Title: Introduction to Microbiology
1Introduction to Microbiology
21.1 The Science and History of Microbes
- What is microbiology?
- Microbes are ubiquitous
- Pathogens and Non-pathogens
- Why study microbiology?
- Indigenous microflora clinical importance
- Food Production
- Bioremediation
- Biotechnology
3Causes of Disease
- Infectious Disease pathogen colonizes the body
and subsequently causes disease - Microbial Intoxication person ingests a toxin
that was produced by a microorganism
4Subdivisions in Microbiology
- Prokaryotic
- Bacteria
- Archaea
- Eukaryotic
- Algae
- Fungi
- Protozoa
- Acellular
- Virus
- Viroid
- Prion
5Pioneers of Microbiology
- 1674 Anton van Leeuwenhoek
- 1796 Edward Jenner
- 1847 Ignaz Semmelweis
- 1853 John Snow
- 1857, 1861, 1864, 1881, 1885 Louis Pasteur
- 1867 Joseph Lister
- 1876, 1881, 1884 Robert Koch
6Pioneers of Microbiology
- 1884 Christian Gram
- 1904 Paul Ehrlich
- 1928 Frederick Griffith
- 1929 Alexander Fleming
- 1944 Avery, MacLeod, McCarthy
- 1948 Barbara McClintock
- 1953 Watson, Crick, Franklin, Wilkins
7Earliest Known Infectious Diseases
- Tuberculosis, Israel 7000 B.C.
- Pestilence, Egypt 3180 B.C.
- Smallpox, China 1122 B.C.
- Plague, Rome 800-430 B.C. (4 outbreaks)
- Syphilis, Europe 1500 A.D.
8Germ Theory
- Germ theory microorganisms can cause disease
- Spontaneous generation the idea that life can
arise from non-living - Biogenesis life can only arise from living
organisms - Pure culture a laboratory culture containing
only a one single species of organism
9Kochs Postulates
- Postulates
- -Microbes must be present in diseased, not
healthy organisms - -Isolate grow organism in pure culture
- -Inoculate healthy organism with pure culture,
organism will develop the disease - -Recover same microbe from experimentally
infected organism and grow again in pure culture
- Exceptions
- -Some microbes will not grow in vitro
- -Obligate intracellular pathogens can only
survive and multiply within living host cells - -Some pathogens ONLY infect humans and therefore
can not be inoculated into other animals for
testing - cell culture models
- 4 Some diseases are caused by synergistic
infection
10Microbiology Today
- Chemotherapy
- Antibiotics
- Synthetic drugs
- Immunology
- Study of disease and the bodys response to it
- Virology
- Study of viruses and viral diseases
- Basic Biology
- Using microorganisms to study metabolism and
genetic properties similar to plants and animals - Genetic Engineering
- Genomics
- Recombinant DNA technology
11Careers in Microbiology
- Microbiology Subdivisions
- Bacteriologist (bacteria)
- Phycologist (algae)
- Protozoologist (protozoa)
- Mycologist (fungi)
- Virology
- Immunologist
- Biotechnologist
121.2 Molecules Metabolism Review
- Macromolecules
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids
- Protein
- Nucleic Acid
- Atoms
- Bonding
- Polar and nonpolar molecules
- Chemical reactions
- Solvents Solutes
- Acids Bases, pH
- Organic molecules
13Basic Chemistry Atoms
- Atoms the smallest component of an element,
having properties of that element - Nucleus
- Protons ()
- Neutrons (0, no charge)
- Outer shell
- Electrons (-)
- Elements matter composed of a single type of
atom
14Basic Chemistry Bonding
- Chemical bonds form because of interaction of the
electrons - Covalent bonds
- Atoms share pairs of electrons strongest
- Ionic bonds
- Atoms complete their outermost shell by gaining
or losing electrons and are then attracted to
each other because of opposing charges - Hydrogen bonds
- Hydrogen atoms interact with two or more parts of
another molecule weakest but vitally important
for life
15Covalent Bonds
- Polar Molecules
- Covalent bond in which shared electrons are not
equally spaced - Example water
- Nonpolar Molecules
- Covalent bond in which shared electrons are
equally spaced - Example ethane
16Chemical Reactions
- Atoms or molecules making or breaking chemical
bonds - Energy is required
- Endothermic- energy captured and used
- Exothermic- energy produced and released
- Activation energy
- Rate of reaction
17Solvents and Solutes
- Solution molecules dispersed in liquid
- Solute molecules that are dispersed
- Solvent liquid component of solution
- Example NaCl (table salt) dissolving in water.
