Introductory Microbiology
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Transcript Introductory Microbiology
Microbial Life
Chapter 13
Characteristics of Microbes
Prokaryotic cells
Smaller
Lack special structures such as a nucleus and organelles
All prokaryotic cells are microorganisms
Some microorganisms are eukaryotic
Viruses?
“Micro”organisms
Microorganisms are diverse and widespread
Pathogens
causing disease
Normal / indigenous flora
decomposing dead skin cells
supplying essential vitamins,
guarding against pathogenic
organisms
Saprobes
In soil
decompose dead organisms,
sustaining chemical cycles
Microbiology
The study of organisms (microorganisms or microbes) too
small to be seen without magnification
This includes:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Bacteria
Viruses
Fungi
Protozoa
Algae
Helminthes
Bacteria
Bacteria
– Single-celled organisms
– Various shapes
• Cocci
• Bacilli
• Spiral shapes
– Cellular
– Lack membrane-enclosed
cellular structures
– Widely distributed in
nature
Generalized structure of a prokaryotic cell
Appendages
Flagella
rotates 360o
1-2 or many distributed over entire cell
Fimbriae
adhesion
Pili
made of pilin protein
found only in Gram negative cells
Functions
joins bacterial cells for DNA transfer
(conjugation)
Adhesion
to form biofilms and microcolonies
The Cell Envelope
External covering outside the cytoplasm
Composed of few basic layers:
glycocalyx
cell wall
Gram positive
Gram negative
cell membrane
Maintains cell integrity
Chromosome
single, circular, double-stranded
DNA molecule
contains all the genetic
information required by a cell
DNA is tightly coiled around a
protein
dense area called the nucleoid
Plasmids
small circular, double-stranded DNA
stable extrachromosomal DNA
elements that carry nonessential
genetic information
duplicated and passed on to offspring
replicate independently from the
chromosome
Endospores
resting, dormant cells
produced by some G+ genera
resistance linked to high levels of calcium
& certain acids
longevity verges on immortality
25 to 250 million years
pressurized steam at 120oC for 20-30
minutes will destroy
Viruses
Viruses
– Acellular
– Composed of nucleic
acid and a few proteins
– Requires electron
microscope for viewing
General Structure of Viruses
Capsids
All viruses possess
Constructed from identical subunits
called capsomers
made of protein
Structural types:
helical
Continuous helix of capsomers forming a
cylindrical nucleocapsid
icosahedral
20-sided with 12 corners
vary in the number of capsomers
General Structure of Viruses
Viral envelope
mostly animal viruses
acquired when virus leaves host cell
Protects the nucleic acid when the virion is outside
the host cell
spikes
exposed proteins on the outside of the envelope
essential for attachment of the virus to the host cell
Naked
composed only of a nucleocapsid
Enveloped
surrounded by an envelope
Nucleic acids
Viral genome
either DNA or RNA but never both
Number of genes varies for each type of virus
few to hundreds
DNA viruses
usually double stranded (ds)
may be single stranded (ss)
circular or linear
RNA viruses
usually single stranded
may be double stranded
Segmented versus nonsegmented
6 Steps in Viral Replication
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
adsorption
penetration
replication
assembly
maturation
release
Fungi
Fungi
– Yeasts and molds
• Single-celled, microscopic
– Mushrooms
• Multicellular, macroscopic
– Cell nucleus and other cellular
structures
– Absorb nutrients from their
environment
– Saprobes
– Widely distributed in water and soil
Thermal dimorphism
grow as molds at 30°C and as yeasts at
37°C
Fungal Organization - Mold
Fungal Cell Structure
Hyphae
Mycelium
Conidia / spores
Sexual and asexual reproduction
Cell walls contain chitin
Energy reserve is glycogen
Nonmotile
Produce wind-blown spores
Grow toward food source
Fungal Organization
Yeasts
Soft, uniform texture and
appearance
Unicellular (bicellular)
False hyphae
Beta-glycan cell wall structure
Protozoa
Protozoa
100,000 species
@ 25 are important pathogens
Some spread by insect vectors
Vary in shape, lack a cell wall
Most are unicellular
Colonies are rare
Obtain food by engulfing or ingesting smaller organisms and
plant material
Most are harmless, free-living in a moist habitat
Protozoa
Exist as trophozoite
motile feeding stage
cyst
Dormant resting stage when
conditions are unfavorable for growth
and feeding
All reproduce asexually, mitosis or
multiple fission
Many also reproduce sexually
Protozoan Classification
Simple grouping is based on method of motility,
reproduction, and life cycle
Mastigophora
primarily flagellar motility
Sarcodina
primarily ameba
Ciliophora
Cilia
Apicomplexa
motility is absent except male gametes
Algae
Algae
– Unicellular to multicellular
– Macroalgae
– Microalgae
– Have a nucleus and many
membrane-enclosed cellular
structures
– Photosynthesize their own food
– Widely distributed in fresh and
salt water
– Important source of food for other
organisms
Algae Diversity
Diatoms
Chrysophyta
single-celled
silica in their cell wall
silica shell
found in fresh water
Euglenophyta
single-celled
photosynthesis
Dinoflagellata
Phaeophyta
contains many familiar
seaweeds.
Rhodophyta
flagella and can move
red pigments
usually photosynthetic
contains many types of seaweed
sometimes phosphorescent
plankton