Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Microbiology: Study of microbes What is a microbe? • Typically microbes are small and most cannot be seen without the aid of a microscope • Microbes are comprised of prokaryotes and eukaryotes • Most microbes classified as bacteria, archaea, fungi, protozoa or algae • Is a virus a microbe? Bacteria and Archaea • Prokaryotes -- single-celled organisms without nuclei • Typically very small • Usually have cell walls and membranes • Live in many different environments • Many bacteria cause disease (pathogenic) • Most haploid and reproduce asexually Fungi -- Molds and Yeasts • Eukaryotic organisms either multi- or unicellular, pathogenic or beneficial • Many are microscopic • Fungi contain cell walls but are not photosynthetic • Molds are typically multicellular and have sexual and non-sexual reproduction by spores • Yeasts are unicellular and reproduce asexually by budding or via sexual spores Protozoa • Eukaryotic single-celled organisms similar to animal cells • Most are motile and are classified by means of locomotion (cilia, flagella or pseudopodia) • Many species are pathogenic Algae • Unicellular or multi-cellular eukaryotes • All are photosynthetic • Have cell walls • Classification based on cell wall composition and composition of their photosynthetic proteins • Large multi-cellular forms include seaweed and kelp • Diatoms contain silicates (glassy) in cell walls Highlights of a History of Microbiology • Leeuwenhoek -- the microscope (1670’s) • Redi, Needham, Spallanzani and Pasteur -spontaneous generation debunked • Germ theory of disease • Koch’s postulates • Development of aseptic techniques and vaccination • Molecular microbiology Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723) • First to view (1674)“animalcules” (protozoa) in drops of water • Reported the existence of bacteria in 1676 • Spent 50 yrs. observing and reporting on microbes, but didn’t share techniques The question of spontaneous generation • Embraced for 1900 yrs. since the time of Aristotle, at least for small organisms • Late 17th century: Francesco Redi demonstrated that maggots appearing “spontaneously” on old meat required the presence of flies 18th century experiments on spontaneous generation: Needham vs. Spallanzani • Needham’s experiments used boiled beef gravy and corked vials • Microbes grew readily • Spontaneous generation supported • Spallanzani used boiled infusions and heat-sealed glass vials • No microbial growth occurred • Spontaneous generation does not occur Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) Father of Microbiology • Disproved spontaneous generation by carefully demonstrating under what conditions microbes appear Other contributions by Pasteur • Demonstrated anaerobic fermentation by both bacteria and yeasts (bacteria produce acid and yeast produce alcohol) • Developed pasteurization to prevent spoilage of wine by bacteria • Began field of industrial microbiology when he added yeast to sterilized grape juice to make wine • Bacterial spoiling of wine led to Germ theory of Disease (1857) Koch’s postulates drive search for disease causative agents • Examined patients blood and identified bacteria associated with different diseases • Postulates: (1) Disease agent must be present in every patient and absent in others; (2) Agent is isolated and when introduced into healthy person, causes the disease; (3) Disease agent can be reisolated from experimentalhost Disease prevention Cleaner is better • Nosocomial infections were rampant through mid 19th century • Semmelweis demonstrated that hand washing could significantly lesson childbirth-related fatalities in mid-1800’s • Lister demonstrated 2/3 reduction in patient death by sterilizing equipment with phenol in early 20th century • Florence Nightingale introduced antiseptic techniques into nursing practices in mid 1850’s Modern microbiology • Biochemical basis of life • Microbial genetics • Recombinant DNA and biotechnology