- NaCl is the solute
- Water is the solvent
18Acids, Bases, and pH
- Pure water neutral, equal H and OH-
- Acids contain more H than OH-
- Bases contain more OH- than H
- pH is based on the concentration of H
- Range 0 to 14
- 0 is the most acidic
- 7 is neutral
- 14 most basic (alkaline)
19Organic Molecules
- Contain carbon (C) and hydrogen
- Carbon can form 4 bonds which makes it very
versatile - Complex structures
- Linear
- Branched
- Rings
- Basis of the macromolecules
- Carbohydrates, lipids, protein, nucleic acid
20Carbohydrates
- Carbon and water (CH2O)
- Monosaccharides (single sugars, monomers)
- Glucose, fructose, ribose, deoxyribose
- Glucose is the building block for many
polysaccharides - Disaccharides (two sugars)
- Sucrose, lactose
- Polysaccharides (many sugars, polymers)
- Glycogen, cellulose, amylose
- Functions
- Energy, building blocks
21Lipids
- Fatty Acids (FAs)
- Long non-polar chains of carbon and hydrogen
- Monomer for most lipids
- Saturated or Unsaturated
- Triglycerides
- Common as dietary fat
- Phospholipids
- Component of biological membranes
- Steroids Cholesterol
- Important in cell signaling and membranes
- Functions
- Energy and energy storage, cell signaling,
membranes
22Proteins
- Amino Acids (monomers)
- Peptides
- Proteins
- Functions
- Enzymes
- Structural components
- Cell movement
- Carrier molecules
23Nucleic Acids
- Nucleotides (monomers)
- Deoxyribose (DNA) or Ribose (RNA)
- Base (A,C,G and T or U)
- Phosphate groups
- DNA and RNA Functions
- Genetic information
- Nucleotides as energy molecules
- Assembly of proteins
24Products of Metabolism
- Water
- Energy production
- CO2
- Changes in pH
- Acid and Base
251.3 Central Dogma of Biology
- DNA? RNA? Protein
- All living organisms have DNA to store genetic
information - RNA is a messenger that carries genetic
information - Protein is the true message
26DNA- Stored Information
- Blueprints
- A, C, T, G (nucleotides)
- Double-stranded (ds)
27RNA- Carriers
- mRNA (messenger)
- rRNA (ribosomal)
- tRNA (transfer)
- A, C, U, G
- Single-stranded (ss)
28Protein- Functional Information
- Peptide bonds (covalent)
- Amino acids
- Beads on a string
- Proper folding and assembly (formfunction)
- Denaturation
29Transcription
- The synthesis of RNA under the direction of DNA
DNA 5- T G C C A T G A A C T C A T G C T A A
A T G-3 3-A C G G T A C T T G A G T
A C G A T T T A C-5
RNA 5- U G C C A U G A A C U C A U G C U A A
A U G -3
30Translation
- The production of proteins by decoding mRNA
produced in transcription
RNA 5- U G C C A U G A A C U C A U G C U A A
A U G-3
Met (Start)
Asn
Ser
Cys
(Stop)
Protein M-N-S-C Met-Asn-Ser-Cys Methionine-
Asparagine-Serine-Cysteine
31DNA?RNA? Protein Interactive
321.4 Cell Review
- Cell fundamental living unit of any living
organism, exhibits all basic characteristics of
life - Obtain nutrients from environment to produce
energy - Metabolism all the chemical reactions that occur
within a cell
33Cell Review
- DNA
- Species
- Organelles
- Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
- Alternative spelling procaryotes and eucaryotes
- Cytology
34Cell Structure Review
- Prokaryotes
- DNA
- Single, Circular Chromosome
- Plasmids
- Ribosomes
- Cytoplasm
- Cell wall
- Plasma membrane
- Flagella, pili, endospores
- Binary fission
- Eukaryotes
- DNA
- Multiple, Linear Chromosomes
- Ribosomes
- Cytoplasm
- Specialized organelles
- Plasma membrane
- Mitosis
- 10x larger than prokaryotes
35Metabolism- All the chemical reactions that occur
within a cell
- Aerobic
- Requires oxygen
- Usually produces large amounts of ATP
- Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle)
- Electron Transport Chain (ETC)
- Anaerobic
- Occurs in the absence of oxygen
- Low production of ATP
- Glycolysis
- Fermentation
- Alcohol production
- CO2 production
- Lactic Acid
36Cell Review Generation Time
- Prokaryotes
- Time it takes for binary fission to occur
- 10 minutes to 48 hours
- E.coli 17 minutes
- S. aureus 30 minutes
- T. pallidum 33 hours
- Eukaryotes
- Time it takes for either mitosis or sexual
reproduction to occur - Yeast 80 minutes
- Aphid fly 5 days
- Rodents 4 months
- Humans 18 years
371.5 Microbial Members Organization
- Taxonomy the science of classification of living
organisms - Classification arrangement of organisms into
taxonomic groups (taxa) based on similarities or
relationships - Nomenclature assignment of names to various taxa
- Identification process of determining whether an
isolate belongs to an established taxa or
represents a previously unidentified species - Bergeys Manual of Systematic Bacteriology
38Five-Kingdom System of Classification
- Robert Whittaker (1969)
- Monera bacteria archaeans (prokaryotes)
- Protista algae protozoa
- Fungi fungi
- Plantae plants
- Animalia animals
- NOTE viruses are not included in classification
because they are not living organisms
39Three Domain System of Classification
- Carl Woese, University of Illinois (1977, 1990)
- Most favored classification by microbiologists,
determined relatedness using RNA subunits (16S
and 18S) from ribosomes
Microbes
Archaea
Bacteria
Eukarya
Includes Protista Fungi Plantae Animalia
40Binomial Nomenclature
- Binomial Nomenclature
- Genus (should always be capitalized)
- Genus specific epithet species
- Handwritten names should be underlined
- Typed names should be italicized
- Handwritten Escherichia coli
- Typed Escherichia coli
41Binomial Nomenclature (ctd)
- Abbreviations
- sp. Designates a single species
- First time written Escherichia coli
- Later written Escherichia sp.
- spp. Designates more than one species
- Clostridium spp. which can include 2 or more
- C. botulinum
- C. tetani