Introduction to Food Microbiology final
Download
Report
Transcript Introduction to Food Microbiology final
INTRODUCTION TO FOOD MICROBIOLOGY
PEOPLE HAVE “PRACTICED” FOOD
MICROBIOLOGY FOR THOUSANDS OF
YEARS
Even if they didn’t k
know it
HISTORY OF FOOD MICROBIOLOGY
•
8-10,000 years ago
–
•
Ca. 4,000 years ago
–
•
Fermented foods
1600s
–
•
Food preservation
Early observations with microscopes
1700s
–
Spontaneous generation was challenged (in
experiments involving food)
1800s –The Golden Age of Microbiology
-Cell theory
-Spontaneous generation disproved
-Proof that fermentation
is a biological process
-Germ theory of
disease
-Canning invented
-Discovery of organisms
that cause foodborne
illness
-Techniques for studying
microbes
Koch’s postulateshttp://scienceblogs.com/digitalbio/wpcontent/blogs.dir/460/files/2012/04/i-67928b6ba62e66dd3d1e18842c3e71d7Kochs_postulates.gif
SANITATION
1849 John Snow: cholera spread through
water contaminated with feces
Several waterborne pathogens isolated
More pathogens isolated from food, diseased animals, feces
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
Salmonella enteriditis- isolated from meat as
well as person who ate it
Staphylococcus
Clostridium botulinum
Isolated in late 19th century
Koch’s postulates in action!
TECHNIQUES IN MICROBIOLOGY
Pure culture technique
Microscopy
Staining, esp. Gram stain
Sterile microbiological media (liquid and solid)
Aseptic technique
Methods to control microbial growth
Biochemical tests to distinguish microbes
Studying beneficial microbes as well as pathogens
MOLECULAR GENETICS AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Rapid identification
Genetic engineering
Understanding mechanisms of resistance,
biochemical processes, etc.
LIMITATIONS OF MICROBIOLOGICAL
TECHNIQUES
Most microbes cannot be grown in the
laboratory
Microbes do not grow in isolation
Most microbes have not even been discovered!
TOPICS IN FOOD MICROBIOLOGY
Fermentation/probiotics
Fermented
foods and important metabolites
Making fermenting strains more stable
Resistant
to viruses
Enhance fermentation capacity
Understanding probiotics and their effect on
the body (the microbiome)
FOOD SPOILAGE
Which microbes, and under what conditions?
What are the metabolites (products)?
How do they work in the cold?
How can they be controlled?
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
Detection
Identification
Control
How do we monitor and share information?
Are we making the problem worse?
Antibiotic
resistance
Are we introducing pathogens through our
processes?
WHAT KINDS OF MICROBES ARE FOUND IN
FOOD?
Bacteria
Fungi (yeasts and molds)
Viruses
Protozoans, algae, helminths to a lesser extent
(Helminths=worms)
Protozoans and helminths are considered
“accidental”
PROKARYOTES
•
•
•
•
Smaller cells
No nucleus or organelles
Single-celled
Bacteria and archaea
EUKARYOTES
•
Larger cells
Cells have nucleus and
organelles
Can be single-celled or
multicellular
Plantae, Animalia, Fungi,
Protista
Viruses and prions are not
cells so are not considered
alive
PROKARYOTES VS EUKARYOTES
NOMENCLATURE
Binomial name: genus and species
Ex.
Salmonella typhimurium; S. typhimurium
Subspecies:
Lactococcus
lactis ssp. lactis, (soft cheese)
L. lactis ssp. cremoris (hard cheese)
Serovar, pathovar, biovar
YEASTS AND MOLDS
Yeasts: single-celled
eukaryotes
Molds: multicellular
structure (filaments,
spores) required for
reproductions
Can be used to make
foods but also involved
in spoilage
Saccharomyces
cerevisiae:
Carbon dioxide and
ethanol
MOLDS CAN GROW ALMOST ANYWHERE
•
•
•
•
•
Food spoilage
Toxins
Allergens
Food processing
Different genera grow on different foods
–
–
–
Rhizopus- fruits, vegetables, bread
Geotrichum- dairy mold
Penicillium-spoils almost everything, but also used
to make cheese
VIRUSES INFECT CELLS
Can cause disease
Interfere with food processing
T4-infects E. coli
Hepatitis A- infects humans
PROTOZOANS, ALGAE, HELMINTHS
Protozoans can cause parasitic disease
(Giardia, Cryptosporidium, Toxoplasma)
Algae- photosynthetic protists
Contaminants,
food products, toxins
Helminths- parasites
Roundworms,
tapeworms- contaminated food
BACTERIA (“EUBACTERIA”)
We will spend much lecture time, and most lab
time, working with them
Classification is complicated and changing all
the time
Most bacterial species have not been
described, but many have been very well
studied
MAJOR CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA
Gram-positive or Gram-negative
morningsidemicro.wikidot.com
Morphology
www.zazzle.com
Scienceblogs.com
BACTERIAL CLASSIFICATION, CONTINUED
Aerobes, anaerobes, fermenters
Spore formers, non spore formers
What metabolic products do they produce?
What do they use for food?
Acids, alcohols, gases- and which ones?
Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins
Under what conditions do they grow?
Temperature range, pH range, availability of water
Do they cause disease? What kind?
WHAT SHOULD A FOOD MICROBIOLOGIST
KNOW?
Characteristics of the different types of microbes
How to identify and enumerate them
Factors that affect their growth (innate and
introduced)
Fermentation vs spoilage
How microbes cause disease
That the field of food microbiology is a work in
progress!