Title: Microbiology
1Microbiology
- Life as a Single Cell
- Where does disease come from?
- Microbes and Mankind
2Some Key Terms
- Disease
- a condition of the living animal or plant body or
of one of its parts that impairs normal
functioning and is typically manifested by
distinguishing signs and symptoms - Infectious Disease
- A disease capable of spreading rapidly to others
- Pathogen
- a specific living causative agent of disease
- Parasite
- an organism living in, with, or on another
organism as a source of nutrition / energy
3There are 5 basic forms of infectious disease.
- Viruses
- Bacteria
- Protozoans (animal-like protists)
- Fungi
- Invertebrate parasites
4The Micro Scale 10-6m
- Single celled or unicellular life exists in four
Kingdoms of life. - Kingdom Monera the bacteria
- Kingdom Fungi yeast mold
- Kingdom Protista the Protozoans
- Kingdom Archaea archaeans
- Microbial life exists in five Kingdoms
- Kingdom Animalia various invertebrates
- Requirements for micro-life
5Characteristics of Living Things
- Reproduce (make more of its kind)
- Obtain energy (heterotrophs/autotrophs)
- Metabolize (breaking down and building up)
- Eliminate waste
- Made of cells (Eukarya/Prokarya/Archaea)
- Genetic information (DNA)
- Part of a food chain (producer / consumer)
- All have to die (have a life cycle)
- Adapt to environment (individuals group)
- Grow (size) and develop (complexity)
6Where does disease come from?
Microbes/Parasites - Genetics - Environment
- What happens to us on the macro-scale depends on
what is happening to us on the micro-scale. - Microbes/Parasites need to feed to get raw
materials and to get energy. - We are food.
7The Virus Questions
- Are Viruses classified as living things or not?
- Currently NO.
- A Taxonomy has been built
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9The Virus Questions
- Why is there a debate?
- Viruses meet some but not all criteria of living
things
10NO
- Respond to the environment ?
- Move under their own power ?
- Influence / change host they live in ?
- Mimic living infections ?
- Have ability to replicate ?
- Age or die under optimal conditions ?
- Have a metabolism ?
- Grow or develop ?
- Contain organic molecules (carbon) ?
- Have genetic information - DNA or RNA ?
- Adapt as a group over time ?
- Eat ?
- Produce by-products / waste products ?
- Reproduce outside of host assistance ?
- Can be killed / inactivated ?
- Produce and consume energy ?
- Made of cells ?
NO
YES
YES
YES
NO
NO
NO
YES
YES
YES
NO
NO
NO
YES
NO
NO
11Virus Questions
- If they are not alive, then what else would they
be? - Viruses are ultramicroscopic non-cellular genetic
elements (nucleic acids DNA/RNA) surrounded by
a protein coat, which are of biological
significance. - Renegade / parasitic DNA RNA
12Visualizing Viruses
- Seeing the ultramicroscopic is only possible
using the electron microscope - The probe is the electron not light
- The images are in black and white because there
is no visible light involved.
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14Helical Symmetry - Coiled spiral
15The helical structure of the rigid tobacco mosaic
virus rod
16Icosahedral Symmetry
- 20 equilateral triangle faces
SPIKES
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18Sugarcane Fiji disease virus
19Polyhedral Virus
20Bacteriophages
- Icosahedral head, helical tail, fibers pins
21Phage Transmission Electron Microscope
22Envelope enclosed - Icosahedral Symmetry
23Virus Vocab
24- Viral Envelope membrane structure - from host
- Spikes-projections from the envelope, attachment
- Unique viral proteins - in lipid bi-layer. Used
to complete attachment and invade host cell
25Viral Infection/Replication
- Transmission Airborne / respiratory,
- blood-borne / body fluids
- Attachment host and viral receptors unite
- Viral - protein coat, glycoproteins,
envelope, - spikes
- Host - pili, cilia, flagella, membrane
proteins - Penetration of the cell membrane phagocytosis
- active transport by host cell blending -
envelope with cell membrane inject -
bacteriophage tail sheath uses enzymes to open
a hole in the cell wall/membrane
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33The End
and a new beginning
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36Genome
Icosahedral
Transmission Attachment Penetration
Capsid
Phagocytosis
Nucleus
Ribosome
Genomes
Capsids
Golgi body
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38Release
- Biological exhaustion of the cell -
disintegration - Cell lysis - cell is physically overloaded with
viruses and the cell membrane bursts - Cell to cell passage virus moves from one cell
to the next without passing through the
environment - Budding (see next slide)
39Release
- Budding - nucleocapsid moves to cell membrane
where it forces itself out of the cell taking a
portion of the cell with it.
