffusion • Similar to passive diffusion – movement of molecules is not energy dependent – direction of movement is from high concentration to low concentration – size of concentration gradient impacts rate of uptake 15 Facilitated diffusion… • Differs from passive diffusion – uses carrier molecules (permeases) – smaller concentration gradient is required for significant uptake of molecules – effectively transports glycerol, sugars, and amino acids • more prominent in eucaryotic cells than in procaryotic cells 16 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. note conformational change of carrier Figure 5.4 17 Active Transport • Energy-dependent process – ATP or PMF • Carrier proteins needed (permeases) – carrier saturation effect is observed at high solute concentrations 18 ABC transporters • ATP-binding cassette transporters • observed in bacteria, archaea, and eucaryotes Figure 5.5 19 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Figure 5.6 20 Group Translocation • Chemically modifies molecule as it is brought into cell • Best known system: transports a variety of sugars while phosphorylating them using phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) • Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) as the phosphate donor 21 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Group Translocation • energydependent process Figure 5.7 22 Iron Uptake • ferric iron is very insoluble so uptake is difficult • microorganisms use siderophores to aid uptake • siderophore complexes with ferric ion • complex is then transported into cell Figure 5.8 23 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Types of Media Table 5.4 24 Defined or Synthetic Media • all components and their concentrations are known Table 5.5 25 Complex Media • contain some ingredients of unknown composition and/or concentration Table 5.6 26 Some media components • peptones – protein hydrolysates prepared by partial digestion of various protein sources • extracts – aqueous extracts, usually of beef or yeast • agar – sulfated polysaccharide used to solidify liquid media 27 Types of Media • General purpose media – support the growth of many microorganisms – e.g., tryptic soy agar • Enriched media – general purpose media supplemented by blood or other special nutrients – e.g., blood agar 28 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Figure 5.9 29 Types of media… • Selective media – favor the growth of some microorganisms and inhibit growth of others – e.g., MacConkey agar 30 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Table 5.7 31 Types of media… • Differential media – distinguish between different groups of microorganisms based on their biological characteristics – e.g., blood agar • hemolytic versus nonhemolytic bacteria – e.g., MacConkey agar • lactose fermenters versus nonfermenters 32 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Table 5.7 33 Isolation of Pure Cultures • Spread plate, streak plate, and pour plate are techniques used to isolate pure cultures 34 Spread-plate technique 1. dispense cells onto medium in petri dish Figure 5.10 (a) 35 4. spread cells across surface 2. - 3. sterilize spreader Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Appearance of a Spread Plate Figure 5.10 (b) 36 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Streak plate technique Figure 5.11 37 The Pour Plate • Sample is diluted several times • Diluted samples are mixed with liquid agar • Mixture of cells and agar are poured into sterile culture dishes 38 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Figure 5.12 39 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Bacterial Colony Morphology Figure 5.13 (a) 40 Copyright © McGraw-Hill companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Bacterial Colony Morphology Figure 5.13 (b) and (c) 41