Title: What is Microbiology?
1What is Microbiology?
Microbiology is the Science that studies
Microorganisms.
Microorganisms, roughly, are those living things
that are too small to be seen with the naked eye.
Microorganisms cannot be distinguished
Phylogenetically from Macroorganisms, e.g.,
includes fungi as well as bacteria, etc.
Microbiology is more a collection of techniques
- Microscopic observation of whole organisms
A microbiologist usually first isolates a
specific microorganism from a population and then
cultures it.
2Relative Microbe Sizes
3Microbes Ecology
- Microbes are producesthey provide energy to
ecosystems - Microbes are fixersthey make nutrients available
from inorganic sources, e.g., nitrogen - Microbes are decomposersthey free up nutrients
from no longer living sources - Microbes form symbioses (such as mycorrhizal
fungi associated with plant rootsthough these
are somewhat macroscopic also the bacteria found
in legume root nodules, etc.) - Microbes serve as emdosymbionts (e.g.,
chloroplasts and mitochondria)
4Microbes Industry
- Industry Fermentation products (ethanol,
acetone, etc.) - Food Wine, cheese, yogurt, bread, half-sour
pickles, etc. - Biotech Recombinant products (e.g., human
insulin, vaccines) - Environment Bioremediation
Each carton of BugsPlus provides easy to follow
step-by-step instructions, containers of
specially-formulated wet and dry nutrients and a
container of microbes cultured for their ability
to digest oil and other petroleum derivatives.
5Microbes Disease
- Microbes both cause and prevent diseases (for
latter antibiotics are made by microbes and
normal flora interfere with pathogen replication) - Microbes produce antibiotics used to treat
diseases - The single most important achievement of modern
medicine is the ability to treat or prevent
microbial disease - The Germ Theory of Disease Microbes cause
disease! - Yes, it wasnt so long ago that humans didnt
know that unseen, microscopic organisms can cause
animal and plant diseases
6Brueghel The Triumph of Death (1560)
7Normal Flora
These are the harmless microorganisms found on
your body.
Every part of your body that normally comes in
contact with outside world (deep lungs and
stomach are exceptions)
8Viruses
Viruses are ...infectious agents of small size
and simple composition that can multiply only in
living cells of animals, plants and bacteria
plus fungi protozoa. Viruses are obligate
parasites that are metabolically inert when they
are outside their hosts. They all rely, to
varying extents, on the metabolic processes of
their hosts to reproduce themselves. The viral
diseases we see are due to the effects of this
interaction between the virus and its host cell
(and/or the hosts response to this
interaction). Encyclopedia Britannica
9Virus (Virion Particle)
- The Virion is what defines a virus as a virus
- A Virion is the extracellular state of a virus
- The job of Virions is to find new cells to infect
- As such, Virions are a durable state that is
designed to attach to susceptible cells - The Virion is then responsible for translocation
of the virus genome into the cell - The Virion consists of a DNA (or RNA) genome
surrounded by Protein that, in turn, may be
surrounded by a Lipid Bilayer - The Protein layer is called a Capsid
- The Lipid Bilayer is called an Envelope
10Virus (Virion Particle)
11Capsid (Nucleocapsid)
- The Capsid is the protein shell surrounding the
virus nucleic-acid genome - A Nucleocapsid is that combination of protein
capsid and nucleic-acid genome - Capsids consist of multiple subunits of one or
more types of protein - Capsomere(s) capsid protein subunits
- For viruses with complex morphologies the capsid
may consist of many (10s of) different types of
capsomer proteins, with additional proteins
involved simply in capsid morphogenesis - Capsids are responsible for nucleic-acid
protection and penetration into cells
12Virus Envelopes (Spikes)
- In addition to the capsid, many animal viruses
additionally posses Envelopes - An Envelope is a lipid bilayer that surrounds the
nucleocapsid - For enveloped viruses the envelope is also (in
addition to the capsid) involved in nucleic-acid
protection and penetration - Without an envelope an otherwise enveloped virus
is not mature nor infectious - Enveloped proteins often have Glycoproteins
(Spikes) projecting from their envelopes that are
involved in virus infection - For Non-Enveloped viruses the capsid is solely
responsible for nucleic-acid protection and
penetration
13Virus Classification
- Viruses are classified
- According to their Genome Type
- Their Virion Morphology (as determined by
electron microscopy) - Their strategies of replication
- Their Serology (serotype), which is their
reaction with specific antiserum - (Increasingly) in terms of the sequence of their
genomes - International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses
(ICTV)
14Viral Genomes
http//www.virology.net/Big_Virology/BVFamilyGenom
e.html
One way to distinguish different types of viruses
(e.g., influenza virus from HIV) is in terms of
the characteristics of their nucleic-acid genomes
Nucleic-Acid Virus Genome
15Steps of Virus Replication
- Adsorption (attachment)
- Penetration (nucleic-acid release)
- Synthesis (of RNA and proteins, as well as DNA if
DNA genome) - Maturation (assembly of virion)
- Release (lysis or chronic release, e.g., budding,
with the latter coinciding with release for
various enveloped viruses)
Caveat It is important to realize that variation
among viruses is between virus strains/species
any one kind of virus cannot replicate in
multiple ways, have more than one virion
morphology, or vary in genome type, etc.
16Lytic Phage Infection Cycle
17Temperate Phage Infection Cycle
18Naked Animal Virus Infection
Lysis!
19Enveloped Virus Infection
Budding, Not Lysis!
20HIV Infection Cycle
Budding, Not Lysis!
21Bacteria Sex
- Viruses move genetic material from cell to cell
- Mostly this material is their own genomes, i.e.,
genes that collectively code for the production
of new viruses - Bacteria DNA also can move from cell to cell
- Once received by a cell, this DNA may be
incorporated into the bacterial genome via
recombination - This idea of DNA sourced from different parents
recombining into a single chromosome is
equivalent to eukaryotic sex (i.e., fertilization
followed by recombination) - Transformation, Transduction, Conjugation
22Transformation
Transformation DNA picked up directly from the
medium and recombined into the genome
23Transduction
24Plasmids
25Conjugation
26Resistance Plasmids
27Bacterial Genotype ? Phenotype
- Bacterial response to environmental change
- Control of gene expression
- Lac operon (response to presence of lactose)
- Trp operon (response to presence of tryptophan)
- Catabolite Repressor Protein (response to
presence of glucose)
28Lac Operon without Lactose
Enzymes required for Lactose Digestion are
synthesized (to any great extent) only when
Lactose is present in the environment
29Lac Operon with Lactose
30Negative Control
Protein-DNA binding Inhibits Transcription
Also Inducible Operon since lactose binding ?
transcription
31Trp Operon without Trp
32Trp Operon with Trp
33Feedback Inhibition
34Negative Control
Protein-DNA binding Inhibits Transcription
Also Corepressed Operon since Trp binding ?
transcription
35Catabolite Repressor Protein
36Positive Control
Protein-DNA binding Enhances Transcription
37Link to Next Presentation
38Acknowledgements
http//207.233.44.253/wms/reynolmj/lifesciences/le
cturenote/bio3/Chap10.ppt http//www.bbchs.k12.il
.us/Teacher_Pages/Hammond/Powerpoint/Chapter_18.pp
t
39Prion Action
40Transposition