Title: Microbial Growth
1Chapter 6
2Bacterial Cell Division
- Cell growth is defined as an increase in the
number of cells, requires continued growth to
maintain species - 2000 chemical reactions with a wide variety of
types - main rxn is polymerization reaction
- monomer to polymer
3Binary Fission
- Cell growth continues until divides into 2 new
cells - Cells create a septum between new cells
- starts as cytoplasmic membrane and eventually
becomes cell wall - Each batch of new cells is a generation
- Cellular components increase proportionally so
each cell gets enough of everything to the new
cell - Time to generate new cells is dependent on
nutritional and genetic factors - division is tied to chromosomal replication
4Fts Proteins
- Filamentous temperature sensitive proteins
mutation in genes that encode the Fts proteins - bacteria without FtsZ have difficulty dividing
- FtsZ is universally distributed in all
prokaryotes - see FtsZ-like proteins in mitochondria and
chloroplasts, also similar to tubulin in eukarotes
5Fts Complexes Division Apparatus
- Fts interact to form the division apparatus
called the divisome - FtsZ attach in a ring to the cell at the membrane
and then attracts FtsA and Zip A - FtsA ATP hydrolyzing enzymes for proteins in
divisome - ZipA anchor attachment of FtsZ to membrane
- Also contain Fts proteins involved in
peptidoglycan synthesis FtsI is a
penicillin-binding protein (activity site for
penicillin) - Divisome makes new cytoplasmic membrane and cell
wall in both directions until large enough to
divide
6DNA Replication
- Occurs prior to FtsZ ring formation and when done
get the ring formation between the 2 nucleoid
regions using min proteins - min C inhibits cell division until exact center
of the cell is found - min E inhibits min C activity and attached at
center of cell, recruits the FtsZ and ring
formation
7Cell Shape
- Morphology cell shape
- Peptidoglycans thought to dictate shape but now
know only a minor role - Protein for shape is homologous to actin
- Major protein MreB forms an actin-like
cytoskeleton - filamentous, spiral-shaped bands in cell under
cytoplasm membrane - cocci lack MreB and its gene, default shape
sphere - Bacteria make FtsZ and MreB tubulin- and
actin-like proteins - evolutionary similarities between eukaryotes and
prokaryotes
8Peptidoglycan Snthesis
- Must make the cell wall before cell division
add new cell wall to existing cell wall - At FtsZ autolysins make openings in wall
- enzyme similar to lysozyme
- present in the divisome
- Cell wall material added thru the holes
- Between new and old cell wall, a ridge forms
like a scar
9Cell Wall Formation
- Precursors to the cell wall are spliced into
existing peptidoglycan - If the precursors arent coordinated with the
old, the cell goes through spontaneous autolysis
cell ruptures
10Biosynthesis of Peptidoglycan
- Cut pre-existing peptidoglycans by autolysins
with simultaneous insertion of precursors
bactoprenol lipid carrier molecule, hydrophobic
C55 alcohol - Bactoprenol makes the peptidoglycan precursors
hydrophobic so they can cross membrane to be
inserted, spend time in the periplasm to build
cell wall and make glycosidic bonds
11Transpeptidation and Penicillin
- Final step need to insert the peptide
components of the cell wall between the muramic
acid (refer to cell wall structure from before) - This reaction is inhibited by penicillins
prevent cell wall formation by binding to FtsI,
autolysins continue to weaken the cell wall and
leads to lysis - used in humans
- since we do not have cell walls, can use drug at
high levels - virtually all bacterial pathogens have
peptidoglycan so works on most bugs
12Final Interactions
- Interaction with several amino acids based on the
organism - E coli between diaminopimelic acids and D-Ala
on adjacent peptides - Removal of the 2nd D-Ala drives the rxn as there
is not ATP (outside the cell) - In gram , glycine interbridge is usaully
present, cross-link accur across the interbridge
on L-Lys and D-Ala
13Growth of Bacterial Populations
- Increase in the number of organisms in a
population - Terminology
- 1 cell to 2 cells is a generation
- time for the new cell to form is the generation
time, mass also doubles so also called doubling
time - These vary between organisms and are based on
growth medium, growth conditions - usually differ out in nature vs. the test tube
14Exponential Growth
- Where number of cells double during a regular
tine interval - Graph on linear scale, see a dramatic increase in
the numbers over time - Graph on semi-log paper, you get a straight line,
meaning exponentially growing - use to estimate growing time
15Estimating Growth Rate
16Growth
- In exponential growth rate increase is slow
initially but increases in cell number - in non-sterile, nutrient rich environments, such
as milk slow growth is good, leave milk out an
hour, not to many bacteria, but if leave out
several hours, the level of bacteria will be much
higher
17Growth Cycle
- Exponential growth cannot continue forever
- Cycle has 4 distinct areas lag, exponential,
stationary and death phases
18Lag Phase
- Delay in growth of bacteria
- Interval may be different
