Title: Chapter One
1Chapter One
- Microorganisms and Microbiology
2What is Microbiology?
- Study of microorganisms
- Microorganisms can include single celled
organisms and viruses - Generally too small to be seen with naked eye
- Microscopic
- Have enormous impact
- Divided into six subgroups
- Bacteria (Bacteriology)
- Archaea
- Fungi (Mycology)
- Protozoa (parasitology)
- Algae (phycology)
- Viruses (virology)
- Helminths (parasitology)
3Classification of Microorganisms
41.1 Microbiology
- Microbiology revolves around two themes
- (1) Understanding basic life processes
- Microbes are excellent models for understanding
cellular processes in unicellular and
multicellular organisms - (2) Application of that understanding to benefit
of humans - Microbes play important roles in medicine,
agriculture, and industry
51.1 Microbiology
- The Importance of Microorganisms
- Oldest form of life
- Largest mass of living material on Earth
- Carry out major processes for biogeochemical
cycles
6Microbiology
- Foundation of all the biological sciences
- First organisms on the planet
- Basic Microbiology
- Understanding Life
- Applied Microbiology
- Human needs
- More BENEFICIAL effect than harmful
- Environment
- Oxygen generation
- Decomposition
- Health/Medicine
- Protection from disease
- Biotechnology
- Food
- Agriculture
- Products
- BAD Bacteria!
- Plant and animal diseases
- Rusting
7The Cell
- Fundamental unit of life
- Major components
- Cell (cytoplasmic) Membrane
- Barrier that separates the inside of the cell
from the outside environment - Constant communication
- Cells always change physiology
- Cytoplasm
- Fluid that fills cells
- Nucleus (or nucleoid)
- Genetic material (DNA or RNA)
- Machinery for cell growth and function
- Ribosomes
- Protein synthesis
- Organic macromolecules
- Proteins, nucleic acids, lipids and
polysaccharides - Cell Wall
- Present in most microbes, confers structural
strength - What are the characteristics of life?
8The Characteristics of Cellular Life
Figure 1.3
9The Characteristics of Cellular Life
Figure 1.3
10The Characteristics of Cellular Life
Figure 1.3
11Cells
- As Machines
- Carry out chemical transformations using enzymes
(catalysts) - As Coding Devices
- Store and process genetic information (DNA) that
is passed on to offspring - Growth
- The link between cells as machines and cells as
coding devices
Figure 1.4
12How do microorganisms exist?
- Microorganisms exist in nature in populations of
interacting assemblages called microbial
communities - The environment in which a microbial population
lives is its habitat - Ecosystem refers to all living organisms plus
physical and chemical constituents of their
environment - Microbial Ecology is the study of microbes in
their natural environments
13Microbial Ecology
- Study of microorganisms in their natural habitat
- Individual cell
- Make up tissues in a multicellular organism
- In a unicellular organism, the cell is the entire
organism - Population
- Interacting group of individuals of one species
- A group of related cells derived from a parent
cell - A microbial habitat is the location in an
environment where a microbial population lives - Community
- All the organisms inhabiting an ecosystem
- SO, a microbial community are many different
populations of microorganisms occupying the same
habitat - Ecosystem
- Communities of organisms and their natural
environment - All the organisms living within a particular area
and the nonliving, physical components of the
environment in which the organisms interact
14Individual cell
151.3 Microorganisms and Their Natural Environments
- Diversity and abundances of microbes are
controlled by resources (nutrients) and
environmental conditions (e.g., temp, pH, O2) - The activities of microbial communities can
affect the chemical and physical properties of
their habitats
161.4 The Antiquity and Extent of Microbial Life
- Life on Earth through the Ages
- Earth is 4.6 billion years old
- First cells appeared between 3.8 and 3.9 billion
years ago - The atmosphere was anoxic until 2 billion years
ago - Metabolisms were exclusively anaerobic until
evolution of oxygen-producing phototrophs - Life was exclusively microbial until 1 billion
years ago
171.4 The Antiquity and Extent of Microbial Life
- The Extent of Microbial Life
- Microbes found in almost every environment
imaginable - Global estimate of 5 x 1030 cells
- Most microbial cells are found in oceanic and
terrestrial subsurfaces - Microbial biomass is significant and cells are
key reservoirs of essential nutrients (e.g., C,
P, N)
181.5 The Impact of Microorganisms on Humans
- Microorganisms can be both beneficial and harmful
to humans - Emphasis typically on harmful microorganisms
(infectious disease agents, or pathogens) - But many more microorganisms in nature are
beneficial than are harmful
19Impact of Microorganisms
- Microorganisms as Disease Agents
- Control of infectious disease during last century
(Figure 1.8)
20Impact of Microorganisms
- Microorganisms and Agriculture
- Many aspects of agriculture depend on microbial
activities - Nitrogen-fixing bacteria produce usable nitrogen
for plants to use for growth - Cellulose-degrading microbes in the rumen
- In cattle and sheep, microorganisms carry out the
digestion of cellulose - Regeneration of nutrients in soil and water
21Microorganisms can have both positive and
negative effects on food
- Negative impacts
- Food can become contaminated by microorganisms
- Food spoilage by microorganisms requires
specialized preservation of many foods - Positive impacts
- Microbial transformations (typically
fermentations) yield - Dairy products (e.g., cheeses, yogurt,
buttermilk) - Other food products (e.g., sauerkraut, pickles,
leavened breads, beer)
22Microorganisms are important in energy production
- Natural gas (methane) is a product of bacterial
activity - Waste materials can be converted to biofuels by
microorganisms - e.g., methane, ethanol, hydrogen
- Microorganisms can detoxify unwanted wastes in
the environment - Bioremediation The role of microbes in cleaning
up pollutants
23E. Coli is an important microorganism for genetic
engineering
- Microorganisms and Their Genetic Resources
- Exploitation of microbes for production of
antibiotics, enzymes, and various chemicals - Genetic engineering of microbes to generate
products of value to humans, such as insulin
(biotechnology)
24History of Microbiology
25History of Microbiology
- Discovery
- Robert Hooke (1665) was the first to describe
microbes - Illustrated the fruiting structures of molds
- Led to the Cell Theory
- All living things consist of cells
- Cells are the smallest unit of life maintaining
properties of life - Life continues because of growth and division of
cells - Antoni Van Leeuwenhoek (late 1600s)
- Was the first to describe bacteria
- Microscopic organisms - Animalcules
- Submitted findings to Royal Society of London
- Raised questions Where did they originate?
