Title: Microbiology
1Microbiology
2Part I
- Introduction to Microbiology
3Scope of Microbiology
- Microbes
- Life forms which require magnification for
viewing - Ubiquitous
- Each group has a distinct set of biological
characteristics - Single celled vs. multi-celled
- Prokaryotic vs. eukaryotic
- Cell wall vs. no cell wall
- Autotrophic vs. heterotrophic
- Cellular vs. acellular
4Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic
5Assigning Characteristics
- Bacteria
- Protozoa
- Fungi
- Algae
- Helminths
- Viruses
Assign common characteristics to each group
6Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Acid fast bacteria
(shown in pink) like this causes TB and leprosy.
Light blue is Staph epi, a common bacteria cocci
which inhabits the Skin. Not a common pathogen
Schistosoma (worms) at two different stages of
development liver Disease and other symptoms
(Top) Coccidioidomycosis Arthrospores (Bottom)
Development of Arthrospores Into spherule in
lung tissue Fungal Infection of the lung
Staphylococcus Aureus Gram positive
bacteria Staph infections and MRSA
Trypanosoma Eukaryotic pathogen African Sleeping
Sickness
Treponema pallidum Bacterial spirochete Causes
syphilis
Herpes Virus
7Size Comparisons
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9Part II
- Historical Figures in Microbiology
10Superstition of Microbiology
- Spontaneous generation
- For thousands of years people believed that
living things arose from vital forces present in
non living matter - Mushrooms appearing on rotting wood
- Afflicted people were thought to be cursed
- Controversy between
- Abiogenesis and biogenesis
11First Look at Microbes
- In the 1600s
- Robert Hooke (English) reported that living
things were composed of little boxes or cells - Antonie van Leeuwenhoek construction microscopes
which could magnify 300X - Described microorganisms that he observed in
teeth scrapings rain water
12Abiogenesis vs. Biogenesis
- Franceso Redi
- He wanted to ascertain whether maggots arose from
some vital force of the meat or were offspring
of flies
13Abiogenesis vs. Biogenesis
- Conclusions of Redis Experiment
- This and related experiments proved that complex
animals such as insects and mice develop through
biogenesis - However, meat leaf out but covered with gauze
would still rot - Therefore, the idea that simpler organism could
arise from abiogenesis was still accepted
14Proving that Microbes Are Present in Dust
Particles
- Jablots vs. Needhams Experiment
- Jablots experiment supported the idea that
microbes are present in the air
15Proving that Microbes Are Present in Dust
Particles
- However, support for Jablots experiment faltered
when Needhams results were reported - Needham performed the same experiment with mutton
gravy - Microbial growth was in both containers
- What do you think happened here?
16Proving that Microbes Are Present in Dust
Particles
- These disputes would be put to rest with Louis
Pasteurs work
17Pasteurization
- Pasteur also demonstrated that spoilage bacteria
could be killed by heat that was not hot enough
to evaporate the alcohol in wine. This
application of a high heat for a short time is
called pasteurization
18Listers Work
- English physician advanced the idea of antisepsis
in health care setting 1860s - Dressed wounds with carbolic acid (phenol)
- Reduced deaths among patients by 2/3
- Listerine Mouthwash
19Kochs Postulates
- 1876 Robert Koch provided proof that a bacterium
causes anthrax and provided the experimental
steps, postulates, used to prove that a specific
microbe causes a specific disease - Koch was a physician and Pasteurs young rival
20Kochs Postulates
Take scraping and plate on agar
Mouse dies with sores
A heterogeneous population of bacteria Grow
which one is the causative agent
Isolate all different strains and types and
inject into healthy mice and see which
mice develop similar phenotype and symptoms
Take a sample again from mice which died of same
symptoms and isolate the causative agent again
21Kochs Postulates
A sequence of experimental steps to relate a
specific microbe to a specific disease
22Kochs Postulates
Used to prove the specific causative agent of
an infectious disease
23Jenners Work
- Observed that milkmaids did not acquire smallpox
- Milkmaids were exposed to chronic low doses of
cowpox and therefore acquired specific immunity - 1796 Jenner inoculated a person with cowpox virus
and found this person was then protected against
acquiring small pox - This protection is known as immunity
- Called vaccinatin from vacca for cow
24Alexander Flemings Work
- In 1928 Fleming discovered the first antibiotic
by accident - He observed that Penicillium fungus secreted a
substance which killed bacteria - Explain why a fungus would do this
- In 1940s penicillin was tested clinically and
mass produced
25Germ Theory of Disease
- All of these aforementioned people and others
helped give rise to the germ theory of disease - Germ Theory states that microorganisms can invade
other organisms and cause disease - Before this many time politics and religion would
spur on erroneous theories
26Part III
27Chronic vs. Infectious Disease
- Chronic
- Disease which persists over a long period of time
- Atherosclerosis, cancer heart failure
- Infectious
- Organism enters and tissues grows
- Bacterial Prokaryotic
- Viral Acellular
- Protozoan Eukaryotic
- Causes symptoms in patients
28Conquering Infectious Disease
- The triumph over infectious disease?
