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Introductory Microbiology Dr. Heather Townsend Characteristics of Life • • • • • Growth and development Reproduction and heredity Metabolism Movement and/or irritability Cell support, protection, and storage mechanisms • Transport of nutrients and waste • Living things are made of cells!! All cells……. • Have an outer plasma membrane • Contain DNA – Enclosed within the cell somewhere • Contain cytoplasm – Everything between the plasma membrane and the region of DNA – Gives cells their shape – Assist in movement of cell and organelles Characteristics of Microbes • Prokaryotic cells – Smaller – Lack special structures such as a nucleus and organelles – All prokaryotic cells are microorganisms • Some microorganisms are eukaryotic • Viruses? “Micro”organisms Characteristics of Cells Eukaryotic cells – Animals, plants, fungi, and protists – contain doublemembrane bound nucleus with DNA – contain membranebound organelles – 10–100 µm in diameter Characteristics of Cells Prokaryotic cells – – – – ~1.0 µm in diameter Bacteria and archaea no nucleus no membrane-bound organelles Microbiology • • The study of of organisms (microorganisms or microbes) too small to be seen without magnification This includes: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Bacteria Viruses Fungi Protozoa Helminths (worms) Algae The Microbes • 1. Bacteria – Single-celled organisms – Various shapes • Spherical • Rod • Spiral shapes – Cellular – Lack membraneenclosed cellular structures – Widely distributed in nature Klebsiella pneumoniae, bacteria that causes pneumonia in humans The Microbes • 2. Viruses – Acellular – Composed of nucleic acid and a few proteins – Replicate themselves to display other properties of living organisms when they invade living cells • 3. Fungi – Yeasts and molds • Single-celled, microscopic – Mushrooms • Multicellular, macroscopic – Cell nucleus and other cellular structures – Absorb nutrients from their environment – Widely distributed in water and soil – Act as decomposers of dead organisms The Microbes • 4. Protozoa – Single-celled, microscopic organisms – Have at least one nucleus and many cellular structures – Obtain food by engulfing or ingesting smaller organisms – Most can move – Found in many different environments The Microbes Amoeba The Microbes • 5. Helminths – Large, multicellular – Parasitize host tissues – Organs for reproduction, digestion, movement, protection – Mouthparts – Ingestion of larvae or eggs in food Tapeworm Head • 6. Algae – Single-celled microscopic organisms – Have a nucleus and many membraneenclosed cellular structures – Photosynthesize their own food – Widely distributed in fresh and salt water – Important source of food for other organisms The Microbes Micrasterias, a green algae living in fresh water General cell characteristics • Locomotor appendages • External boundaries External Structures of Cells • Locomotor appendages – flagella • long, sheathed cylinder containing microtubules • covered by an extension of the cell membrane • function in motility – cilia • similar in overall structure to flagella – shorter and more numerous • found only on a single group of protozoa and certain animal cells • function in motility, feeding and filtering External Boundary Structures • Plasma (cell) membrane – typical bilayer of phospholipids and proteins – serves as selectively permeable barrier in transport External Structures of Cells • Glycocalyx – an outermost boundary that comes into direct contact with environment – usually composed of polysaccharides – appears as a network of fibers, a slime layer or a capsule – functions in adherence, protection, and signal reception – Beneath the glycocalyx: • Fungi and most algae - cell wall • Protozoa, a few algae, and all animal cells – cell membrane External Boundary Structures • Cell wall – Fungi • thick inner layer of polysaccharide fibers • composed of chitin or cellulose and a thin layer of mixed glycans – Algae • varies in chemical composition • substances include cellulose, pectin, mannans, silicon dioxide, and calcium carbonate – Bacteria!!! • Dependent on cell wall composition Prokaryote Eukaryote Branches of Study Within Microbiology • Immunology: – studies immune chemicals and cells that are produced in response to infection • Public health microbiology & epidemiology: – aim to monitor and control the spread of diseases (CDC) • Food, dairy and aquatic microbiology: – examine the ecological and practical roles of microbes in food and water • Biotechnology: – ranges from bread making to gene therapy • Genetic engineering & recombinant DNA technology: – altering the genetic makeup of organisms Microbes Are Involved In: • nutrient production & energy flow – i.e., photosynthesis • decomposition and nutrient recycling • production of foods, drugs & vaccines • bioremediation • causing disease Impact of Pathogens • Pathogens – Diseases-causing agents • Nearly 2,000 different microbes cause diseases in the human body • 10 B infections/year worldwide • 13 M deaths from infections/year worldwide – killing about 1/3 of the U.S. population each year Impact of Pathogens • Emerging diseases – Becoming more prominent over the years – Zoonosis • SARS • Reemerging – Older diseases increasing in occurrence • TB • Malaria • Hepatitis Historical Microbiology • 1546 – physician suggest that invisible organisms may be involved with disease • Abiogenesis vs biogenesis Antonie van Leeuwenhoek • First to observe living microbes • His single-lens magnified up to 300X (1632-1723) Early Medical Microbiology • Spontaneous generation – “Living things arise from nonliving things” – Belief that some forms of life could arise from vital forces present in nonliving or decomposing matter – Debate over spontaneous generation led in part to development of scientific method Early Medical Microbiology • Louis Pasteur: – Worked in the wine industry • Had knowledge about yeast producing alcohol – Swan-neck flasks – Tipping the flask would allow the microbes to enter the infusion • Cause them to become cloudy • Main experiment that helped disprove spontaneous generation – Developed Pasteurization – Developed a rabies vaccine Early Medical Microbiology • Robert Koch (~120 years ago, German) – Linked a microscopic organism with a specific disease (anthrax) – Developed method to grow bacteria in pure cultures (cultures containing only one kind of organism) • Used solidified gelatin from potato slices mixed with agar • Creates a firm surface that microbes could grow on Koch’s Postulates 1. The specific causative agent must be found in every case of the disease 2. The disease organism must be isolated in pure culture 3. Inoculation of a sample of the culture into a healthy, susceptible animal must produce the same disease 4. The disease must be recovered from the inoculated animal Early Medical Microbiology • Oliver Wendell (American physician) – observed mothers who gave birth at home experienced fewer infections than those that gave birth in a hospital • Ignaz Semmelweis (Hungarian doctor) – showed that women became infected with puerperal fever during delivery by doctors coming directly from the autopsy room Early Medical Microbiology • Joseph Lister (English surgeon) – Introduced aseptic techniques • Aimed at reducing microbes in a medial setting and preventing wound infections – Improved sanitation • Promotes use of carbolic acid on bandages and medical instruments 1900s • Alexander Fleming – observed that a species of Penicillium mold killed bacterial cells – led to the development of penicillin • Two types of cells recognized!!! Microbiology—Now • Microbiology continues to face many challenges – A pathogen can cause more than one disease – Pathogens are becoming resistant to antimicrobials – Pathogens can be used intentionally to infect large numbers of people through bioterrorism Science • Scientific method – 1. Observe some aspect of the natural world and ask questions about it – 2. Hypothesis – 3. Make predictions – 4. Test the predictions – 5. Repeat the tests or develop new ones – 6. Analyze and report the test results and conclusions Microscopy • Micrometer Size Range – Most bacterial and archaeal cells are 1-5 micrometers (µm) in length How to view microbes? • Light Microscopy – Visible light passes through multiple lenses and through the specimen – Light microscopes usually have at least 3 lenses • low-power • high-power • oil-immersion How to view microbes? • Staining techniques – simple stain technique – negative stain technique – Special stains Taxonomy • Organizing, classifying and naming living things • In the mid-1700s, Carolus Linnaeus published Systema Naturae, establishing a uniform system for naming organisms • Nomenclature gives scientific names to organisms • Identifying and classifying organisms according to specific criteria Taxonomy • • • • • • • • Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus species 3 Domains • Eubacteria – true bacteria – peptidoglycan • Archaea – odd bacteria that live in extreme environments – high salt, heat, etc. (usually called extremophiles) • Eukarya – have a nucleus & organelles – Protista • Algae – Fungi – Plantae – Animalia Naming “Most” Micoorganisms • Binomial (scientific) nomenclature • Gives each microbe 2 names: – Genus - noun, always capitalized – species - adjective, lowercase • Both italicized or underlined**** – Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) – Bacillus subtilis (B. subtilis) – Escherichia coli (E. coli) What to expect…….. • Different microorganisms • How to detect microorganisms • Common disease caused by microorganisms • How to control the spread of microorganisms • Immune system