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41Antiviral Agents
- Antibiotics do not work against viruses because
they do not have the cellular functions
antibiotics target - Nucleotide analogs - bind to viral DNA / RNA
- Acyclovir - prevent viral replication of herpes
- Azidothymidine (AZT) - prevent viral replication
of HIV - Gamciclovir - cytomegalovirus
- Amantadine - influenza
- Interferon - proteins, produced naturally by an
infected host cell. Do not help infected cell,
but protects neighboring cells
42Viral Vaccines
- Preventive measure - not treatment
- Injection / oral dose to prime the immune
system antigen - host makes antibody - inactivated virus - dead from physical/chemical
treatment - attenuated virus - live, weakened virus - slow
replication, no symptoms of the disease - synthetic antigens - genetically engineered
antigens - examples polio, yellow fever,
- measles, rubella, hepatitis,
- smallpox
43Kingdom Monera
- Formerly know as Prokaryotae,
all Monerans are prokaryotic bacteria - Heterotrophs - parasitic saprobphitic
- Autotrophs - photosynthetic chemosynthetic
- All are microscopic - some are ultramicroscopic
- Most are motile - flagella, cilia, slimy gliders
- Some are useful or harmless to humans, some cause
infection/disease
44Morphology - Basic shapes
- Cocci (coccus) spherical
- Bacilli (bacillus) rod-like
- Vibrio comma
- Spirochete flexible wavy shape
- Spirochetes have a worm-like, spiral-shaped form,
and wiggle vigorously when viewed under a
microscope - Spirillum corkscrew
- Anywhere from less than one to five helical
turns. - They have rigid helical cell structure as opposed
to the flexible cell structure of spirochetes. - diplococcus pair of cocci
- streptococcus chain of cocci
- streptobacilli chain of bacilli
- tetracoccus four cocci in a cube
- staphylococcus grapelike cluster
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55Im Wavy
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58Tetrads
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60Phylum Eubacteria
- the true bacteria
- mostly heterotrophs
- Decomposers, saprobes, parasites, symbionts
- all have a complex carbohydrate cell walls made
of peptidoglycan and at least one inner membrane - common causes of disease
- example Streptococcus aureus
61Other Moneran Phyla
- Prochlorobacteria small, photosynthetic
- Cyanobacteria formerly blue-green algae
- Archaebacteria now Kingdom Archaea, live in
extreme environments
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63Kingdom Archaea
- Â The archaea very much resemble bacteria, so
much so that they were once thought to be a weird
group of bacteria. However, by studying archaeal
cells on a molecular level, scientists have now
come to think that these "weird bacteria"
actually are a separate category of life
altogether. In fact, in some ways, archaea are
more like you than they are like bacteria!
- Â The archaea very much resemble bacteria, so
much so that they were once thought to be a weird
group of bacteria. However, by studying archaeal
cells on a molecular level, scientists have now
come to think that these "weird bacteria"
actually are a separate category of life
altogether. In fact, in some ways, archaea are
more like you than they are like bacteria!
64Archeaens Distinctives -Extremophiles
- Many archaeans thrive in conditions that would
kill other creatures boiling water, super-salty
pools, sulfur-spewing volcanic vents, acidic
water and deep in Antarctic ice. These types of
archaea are often labeled "extremophiles,"
meaning creatures that love extreme conditions.
65Kingdom Profiles - Archaea
66Archaean Distinctives
Biochemistry of the cell membrane
67Archaean Distinctives
Structure of the ribosomes
68Archaean Distinctives
Alternate Sources of nutrition Hydrogen,
Sulfur, Carbon Dioxide
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71Moneran Parts
- Most have a cell wall - some just a defective
layer - Prevents cell from exploding in a hypotonic
solution - Provides some protection against viruses, other
bacteria, antibiotics, host immune system,
environment, dehydration, disinfection - adhere to surfaces
- Cell walls are classified as Gram or Gram -
- Gram variable capsule, thick peptidoglycan,
membrane - Gram - variable capsule, outer lippoprotein
membrane, sheet of peptidoglycan, periplasam,
inner membrane
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74 Bacterial Growth
- Very short generation time (doubling time)
- 20 min for the fastest
- Average time is 30 min to 3 hours
- Lag phase - bacteria become accustomed to new
environment, new cells replace dying cells, slope
up - Logarithmic (log) phase - optimal level of
growth, population doubles rapidly, straight
ascending line. - Stationary phase - reproduction offsets death
(from accumulation of waste, lack of nutrients,
unfavorable environment and host immune response.
- Death phase - decline in population
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77Antibiotic Resistance
- Resistance is being able to defeat the antibiotic
by, making an enzyme that destroys the antibiotic
(penicillinase) -or- making a molecule that binds
to the active site of the antibiotic. - When exposed to antibiotics, the susceptible
cells in the population die - the resistant cells
multiply rapidly when competition is gone. - Resistant strains become widespread.