- based on organism and growth conditions
- See when using old or stationary phase cultures
to start your growth curve - Lag is caused by cells being depleted in
essential constituents, must also repair if
damaged by heat or radiation, etc - also see if moving from a rich medium to a poorer
medium
19Exponential Phase
- Cells divide for a brief time based on
resources and other factors - Rate of growth vary greatly
- influenced by environmental conditions and
genetic characteristics of the organism
20Stationary Phase
- Limitation on growth caused by 2 factors
- essential nutrients of culture medium is used up
- some waste products of the organism build up in
medium and inhibit growth - can be a combination of both
- Exponential growth stops and there is no net
increase or decrease in the cell number may be
slow growth - Cellular functions continue energy metabolism
and biosynthetic processes - some divide and some die cryptic growth
21Death Phase
- Cells will die eventually
- Death accompanied by cell lysis
- Exponential death but slower than growth
- Figure 6.8 is of a POPULATION and not a single
cell, this process does NOT apply to them
22Measuring Microbial Growth
- 2 methods of direct measurement
- total counts
- viable count
- Important to know the number of bacteria for some
tests
23Total Counts
- Total count using a microscope and hemocytometer
a special counting chamber with a square on
surface of glass with a known volume under a
cover slip - count the number of cells on the grid and then
calculate the number of cells based on the volume
on the chamber - also count dead cells, miss small cells,
precision is hard to achieve, requires phase
contrast microscopy when not stained, not good a
low density and motile cells must be immobilized
24Viable Counts
- Viable cells can divide and make offspring
- Determine whether capable of forming colonies on
suitable agar - plate count or colony count, assume each cell can
yield a colony - 2 methods spread plate and pour plate
- spread plate use small volume of diluted cells
and spread over surface of agar, count colonies
and calculate number using dilution - pour plate add volume of culture into Petri
dish, add melted agar, mix by swirling colonies
form throughout the agar, not just on top like
above method, examine carefully
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26Dilutions
- Use dilutions to determine the number of colonies
in a countable range count/plate should be
between 30 and 300 colonies - Must determine optimum conditions to grow the
bacteria temp, medium, time, etc - Perform serial dilutions to get into the
countable range - Sources of error not using correct growing
conditions, errors also in technique pipeting,
mixing, etc.
27Serial Dilutions
- Usually do serial 10-fold dilutions by mixing 0.5
ml of sample with 4.5 ml of fresh medium (1 part
in 9 parts 10) - Do consecutive dilutions in the same manner and
plate a volume on the agar - After growth, count the colony forming units
(cfu) and calculate the number of bacteria using
dilution and volume placed on plates
28Colony Forming Units
- Use colony forming units because occasionally you
may have 2 bacteria in the same area that make a
single colony you cant tell apart - Can use selective media to count only a
particular organism - Great plate anomaly may be unreliable to assess
total number of cells in natural samples soil,
water plate count is usually lower than direct
count - organisms may have really different nutrient
needs - may need selective media to get a better count
29Indirect Measurements
- Use turbidity as an indirect measurement more
cells mean it is more cloudy - Use a photometer or spectrophotometer
- similar in use light scattered by cells and all
light that passes thru will be collected - differences is with the light source photometer
is a broad pass filter and spec is prism or
diffraction grating - both measure only unscattered light but report in
Klett units or optical density
30Generation of a Standard Curve
- Can substitute turbidity for direct counting
methods but need to make a standard curve - Relate direct count to indirect method
- may use cell number or cell mass
- Must use within limits really dense samples
may deflect light and then another cell
re-deflects them to the detector - makes things non-linear
- can check sample repeatedly without altering test
outcome
31Continuous Culture - Chemistat
- Previous growth was based on batch cultures
fixed volume of medium altered by metabolism in
culture closed system - Constant environment needed over long periods of
time to generate a continuous supply of
exponential phase bacteria continuous culture
open system - add fresh medium and remove the old medium in a
chemistat - volume, cell number and nutrient state are
constant steady state
32Chemistat
- Constant growth rate and population density
- 2 important factors
- dilution rate
- concentration of limiting nutrient, usually N or
C
33Affect of Nutrient on Growth and Yield
- In batch cultures nutrient can affect growth
rate and growth yield - At low concentrations only the rate is reduced
- cannot meet the needs of organisms