- Antibiotics discovered in 1940s
- Vaccinations routinely delivered in the 1950s
through today - Eradication of polio and small pox
- But then
- MRSA
- Drug resistant TB
- HIV
- Ebola
- Avia Flu
- And more
29Conquering Infectious Disease
- What went wrong?
- Medical advances
- Older and sicker people live longer
- More susceptible to garden variety microbes
- Population is more mobile
- Emerging diseases
- Encroachment of humans into wild habitat
- Rapid evolution and biochemical changes to
microbes - Microbes have a quick generation time
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31Top Causes of Death
United States Deaths Worldwide Deaths
1. Heart Disease 696,950 1. Heart Disease 8.12 x 106
2. Cancer 557,270 2. Stroke 5.51 x 106
3. Stroke 162,670 3. Res infection 3.88 x 106
4. Chronic LRD 124,800 4. Cancer 3.33 x 106
5. Accidents 106,740 5. HIV/AIDS 2.78 x 106
6. Diabetes 73,250 6. Chronic LRD 2.75 x 106
7. Flu Pneumonia 65,680 7. Diarrheal disease 1.80 x 106
8. Alzheimer disease 58,870 8. Tuberculosis 1.57 x 106
9. Kidney problems 40,970 9. Malaria 1.27 x 106
10.Septicemia 33,865 10. Accidents 1.19 x 106
Stands for lower respiratory disease Infectious
Diseases are shown in red
32Infectious Disease Statistics
33Part IV
- Taxonomy Biological Classification
34Organizing Life
- Classification
- Orderly arrangement of organisms into groups that
indicate evolutionary relationships - Nomenclature
- Assigning names to various taxonomic rankings
- Identification
- Correct placement of organism into taxonomic
scheme
35Taxonomy
- Origins of organizing biological life
- Carl von Linne or Linnaeus 1701 1778
- System of recognizing and defining properties of
living organism followed by the placement into
specific slots - Grouped according to similar properties
- Grouped according to evolutionary relatedness
- Constantly being revised and refined
36Taxonomy
37Nomenclature
- Scientists use a standard binomial system
- Overseen by an international group
- Verify that standard procedures were followed
- Ascertain the uniqueness of each name
- Make sure no other name exists
38Nomenclature
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Staphule bunch of grapes
- Aureus golden
- Campylobacter jejuni
- Kampylos curved
- Bakterion little rod
- Jejunum section of small intestine
- Giardia lamblia
- Alfred Giard French microbiologist
- Vilem Lambl Bohemian physician
39Evolution Phylogeny
- Evolution
- All new species originate from preexisting
species - Closely related organism have similar feature due
to evolution from common ancestral forms - Phylogeny
- Tree of life
- Classification based on evolutionary relatedness
40Whittakers System
41Whittakers System
- Although used for many years this system has
problems in terms of evolutionary relatedness - Kingdom Protista
- Autotrophs heterotrops are groups together
- Archaea
- Although these organisms are prokaryotic they are
more closely related to eukaryotic cells
42Solution to Whittakers Tree
- Biologist no longer group organisms into a 5
kingdom system - Currently a three domain system
- Many original kingdoms still work
- Plants, animals, fungi
- However, Kingdom Protista Kingdom Monera have
been extensively reorganized into many different
kingdoms
43Three Domain System