Title: Methods in Microbial Ecology Lecture 16 Feb 27, 2006
1Methods in Microbial EcologyLecture 16Feb 27,
2006
2Microbial ecology
- The study of how microorganisms interact with
each other and with their environment. - Biodiversity isolation, identification and
quantification of microorganisms in their native
habitats - Microbial activity what are the organisms
actually doing in their native habitats
3Culture-dependent analysis
- In nature, microorganisms exist in mixed
cultures called microbial communities - To isolate and study a particular organism,
researchers must isolate microorganisms from
nature and establish them in pure cultures - Enrichment culture is a selective medium and
incubation procedure that selects for desired
organisms and against undesired ones. Success
requires a proper inoculum, culture medium and
incubation conditions
4Enrichment and isolation of Azotobacter
- Azotobacter is a fast-growing nitrogen-fixing
bacterium - It is isolated in culture conditions including
oxygen, and no fixed nitrogen supply
5Winogradsky column
- A miniature anoxic ecosystem that is used as a
long-term inoculant source for enrichment
cultures - Particularly good for enrichment of purple and
green phototrophic bacteria, sulfate reducing
bacteria - Preparation 1) fill a large glass cylinder
half full with organic-rich mud supplemented with
calcium carbonate and calcium sulfate. 2) Top up
with lake, pond or sea water. 3) Cap loosely and
grow in muted sunlight
6Test the hypothesis that a particular organism
exists in the column by supplementing with a
compound that it can degrade
7- A mixture of organisms generally develops
- Algae and cyanobacteria appear in the upper part
of water column and produce oxygen - Anoxic decomposition in the mud creates a
gradient of hydrogen sulfide which favors growth
of green and purple sulfur bacteria - Purple nonsulfur bacteria may grow at the
interface between oxic and anoxic zones
8Enrichment bias
- Dominant organism in an enrichment culture does
not necessarily represent the dominant organism
in a natural habitat. - Laboratory cultures often misrepresent natural
communities. Lab cultures favour fastest-growing
species - Dilution of the inoculum prior to enrichment
often yields a different culture. Why?
9Pure culture isolation agar shakes
- Dilution of a mixed culture in tubes containing
molten agar. Individual colonies become
separated and embedded in the agar - Useful for purifying anaerobes such as
phototrophic sulfur bactera and sulfate-reducing
bacteria from Winogradsky columns. - Pure cultures are generally obtained after
several serial dilutions
10Pure culture isolation Most Probable Number
technique
- Serial dilution of inoculum in liquid medium
until the final tube shows no growth. - Used to test numbers of microorganisms in foods,
wastewater and other samples where cell numbers
are measured routinely - Medium can be highly selective for individual
species or complex enough to get an idea of total
cell numbers
11MPN in this example is 105 106 recoverable
cells per gram of sample
12High-tech pure cultures-Laser tweezers
- Apparatus consists of an inverted light
microscope, powerful infrared laser and
micromanipulation device - Laser creates a force pushing down on small
objects (such as a single cell) that can be moved
away from contaminants - Useful for isolating slow-growing or rare
species
13- Cells in capillary tubes can be optically
trapped, isolated. Tube is broken and the cell
is flushed out into sterile medium to initiate a
pure culture
14Molecular analysis viability and
quantification staining
- DAPI 4,6-diamido-2-phenylindole is a
fluorescent stain useful for quantitating cells
in opaque habitats - DAPI binds to DNA and fluoresces bright blue,
making cells easy to count - Aquatic samples can be counted after the sample
is passed through a filter - DAPI staining does not distinguish living from
dead cells or between different microbial groups
15Viability staining
- Methods of fluorescent staining that distinguish
between living and dead cells. Example
LIVE/DEAD Bac Light - Based on the integrity of the cytoplasmic
membrane - Green fluorescent dye penetrates all cells. Red
dye containing propidium iodide penetrates only
those cells with severely damaged membrane. Red
cells dead cells - Procedure does not work in natural habitats
