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What Microbiology is all about The study of germs There are 4 categories of microbes: Viruses Bacteria Yeast/Fungi Parasites Viruses are the smallest microbes They are too small to be seen with a light microscope and can only be seen with electron microscopes. Their size range is 20300 nm They are not capable of metabolic activity, Must infect a living cell to reproduce. Therefore they are not “Alive” They can exist outside of a living environment for a limited amount of time This is a picture of a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Most viruses can be grown in Tissue Culture A tissue culture is a bottle with a single layer of cells growing on the inside of the bottle Virus is added to the bottle The virus infects the cells, turning them into virus factories The cell fills with virus, then explodes, releasing the virus which can be harvested Some viruses can only be grown in fertilized eggs Influenza virus is one of these Some virus caused diseases are: Common colds Influenza AIDS Hepatitis A, B, C, and D Rabies Measles and mumps Smallpox Herpes viruses (Rubella, Herpes simplex I and II) Influenza can cause major epidemics In 1918 there was an influenza pandemic that killed 50 million people. One fifth of the world’s population was infected Last winter the world faced a new influenza epidemic This new epidemic was the reemergence of H1N1 virus To prepare for the new epidemic laboratories began making H1N1 vaccine as soon as the virus was identified, in order to have the vaccine ready when the winter flu season hit. Influenza still remains a serious disease AIDS-Acute Immunodeficiency Disease syndrome HIV, the virus that causes AIDS is a new virus It emerged in the 1970 from Africa where it had been a virus in monkeys Initially it was found in gay men, Haitians and IV drug users Smallpox, measles, and polio caused their own epidemics Smallpox caused epidemics around the world until a vaccine was discovered by Edward Jenner in 1798 In 1980 the WHO officially declared the whole world to be free of smallpox Both Measles and Smallpox were used as biological weapons These diseases wiped out native populations coming into contact with them for the first time. Both were used as biological weapons against Native Americans during the settlement of North America. Infected blankets and other goods were given to the susceptible populations and wiped them out. Polio caused epidemics during the 20th century until the first vaccine was discovered in 1952 Polio caused paralysis or even death. The disease was spread by person to person contact like the common cold. The Salk vaccine discovered by Jonas Salk in 1952, it was made from killed virus The Sabin vaccine made with live attenuated virus was discovered in 1958 and supplanted the killed virus Salk Vaccine. Today polio is almost unknown, even in 3rd world countries. Some polio patients were paralyzed from the neck down and spent the rest of their lives in iron lungs Some viruses can only be grown in embryonic eggs This is how influenza virus is grown At the present time we only have anti-viral medicines for a few diseases. Vaccines are available for many deadly diseases There are anti-viral agents that can shorten the amount of time you are ill, for example, Tamiflu for influenza There is a regimen of agents that control but do not kill the AIDS virus Bacteria can be equally deadly Bacteria are visible with a light microscope. They are a few micrometers long They are prokaryotic cells. This means that they do not have a nucleus but their nuclear material is distributed throughout the organism. They come in various shapes; rods, spheres and corkscrews. Most bacteria can be grown on agar A few bacterial diseases are: Plague Yersinia pestis Staph infections including methocyllin resistant staph Staphlococcus aureus Strep throat Streptococcus pyrogenes Gonorrhea Neisseria gonorrheae Syphilis Treponema pallidum Leprosy Mycobacterium leprae Tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculis The plague killed one third of the people in Europe during the mid 14th century Thought to have been brought to Europe by Ghengis Khan and his horde Spread by the fleas from black (roof) rats An infected flea would bite a rat, the rat would become infected and ill. Infected fleas would leave the dying rat and bite the inhabitants of the house. Death in humans would occur within x number of hours. As the disease spread, it modified so that there was human to human spread. How plague spread Syphilis was brought to the old world from the new world by Columbus and the explorers who came after him The first outbreak in Europe occurred during the War of Naples in 1494 When this disease first came to Europe it caused disfiguring lesions all over the face of victims, and they often died within 3 to 4 months. The disease has become less virulent in the 5 centuries since then, and now causes a chronic disease that can be treated, but if untreated, will not kill the patient for 20 to 50 years. Syphilis has 3 stages, the first stage is infectious and the 3rd (and final) stage is neurological Famous people who had Syphilis: Napoleon Bonaparte, King Henry VIII of England, Karin Blixin (wrote Out of Africa) Vincent Van Gogh, Al Capone, Paul Gauguin, Tsar Ivan the Terrible, Oscar Wilde, Leo Tolstoy, Fredrick Nietzche and the captain of the Pinta (one of Columbus’s boats) An image of Treponema pallidum: this bacterium is called a spirochete. Most bacteria can be grown on agar plates This picture demonstrates several different bacteria growing on blood agar You can see white colonies, some green colonies and some that clear the agar. These are all different organisms Most bacteria can be seen through a light microscope This is what staph bacteria look like with a light microscope. Bacteria come in different shapes They may be rod shaped They can be round and grown in clusters They can be round and grow in long chains They may be corkscrew shaped like the spirochete that causes syphilis Images of rod shaped bacteria and bacteria in chains Most bacteria are susceptible to antibiotics, which have been available since the 1940s Antibiotic: anti means against, biotic means life. Early antibiotics were made from molds that killed bacteria In 1928 Alexander Fleming discovered that the mold penicillium would kill staphlococcus Modern antibiotics are no longer made from molds but are discovered in laboratories. This is what Alexander Fleming saw when he discovered penicillin Yeast/fungal diseases Yeast and Fungal diseases range from: Annoying and commonplace like ringworm, athletes foot and yeast infections To deadly difficult to treat diseases such as Histoplasmosis, Cryptococcosis and Coccidiomycosis Yeast and fungi are eukaryotic cells They contain a nucleus And a cell wall like plants do They belong in the Fungi kingdom which is separate from the kingdoms of plants, animals, and bacteria Pictures of a budding yeast and of a fungus Yeast and fungi can be cultured much like bacteria Minor fungal diseases such as ringworm and fungal nail infections Life threatening yeast/fungal infections Fighting fungal infections There are anti-fungal drugs Most are toxic Most fungal infections take a long time to treat The failure rate for anti-fungal drugs is high The fourth group of microbes is parasites There are protozoans, one cells animals such as amoebae which cause diseases as diverse as dysentery and malaria Malaria is an amoebic disease carried by mosquitoes One million people die from it each year mostly children under the age of 5 There are 250 million cases per year Most of the cases are in sub-Saharan Africa 3.3 billion people live where malaria is a threat Helminths are worms and flukes Helminthic diseases include Tapeworms such as fish, pork and beef tapeworms Flukes of the blood, liver and lungs Roundworms like hookworms and pinworms The size range of parasites Amoeba 10-20 micrometers Roundworms 0.5mm to 1 cm Flukes 5mm to several cm Tapeworms 1mm to 15 m (50 feet) There are both anti amoebic and anti helminthic drugs,but there is not treatment for all amoebic or helminthic diseases. Normal Flora All living organisms have viruses, bacteria, yeast/fungi and parasites living on them and in them In a healthy organism these microbes are beneficial The normal flora varies from organism to organism Normal flora varies according to the site and the organism Not all humans have the same flora It varies according to where you live and what you are exposed to It varies according to the part of the body. Organisms that live on your skin are different from those in your mouth or in your intestines. Some parts of your body are sterile—without normal flora Blood Brains Muscle bones The End