26Robert Hooke and Early Microscopy
Figure 1.9b
27Leeuwenhoeks lens
Leeuwenhoeks animalcules
2819th century Ferdinand Cohn
- Botanist who thought that algae and
photosynthetic bacteria were plants - Founded the field of bacteriology
- Discovered Bacillus and endospores were heat
resistant - Developed sterilization for microbial media
- Cotton closures for liquid cultures
- Helped Robert Koch develop the aseptic technique
29Spontaneous Generation
- Life formed spontaneously from non-living matter
- Believed to be the origin of animalcules
- Louis Pasteur (1861)
- Experiments disproving spontaneous generation
- Led to the development of aseptic techniques
30The Defeat of Spontaneous Generation Pasteurs
Experiment
Figure 1.13a
31The Defeat of Spontaneous Generation Pasteurs
Experiment
Figure 1.13b
32The Defeat of Spontaneous Generation Pasteurs
Experiment
Figure 1.13c
33Golden Age of Microbiology (1857- 1914)
- Period of rapid development
- Pasteur
- Disproved spontaneous generation
- S-shaped necked flask experiments
- Additional work
- Fermentation
- Discovered that alcoholic fermentation was a
biologically mediated process (originally thought
to be purely chemical) - Pasteurization
- Silk worm disease
- Developed vaccines for anthrax, fowl cholera, and
rabies
34Robert Koch
- Germ theory of disease
- Robert Koch (1876)
- First medical microbiologist
- Proved germ theory of disease
- Definitively demonstrated the link between
microbes and infectious diseases - Discovered Bacillus anthracis
- Identified causative agents of anthrax and
tuberculosis - Showed Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes TB
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis difficult to stain
because of a waxy lipid present in the cell wall - Developed precursor to the acid fast stain
- Kochs postulates
- Developed a set of postulates to prove that a
specific microorganism causes a specific disease
35Kochs postulates
- Organism present only in diseased individuals
- Organism cultivated in pure culture from diseased
individual
Figure 1.15
36Kochs postulates
- Organism causes disease when injected into
healthy individuals - Organism re-isolated from infected individual
from point 3.
Figure 1.15
37Best Way to study microorganisms
- Koch developed techniques (solid media) for
obtaining pure cultures of microbes, some still
in existence today - Pure culture
- A population of cells that all come from a single
cell - Broth or agar
- Laboratory population
- Need proper nutrient media and environmental
conditions
38Rise of General Microbiology
- Beijerinck (1851-1931)
- Developed Enrichment Culture Technique
- Microbes isolated from natural samples in a
highly selective fashion by manipulating nutrient
and incubation conditions - e.g., Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
- Isolated many types of bacteria from the
environment
39Winogradsky (1856-1953)
- Studied physiological processes
- Nitrification
- H2S oxidation
- Nitrogen fixation
- Nitrifying bacteria
- Coined the terms chemolithotrophy (trap energy
available in inorganic compounds) and autotrophy
or chemoautotroph (use CO2 as a source of carbon)
40Winogradsky
Figure 1.19a
41Winogradsky
Figure 1.19b
42Microbiology Research Today
- Genome sequencing, bioinformatics and proteomics
(biocomputing) - Phylogeny (renaming, reclassifying and
determining evolutionary trends) - Characterizing novel organisms
- AIDS
- Discovering antibiotics and understanding
antibiotic resistance - Medical microbiology new treatment for diseases
and understanding diseases - Bioremediation use microorganisms to remove
toxic or unwanted chemicals in an environment
clean up pollution created by humans