MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences
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Transcript MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences
Lecture 5: Survey of the microbial world
Edith Porter, M.D.
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Classification of microorganisms
▪ Taxonomy
▪ Three domain system: Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya
Prokaryotes
▪ Bacteria
▪ Archaea
Eukaryotes
▪ Protozoa
▪ Algae
▪ Fungi
▪ Helminths
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The science of classifying organisms
Provides universal names for organisms
Provides a reference for identifying
organisms
Initially based on morphology and
biochemical assays
Now based on nucleic acid sequencing (16S
and 18S rRNA analysis)
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The study of the evolutionary history of
organisms
All Species Inventory (2001–2025)
To identify all species of life on Earth
Species definition
Eukaryotes: breed among themselves
Prokaryotes: > 97% homology in 16S rRNA
Cladograms used to establish relation ship
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Taxonomy is the science of classification using
a hierarchical system
Universal ancestor
The three domains differ in presence of a
nucleus (eukarya), ether linked lipids (archaea)
and use of formylmethionine as started amino
acid in protein synthesis (bacteria)
Cladograms are used to establish evolutionary
relationships
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Obligate intracellular bacteria
Cannot proliferate outside of a host cell
Selected human pathogens
Rickettsia
Chlamydia
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Transmitted by ticks or lice
Infects vascular endothelial cells
R. rickettsii: Rocky Mountain spotted fever
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Eukaryotic
Aerobic or facultatively anaerobic
Chemoheterotrophic
Most are decomposers
Asexual and sexual spore formation
For Reproduction, not endurance!!
Broad use of fungi
Food, food production, drugs
Mycology is the study of fungi
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, absorptive
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YEASTS
Unicellular
Proliferate by budding or
fission
Candida albicans
MOLDS
Multicellular
Septated and unseptated
hyphae
Mass of hyphae is mycelium
Aspergillus spec., Rhizopus
spec.
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Switch growth phase depending on environmental
conditions
Pathogenic dimorphic fungi are yeastlike at 37°C and
moldlike at 25°C
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Systemic mycoses: Deep within body
Subcutaneous mycoses: Beneath the skin
Cutaneous mycoses: Affect hair, skin, and
nails
Superficial mycoses: Localized, e.g., hair
shafts
Opportunistic mycoses: Caused by normal
microbiota or environmental fungi
Note: antibiotics do not work against fungi!
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Yeasts
Candida: Candidiasis
Cryptococcus: Meningitis
Molds
Aspergillus: Lung infection in neutropenic patients
Rhizopus, Mucor: in diabetes patients
Dimorphic
Coccidioides: Lung infections
Histoplasma: Lung infections
Dermatophytes
Trichophyton, Epidermophyton: Tinea
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Eukaryotic
Always unicellular
Chemoheterotrophs
Digestion in vacuoles
Often complex life cycles with multiple hosts and
vectors
Some produce cysts
Resistant survival forms
Vegetative form is a trophozoite
Reproduction
Asexual
Sexual reproduction
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Archaezoa: Trichomonas, Giardia
Amaebazoa: Entamoeba
Apicomplexa: Plasmodium
Ciliophora: Balantidum
Euglenozoa: Trypanosoma
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Eukaryotic
Multicellular, organ differentiation
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Platyhelminthes (flatworms)
▪ Class: Trematodes (flukes)
▪ Class: Cestodes (tapeworms)
Phylum: Nematodes (roundworms)
Chemoheterotrophic
Multiple hosts
Intermediate host
Definitive host: adult form develops, sexual reproduction
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Monoecious (hermaphroditic)
Male and female reproductive systems in one
animal
Dioecious
Separate male and female
Egg larva(e) adult
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Oral sucker: food uptake
Incomplete digestive tract
Ventral Sucker: Attachment
Mostly hermaphroditic (monoecious)
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Sucker for
attachment
No digestive tract
Food uptake by
absorption
Hermaphrodites
(monoecious)
Scolex, neck,
proglottides
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Necator americanus
(hook worm)
Dioecious (male, female)
Complete digestive tract
Caenorrhabditis elegans: model system
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Fungi
Molds (septated, unseptated), yeast, dimorphic
Sexual and asexual spores
Mycoses: local or systemic impairment of host
defense
Protozoa: always unicellular, often vectors
Helminths: always multicellular, complex life
cycles
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Eukaryotic
Multicellular, organ differentiation
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Platyhelminthes (flatworms)
▪ Class: Trematodes (flukes)
▪ Class: Cestodes (tapeworms)
Phylum: Nematodes (roundworms)
Chemoheterotrophic
Multiple hosts
Intermediate host
Definitive host: adult form develops, sexual reproduction
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