Transcript chapt01CR
Chapter 1
The Main Themes of Microbiology
Microbiology
Microbiology
is a specialized area of biology that deals with
living organisms ordinarily too small to be seen without
magnification
Such
microscopic organisms are collectively referred to as
microorganisms or microbes
Microorganisms
include:
bacteria
viruses
fungi (microscopic, fungal spores)
protozoa (unicellular)
helminths (parasitic worms)
algae
2
Microbiology
Microbiology
is one of the largest and most complex of the
biological sciences because it integrates subject matter from
many diverse disciplines
Microbiologists
study every aspect of microbes
their genetics
their physiology
characteristics that may be harmful or beneficial
the ways they interact with the environment and with their hosts
their uses in industry and agriculture
3
Microbiological Endeavors-A sampler
Immunology
Public
health microbiology and epidemiology
Food,
dairy and aquatic microbiology
Agricultural
microbiology
Biotechnology
Genetic
engineering and recombinant DNA technology
4
5
6
7
8
Specialty Professions of Microbiology
Geomicrobiologists
- focus on the roles of microbes in the
development of earth’s crust
Marine
microbiologists - study the oceans and its smallest
inhabitants
Pharmaceutical
microbiologists - discover and develop new
drugs from microbial sources
Nurse
epidemiologists - analyze
infectious diseases in hospitals
Astrobiologists
the
occurrence
of
- study the possibilities of organisms in
space
9
The Impact of Microbes on Earth
For
billions of years, microbes have extensively shaped the
development of the earth’s habitats and the evolution of
other life forms
Procaryotes
Eucaryotes
(no nucleus) appeared first
(with nucleus) appeared later
Microbes
can be found nearly everywhere, from the deep in
the earth’s crust, to the polar ice caps and oceans, to the
bodies of plants and animals
10
11
Microbial Involvement
Nutrient
Energy
production (photosynthesis)
flow through the earth’s ecosystems
Decomposition
and nutrient recycling
Biotechnology
production of foods, drugs and vaccines
Genetic
engineering
Bioremediation
Infectious
diseases
12
13
14
Infectious Diseases and the Human
Condition
Humanity
is plagued by nearly 2,000 different microbes that
can cause various types of diseases - pathogens
Infectious
diseases still devastate human populations
worldwide, despite significant strides in understanding and
treating them
10
B new infections/year worldwide (WHO)
12
M deaths from infections/year worldwide
15
16
17
The General Characteristics of
Microorganisms
Prokaryotes
and eukaryotes
prokaryote – microscopic, unicellular organisms, lack nuclei and
membrane-bound organelles
eukaryote – unicellular (microscopic) and multicellular, nucleus
and membrane-bound organelles
Viruses
acellular, parasitic particles composed of a nucleic acid and
protein
18
19
20
Microbial Dimensions
Prokaryotes
Viruses
are measured in micrometers (10-6 m)
in nanometers (10-9 m)
Helminths
are measured in millimeters (10-3 m)
21
Insert figure 1.7
measurements
22
Lifestyles of Microorganisms
The
majority of microorganisms live a free existence in
habitats such as soil and water, where they are relatively
harmless and often beneficial
A
free-living organism can derive all required foods and
other factors directly from a nonliving environment
Many
microorganisms have close associations with other
organisms
parasites - harbored and nourished in the bodies of larger
organisms called hosts
a parasite’s actions may cause damage to its host through
infection and disease
23
Historical Foundations of Microbiology
300
years of contributions by many microbiologists
Prominent
discoveries include:
microscopy
The rise of the scientific method
development of medical microbiology
germ theory
modern microbiological techniques
24
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
Dutch
First
Insert figure 1.8
(1632-1723)
linen merchant
to observe living microbes
Single-lens
magnified up to 300X
25
Insert figure 1.9 (a)
microscope
26
Spontaneous Generation
Early
belief that some forms of life could arise from vital
forces present in nonliving or decomposing matter (flies
from rotten meat, mushrooms on rotting tree, rats and mice
from piles of litter. etc)
27
Scientific Method
A
general approach to explain a natural phenomenon
Form
a hypothesis - a tentative explanation that can be
supported or refuted by observation and experimentation
A
lengthy process of experimentation, analysis and testing
either supports or refutes the hypothesis
28
Scientific Method
Results
must be published and repeated by other
investigators
If
hypothesis is supported by a growing body of evidence
and survives rigorous scrutiny, it moves to the next level of
confidence - it becomes a theory
If
evidence of a theory is so compelling that the next level of
confidence is reached - it becomes a Law or principle
29
30
Discovery of Spores and Sterilization
John
Tyndall and Ferdinand Cohn each demonstrated the
presence of heat resistant forms of some microbes
Cohn determined these forms to be endospores
Sterility
requires the elimination of all life forms including
endospores and viruses
31
Development of Aseptic Techniques
Oliver Wendell Holmes – observed that mothers of
home births had fewer infections than those who gave birth
in hospital
Dr.
Ignaz Semmelweis – correlated infections with
physicians coming directly from autopsy room to maternity
ward
Dr.
32
Development of Aseptic Techniques
Lister – introduced aseptic techniques reducing
microbes in medical settings to prevent infections
Joseph
involved disinfection of hands using chemicals prior to surgery
use of heat for sterilization
33
Pathogens and Germ Theory of
Disease
Many
diseases are caused by the growth of microbes in the
body and not by sins, bad character, or poverty, etc.
Two
major contributors:
Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch
34
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895)
Showed
microbes caused fermentation
and spoilage
Disproved
spontaneous generation of
microorganisms
Developed
Insert figure 1.11
pasteurization
Demonstrated
what is now known as
Germ Theory of Disease
Developed
a rabies vaccine
35
Robert Koch (1843-1910)
Established
Koch’s postulates - a
sequence of experimental steps that verified
the germ theory
Identified
cause of anthrax, TB, and
cholera
Insert figure 1.12
Developed
pure culture methods
36
Taxonomy: Organizing, Classifying and
Naming Living Things
Formal
system originated by Carl von Linné (1701-1778)
Concerned
with:
classification – orderly arrangement of organisms into groups
nomenclature – assigning names
identification – discovering and recording traits of organisms for
placement into taxonomic schemes
37
Levels of Classification
Domain
- Archaea, Bacteria & Eukarya
Kingdom
Phylum
-
or Division
Class
Order
Family
Genus
species
38
Naming Microrganisms
Binomial
Gives
(scientific) nomenclature
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)
39
40
Evolution - living things change gradually
over millions of years
Changes
favoring survival are retained and less beneficial
changes are lost
All
new species originate from preexisting species
Closely
related organisms have similar features because
they evolved from common ancestral forms
Evolution
usually progresses toward greater complexity
41
42
3 Domains
Bacteria
- true bacteria, peptidoglycan
Archaea
- odd bacteria that live in extreme environments,
high salt, heat, etc.
Eukarya-
have a nucleus and organelles
43
Insert figure 1.15
Woese-Fox System
44