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Cultivation, Reproduction and Growth of Bacteria

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Make their own food using simple carbon sources. Photoautotroph Energy from ... Hemocytometer. Add trypan blue to show the dead cells. 34. Plate Count ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cultivation, Reproduction and Growth of Bacteria


1
Cultivation, Reproduction and Growth of Bacteria
  • Chap 5

2
Nutritional Considerations
  • Energy source
  • Carbon source
  • Nitrogen, sulfur and phosphorus sources
  • Metallic elements
  • Vitamins
  • Water

3
Nutritional Types of Organisms
  • Autotrophs and Heterotrophs

4
Autotrophs
  • Make their own food using simple carbon sources
  • Photoautotroph gtgt Energy from sunlight and carbon
    from CO2
  • Chemoautotroph gtgt Inorganic compounds as carbon
    and energy source

5
Heterotrophs
  • Not able to synthesize food from inorganic
    compounds, need carbs, fatty acids or alcohols
  • Photoheterotroph gtgt Sunlight as energy source,
    preformed organic molecules for carbon source
  • Chemoheterotroph gtgt Use preformed organic
    molecules for both carbon and energy source

6
Types of Media
  • Complex and Synthetic and Modifications of Them

7
Types of Media
  • Complex
  • Most commonly used
  • Exact make up is unknown
  • Beef extract, yeast extract, tryptone, peptone,
    salt
  • Synthetic
  • To determine growth requirements
  • Glucose, salt, magnesium, potassium, etc.
  • Nutrient agar

8
Types of Media
  • Differential gtgt allows identification based on
    specific properties
  • Blood agar - hemolysis
  • Eosin Methylene Blue (EMB)

E. coli produces metallic green colonies
http//www.rlc.dcccd.edu/mathsci/reynolds/micro/la
b_manual/throat.html http//www2.austin.cc.tx.us/m
icrobugz/html/eosin_methylene_blue_agar.html
9
Types of Media
  • Selective Media gtgt contains ingredients to
    inhibit the growth of some while allowing the
    growth of others
  • Sodium Chloride Agar
  • Antibiotic Containing Agar

10
Types of Media
  • Enriched gtgt for fastidious organisms
  • Blood agar
  • Chocolate agar
  • Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria species

11
Types of Media
  • Characterization
  • Gelatin looking at liquefaction patterns

12
Even with all of this, less than 1 of all known
bacteria can be cultured in the lab
13
Chlamydia
  • Obligate intracellular bacterial parasite
  • Must be grown inside cells

Reticulate bodies
14
Physical Growth Conditions
  • Temperature, Oxygen, pH, Pressure

15
Temperature
  • Psychrophiles - low temperature range
  • less than15C
  • Mesophiles - mid temperature range
  • 10-45C gtgt human pathogens
  • Thermophiles - high temperature range
  • around 60C
  • Hyperthermophiles - extremely high temperatures
  • above 80C
  • Psychrotrophic bacteria mesophiles growing at
    the low temperature range certain Campylobacter
    sps growing at fridge temperature

16
Growth Rates in Response to Temperature
37C
Fig 5.8 pg 147
Note the overlapping ranges and how quickly the
curves decline outside of the optimal range
17
Oxygen
  • Aerobic bacteria - Bacillus
  • Anaerobic bacteria Clostridium
  • sulfur
  • Microaerophilic Treponema palladium
  • Facultative anaerobe Bacillus
  • prefers oxygen, but can grow without

18
Effect of Oxygen on Bacterial Growth
Fig 5.10 pg150
Thioglycollate broth binds free oxygen, so the
only available is at the top where it enters from
the environment
19
Acidity/Alkalinity
  • Optimal pH for growth
  • Human body between 7.2 7.4
  • Prokaryotic cytoplasm 7.0
  • Acid-tolerant bacteria gtgt acidophiles
  • Lactobacillus
  • Streptococcus
  • Alkaline-tolerant bacteria gtgt alkalophilic
  • Vibrio cholerae as low as 2.0

20
Osmotic and Hydrostatic Pressure
  • Bacteria are under constant pressure from the
    inside out
  • Hypertonic to their environment gtgt This is why
    prokaryotes have cell walls!
  • Halophiles gtgt up to 30 environmental salt
  • Marine organisms live at 16,000 psi, but die at
    the surface, 14.7 psi gtgt barophiles

21
Reproduction of Bacteria
22
Types of Reproduction
  • Binary fission
  • Budding
  • Fragmentation
  • More common in fungi

23
Binary Fission
Fig 5.2 pg 139
24
Incomplete Binary Fission
  • Tetrads
  • Cell arrangement that is a consequence of
    binary fission with incomplete separation of
    cells, occurring in two planes, producing a
    square consisting of four cocci, one at each
    corner

25
Growth
  • Increase in cell size
  • Happens but irrelevant
  • Increase in cell number
  • Colony gtgt A visible mass of microorganisms of one
    type arising from one parental cell

26
Generation Time
  • Interval of time between cell divisions
  • Reproductive potential of E. coli 18-20min
  • Reproductive potential of S. aureus 30min
  • Reproductive potential of M. tuberculosis 18 hr

27
Bacterial Growth Curves
28
Rapid Generation Times
1cell to 2 million cells in 7 hours! Only a
build up of waste or depletion of food will
stop growth
Fig 5.3 pg 140
29
Bacterial Growth Curve
  • Lag phase gtgt preparing for division
  • Logarithmic phase gtgtreproduction
  • Disease symptoms develop
  • Vulnerability to antibiotics highest
  • Stationary phase gtgt equilibrium
  • Decline phase gtgt cell death

30
Growth Curve
Living Dead
Fig 5.4 pg 142
31
Quantification of Bacteria
  • Direct Cell Count, Plate Count, Membrane Filter,
    Turbidity, Dry Weight

32
Direct Cell Count
  • Counts cells per ml
  • Very common method
  • Count bacteria in vaccines and other cultures

33
Hemocytometer
Add trypan blue to show the dead cells
34
Plate Count
  • Counts Colony Forming Units (CFU) per ml
  • Count bacteria in milk, water, etc
  • Standard Plate count must have between 30 and 300
    colonies per plate

35
Turbidity
  • Measures optical density (OD)
  • gtgt cells per ml
  • Light absorption compared to a standard
  • Estimate cell numbers in heavy suspensions
  • Faster than direct count

36
Membrane Filter
  • Counts CFU per ml
  • Count bacteria in very dilute samples of milk,
    water
  • Common in industry

37
Dry Weight
  • Counts mg of dry bacteria per ml
  • Remove the water and weigh
  • Count bacteria in very heavy suspensions
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