- Sometimes even non-resistant bacteria living near
resistant ones can survive - drug resistant genes can be transferred during
conjugation
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79Controlling Bacterial Disease
- Alxandar Flemming - discovered 1st antibiotic in
1929 - discovered penicillin growing on a moldy petri
dish - isolated antibacterial agent
- Lister - listerine is named for him
- pioneered hygiene sanitation
- heating to 60 C for 30 min destroys exotoxins and
kills most bacteria.
80Protozoans
- The animal-like, heterotrophic, unicellular,
Protists
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82ectoplasm
endoplasm
Hyalin cap
83Giardia - common beaver parasite
84Giardia Scanning Electron microscope
Compound light microscope
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86Plasmodium, causes malaria - 1 infectious human
disease
Do you know anyone with malaria?
Why not?
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88Toxoplasma gondii - 1/2 of all Americans have had
this sporazoa at one time - found in cats
pork.Not serious for healthy adults, but very
dangerous to newborns, fetus AIDS patients.
89This diagram shows the possible steps in the
complicated life-cycle of Toxoplasma
906 General Characteristics
Kingdom Fungi
- 1) Eukaryotic
- 2) Non-photosynthetic, heterotrophic absorptive
- 3) Lack tissue differentiation, composed of
similar cells hyphae - 4) Have cell walls made of chitin
polysaccharide, strength molecule - 5) Propagate by spores may be produced sexually
or asexually - 6) Non-motile
91Hyphae a Fungus original
92Hyphae a closer look
93Hyphae a microsopic view
94Fungi Feeding
- Parasites - specialized hyphae called haustoria
pierce the cell membranes of host cells and feed
directly from them
95Typical Deuteromycota Mycelium
96Thursh - Angular cheilitis
97Thrush - Atrophic candidiasis
98Thrush - Atrophic candidiasis
99Thrush - Atrophic candidiasis
100Babies with Thrush
101Athletes Foot - Moccasin Pattern
102Athletes Foot - Craks Fissures
103Onychomycosis Toenails fingernails
submitted by Stephanie Johnson class 04
104What can you do ?
105Athletes Foot - Advanced Spread
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108Ringworm - Basic Lesion Pattern
109Ringworm - Ankle
110Ringworm - Back
111Ringworm Face Head
112Ringworm - Legs
113Ringworm - Feet
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115Ringworm - Feet 77 year old woman
116Ringworm - More Nappy Old Toes
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118Kingdom Anamalia - Phylum Platyhelminthes
Three Classes Turbellaria - free living
flatworms Trematoda - parasitic
flukes Cestoda - tapeworms
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120 Class Trematoda Sheep Liver Fluke
Pharynx
Oral Sucker
Two Part Digestive Tract
121 Class Trematoda Chinese Liver Fluke
Ventral Sucker
Oral Sucker
122Kingdom Anamalia - Phylum Platyhelminthes -
Class Cestoda
Young Progottid
Scolex
Old Progottid
123Â
can grow up to 30 feet length of whole intestine
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125Kingdom Anamalia - Phylum Platyhelminthes -
Class Cestoda
Hooks
Suckers
Scolex
126A tapeworms fancy attachment equipment
127Kingdom Anamalia - Phylum Platyhelminthes -
Class Cestoda
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130Suckers
131how do you get a tape worm?
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135Urban Myths
- A young woman had tried all kinds of diets that
didn't work, and finally she decided to try diet
pills. They made her lose so much weight all at
once that she was really happy. Then one night,
when she was lying in bed with her husband, a
tapeworm crawled right out of her nose. It had
made her sick and caused her to lose so much
weight all of a sudden.
136Urban Myths
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138Kingdom Anamalia Phylum Nematoda
Examples Round worms, pinworms, filarial worms
(elephantiosis), trichinella (trichinosis) hookwor
m
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140Hookworm
141Are round worms dangerous? There have been cases
of human illness caused by the ingestion of live
Phocanema or Anisakis larvae in countries where
raw or lightly cured fish is commonly eaten. By
1980, there had been only one reported case of
illness in the United Kingdom caused by larval
round worms from fish this is because in the UK
fish products are normally cooked before
consumption.
142- Toxocara canis is the predominant cause of a
serious condition called Visceral Larva Migrans
in humans. Most victims are children. They are
infected by inadvertantly consuming worm eggs in
soil (typically by getting dirty fingers in their
mouths). The worm is not present in its correct
host but tries to complete its life cycle anyway.
The worm gets lost in the human body (classically
in the eye), dies, and generates an extreme
inflammatory reaction. If the worm dies within
the human eye, blindness usually results. - For this reason, it is important for parents to
be aware of this hazard. Proper hand-washing
will prevent infection. Monthly pet deworming
will reduce environmental contamination. Public
leash laws and restriction of dog walking are
meant to reduce fecal contamination of public
areas. Stray cats should be kept away from
childrens sandboxes.