because of nonspecific fluorescence of background
materials
16Fluorescent antibodies-immunofluorescence
- Exploits the specificity of antibodies to
recognize a particular cell-surface protein of an
organism - Used for identifying an organism in a complex
community including many species, such as soil or
a clinical sample - Preparation of antibodies against a particular
organism is expensive and time-consuming - Many clinically relevant antibodies are
available commercially
17Detection of Sulfobolus acidocaldarius on the
surface of soil particles by immunofluorescence
18Limitations of cell staining/microscopy
- Very small cells may be overlooked
- Morphologically similar but genetically distinct
species may be confused - Genetic stains solve this problem by detecting
specific gene sequences that can be quite
specific, or quite promiscuous
19Genetic Stains - FISH
- Fluoresent in situ hybridization uses
fluorescently-labelled single-stranded DNA or RNA
probes to bind directly to its complementary
sequence in a nucleic acid. - Phylogenetic staining using FISH uses probes
that bind directly to signature sequences
within 16S (prokaryotes) or 18S (eukaryotes)
rRNA. Degree of specificity of the probes can be
altered to detect individual species or entire
domains. Can therefore be used to track related
organisms
20(No Transcript)
21Chromosome painting
- FISH technology used to detect the presence of
specific genes in a sample. Example is a
nitrogen-fixing organism present? Look for
nitrogenase - Must have a fluorescent probe specific for the
class of genes of interest can distinguish
photosynthetic organisms, nitrogen fixers,
hydrogen bacteria etc. - Used to estimate the numbers of different types
of cells in a natural sample
22(No Transcript)
23In situ reverse transcription
- Used to determine whether a given gene is being
expressed in a sample at a particular time - Involves the use of a probe that binds to the
mRNA of the gene of interest. Therefore only the
expressed gene is detected - Allows researchers to study factors affecting
gene expression in natural populations and
habitats
24PCR linking genes to specific organisms
- Biodiversity of a habitat can be monitored
without culturing or observing cells. Isolate
characteristic gene sequences instead! - Isolate total DNA from habitat and clean up
contaminants. Use PCR to amplify gene sequences
of interest (often 16S RNA) - Sequence individual PCR products or separate
them by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis
25- The most abundant members of a microbial
community may never have been seen in laboratory
culture
26Measuring microbial activity in
nature-radioisotopes
- Direct chemical measurements are often
sufficient to detect microbial activities
transformation of lactate and sulfate to hydrogen
sulfide by sulfate-reducing bacteria - Radioisotopes are used to determine the fate of
portions of molecules, turnover rate, or for
extreme sensitivity
27(No Transcript)
28Controls such as the killed cell control
guarantee that transformation of a radiolabeled
compound is due to a microbial rather than a
strictly chemical process
29Microelectrodes
- Tiny glass electrodes (2-100 ?m diameter) to
measure pH, oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen,
hydrogen sulfide. Often used to measure chemical
reactions in microbial mats - Layered microbial communities with cyanobacteria
in the uppermost layer, anoxygenic phototrophs in
middle layers and chemoorganotrophs (especially
sulfur reducing) as light becomes limiting at the
bottom - Microbial mats are found in hot springs and
intertidal zones
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Stable isotopes
- Isotopes that are not radioactive. Carbon and
sulfur are the most commonly used in microbiology - 12C is 95, 13C is 5
- 32S is common, 34S is rare
- Biochemical reactions tend to favour the lighter
isotope. Therefore cells become enriched in 12C
and depleted in 13C relative to a standard.
33Isotopic fractionation discrimination against
the heavier isotope
34Use of isotopic fractionation in microbial ecology
- Isotopic composition of a sample indicates its
past biological activity - Life can be inferred from organic carbon in
rocks 3.5 billion years old - Sulfides in lunar rocks provide evidence against
past life on the moon
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)