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Microbial Nutrition and Growth Microbial Population Growth

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Title: Microbial Nutrition and Growth Microbial Population Growth


1
Microbial Nutrition and GrowthMicrobial
Population Growth
  • Microbiology of the Health Sciences

2
The Study of Microbial Growth
  • Growth takes place on two levels
  • Cell synthesizes new cell components and
    increases in size
  • The number of cells in the population increases
  • The Basis of Population Growth Binary Fission

3
Figure 7.13
4
The Rate of Population Growth
  • Generation or doubling time The time required
    for a complete fission cycle
  • Each new fission cycle or generation increases
    the population by a factor of 2
  • As long as the environment is favorable, the
    doubling effect continues at a constant rate
  • The length of the generation time- a measure of
    the growth rate of an organism
  • Average generation time- 30 to 60 minutes under
    optimum conditions
  • Can be as short as 10 to 12 minutes
  • This growth pattern is termed exponential

5
Basic Nutrients for Growth
  • ATP for cellular processes
  • Carbon is necessary for the
  • production of many
  • macromolecules (proteins, lipids,
  • and carbohydrates)
  • Oxygen for metabolism
  • Nitrogen for amino acid synthesis
  • Sulfur for vitamins, amino acids,
  • structural stability of proteins

6
Basic Nutrients for Growth
  • Phosphorous makes ATP and membranes
  • Trace elements are used for metabolic reaction in
    the
  • cell and cell component stabilization
  • cobalt Co
  • potassium K
  • molybdenum Mo
  • magnesium Mg
  • manganese Mn
  • calcium Ca
  • iron Fe
  • zinc Zn

7
Basic Nutrients for Growth
  • Organic growth factors such
  • as vitamins, amino acids, and
  • nucleic acids some growth
  • factors cannot be synthesized
  • by own cellular processes
  • Water
  • water activity

8
How Microbes Obtain Nutrients
  • Heterotroph uses organic
  • carbon source
  • Autotroph uses inorganic
  • carbon dioxide
  • Phototroph uses light as energy
  • source
  • Chemotroph uses chemical
  • compounds (ie. glucose)
  • Saprobe
  • Parasite

9
Microbial Nutrition Growth Requirements
INSERT FIGURE 6.1
10
Culturing Microorganisms
  • Inoculum introduced into medium (broth or solid)
  • Environmental specimens
  • Clinical specimens
  • Stored specimens
  • Culture refers to act of cultivating
    microorganisms or the microorganisms that are
    cultivated

11
Culturing Microorganisms
INSERT TABLE 6.3
12
Culturing Microorganisms
  • Special Culture Techniques
  • Techniques developed for culturing microorganisms
  • Animal and cell culture
  • Low-oxygen culture
  • Enrichment culture

13
Media
  • Chemically defined
  • Natural
  • Living

14
Media
  • Enriched Media
  • added nutrient encourages
  • the growth of microorganisms

15
Media
  • Selective Media
  • Selects form a microorganism
  • while inhibiting most others
  • Phenol Ethanol Agar
  • Deoxycholate Agar

16
Media
  • Differential Media
  • Allow for the differentiation of
  • microorganisms based on
  • action that occurs on the media
  • or a color change within the
  • media that is based on a pH
  • change
  • Mannitol Salt Agar
  • MacConkey Agar

17
Media Question
  • What type of media is
  • Blood Agar considered?
  • Enriched
  • Selective
  • Differential

18
The Population Growth Curve
  • A population of bacteria does not maintain its
    potential growth rate and double endlessly
  • A population displays a predictable pattern
    called a growth curve
  • The method to observe the population growth
    pattern
  • Place a tiny number of cells in a sterile liquid
    medium
  • Incubate this culture over a period of several
    hours
  • Sampling the broth at regular intervals during
    incubation
  • Plating each sample onto solid media
  • Counting the number of colonies present after
    incubation

19
The Rate of Population Growth
  • Generation or doubling time The time required
    for a complete fission cycle
  • Each new fission cycle or generation increases
    the population by a factor of 2
  • As long as the environment is favorable, the
    doubling effect continues at a constant rate
  • The length of the generation time- a measure of
    the growth rate of an organism
  • Average generation time- 30 to 60 minutes under
    optimum conditions
  • Can be as short as 10 to 12 minutes
  • This growth pattern is termed exponential

20
Stages in the Normal Growth Curve
  • Data from an entire growth period typically
  • produce a curve with a series of phases
  • Lag Phase
  • Exponential Growth Phase
  • Stationary Growth Phase
  • Rapidly Declining Phase
  • Death Phase

21
Lag Phase
  • Relatively flat period
  • Newly inoculated cells require a period of
    adjustment, enlargement, and synthesis
  • The cells are not yet multiplying at their
    maximum rate
  • The population of cells is so sparse that the
    sampling misses them
  • Length of lag period varies from one population
    to another

22
Exponential Growth (Logarithmic or log) Phase
  • When the growth curve increases geometrically
  • Cells reach the maximum rate of cell division
  • Will continue as long as cells have adequate
    nutrients and the environment is favorable
  • The number of cells growing greatly out number
    the number of cells dying.

23
Stationary Growth Phase
  • The population enters a survival mode in which
    cells stop growing or grow slowly
  • The rate of cell inhibition or death balances out
    the rate of multiplication
  • Depleted nutrients and oxygen
  • Excretion of organic acids and other biochemical
    pollutants into the growth medium
  • The number of cells growing will equal the amount
    of cells dying.
  • Endospores begin to form in this phase.

24
Rapidly Declining Phase
  • The curve dips downward
  • Cells begin to die at an exponential rate
  • The amount of cells dying out numbers the amount
    of cells growing.
  • The dead cells become nutrients for the growing
    cells.

25
Death Phase
  • The curve continues to dips downward
  • Most cellular activity stops
  • Endospores are formed and released from the
    parent cells.

26
Phases of Growth
  • Basic phases of growth
  • 1. Lag phase new growth medium, period of
    delay while cells prepare to divide
  • 2. Log phase (exponential growth phase)
    cellular reproduction most active during this
    period, generation time reaches a constant
    minimum
  • 3. Stationary phase state of equilibrium where
    number of cell deaths equals number of cell
    divisions

27
Phases of Growth
  • Basic phases of growth
  • 4. Rapidly Declining Phase cells die
    logarithmically, endospores formed
  • 5. Death phase number of deaths exceeds number
    of new cells

28
Potential Importance of the Growth Curve
  • Implications in microbial control, infection,
    food microbiology, and culture technology
  • Growth patterns in microorganisms can account for
    the stages of infection
  • Understanding the stages of cell growth is
    crucial for working with cultures
  • In some applications, closed batch culturing is
    inefficient, and instead, must use a chemostat or
    continuous culture system

29
Graphing Bacterial Growth
  • The data from growing bacterial populations are
    graphed by plotting the number of cells as a
    function of time
  • If plotted logarithmically- a straight line
  • If plotted arithmetically- a constantly curved
    slope
  • To calculate thesize of a population over time
    Nf (Ni)2g
  • Nf is the total number of cells in the population
    at some point in the growth phase
  • Ni is the starting number
  • g denotes the generation number

30
Population Equation
  • Nf Ni (2)g
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