- Moderate to high may not change the rate but
the yield will increase
34Chemistat Control of Rate and Yield
- Both rate and yield can be controlled
independently by altering the dilution rate which
effects the of nutrients present - Dilution rate at high and low rates the steady
state breaks down, at high bacteria arent
growing fast enough and at low not feeding
fast enough so cells are dying - Cell density (cells/ml) controlled by level of
limiting nutrient
35Environmental Effects - Temperature
- Most important as alter the temperature to
drastically the bacteria will die - Raising the temperature may speed up growth rates
but over a limited range may be detrimental if
too high maximum temperature or too low
minimum temperature - Optimum temperature temperature that growth
occurs most rapidly usually nearer to the
maximum than the minimum
36Cardinal Temperatures
- Maximum, optimum and minimum are the cardinal
temperatures - Cardinal temps are not fixed and may fluctuate
depending on growth medium - Maximal temperatures reflects denaturation of 1
or more proteins - Not sure what causes minimal temperature but may
be the composition of the cytoplasmic membrane - alter composition resulted in a change in the
maximum and minimum temperatures
37Temperature Classes of Organisms
- Psychrophile very low temperatures
- Mesophiles moderate temperatures
- Thermophiles high temperatures
- Hyperthermophiles very high temperatures
- All but mesophiles can also be classified as
extremophiles
38Important Thermophile
- Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase that works in
artificial or in vitro DNA replication - Enzyme is taq polymerase and is used in PCR
39Effect of pH
- pH scale logarithmic scale that measure the
H in a solution - 10-fold difference between numbers
- Bacteria grow in media with various pHs
- 0-6.9 are acidophiles
- 7.1-14 are alkaliphiles
40pH
- Each organism has a range that it can grow in
(external pH) usually 2-3 pH units and between
pH 5-9 - Acidophiles usually live at lt pH 2, fungi are
more tolerant of low pH, some obligate
acidophiles as they need a large amount of H to
maintain membrane structure - Alkaliphiles usually gt pH 10, some are also
halophilic (love salt) use the Na to - proteases and lipases from alkaliphile bacteria
seen in household cleaners - Neutrophiles live between pH 6-8
- Internal pH must remain close to neutral
41Buffers
- We add buffering chemicals to the media to insure
to proper pH for the organisms - Metabolic reactions will increase or decrease the
pH depending on what is happening in the cell - Potassium phosphate is used quite frequently, use
others depending on the pH range needed for the
bacteria
42Osmotic Effects
- Water availability is expressed as water activity
- Water diffuses from high to low thru a
membrane osmosis - Solute usually higher outside the organism so
water moves into the cell - cell in a positive water balance, in an area of
low water activity, then water leaves the cells - causes many problems
43Halophiles
- Osmotic effects seen in habitats with high salt
- Mild halophile 1-6, moderate halophile 7-15
NaCl - Halotolerant can adjust to increase in solute
by decreasing water in the cell - Extreme halophiles 15-30 NaCl
44Other Types of Organisms
- Osmophiles grow in environments with a high
sugar - Xerophiles grow in very dry environments
45Compatible Solutes
- Organisms grown in an area of low water activity
need to adjust to this - Gain water by increasing the concentration of
internal solutes - Accomplish this by
- pumping inorganic ions into cell from environment
- synthesizing or concentrating and organic solute
- Solute must not inhibit the biochemical processes
in the organism
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47Solutes
48Where do the Solutes Come From?
- Synthesize or take up solute genetically
determined by the organism - Staphylococcus species are salt tolerant use to
select over salt intolerant organism and use
proline as a compatible solute - See glycine betaine in halophilic bacteria and
cyanobacteria - Extreme halophiles produce ectoine (cyclic
derivative of aspartate)
49Oxygen and Microbial Growth
- Anoxic organisms grow without oxygen
- Classes of microorganisms vary in use of oxygen
and tolerance - Aerobe grow in 21 O2 and respire O2 in
metabolism - Microphiles require less than 21 O2 may
contain an O2 labile protein, limited capacity to
respire - Facultative aerobe under appropriate nutrient
and culture conditions either grow anoxic or oxic
condition - Anaerobes cannot respire in O2
- 2 kinds aerotolerant anaerobes can tolerate O2
and grow in the presence of O2 but do not use it
and obligate or strict anaerobes inhibited or
killed by O2
503 Types of Obligate Anaerobes
- Prokayotes important one is clostridium family
that is gram positive spore forming rob that
causes food poisoning - Some fungi
- Few protozoans
- Sensitivity to O2 varies in all these groups
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52Culture Techniques
- Anaerobes need the O2 removed form the culture
use a reducing agent such as thioglycolate in
broth to determine oxygen requirements - Growth at the top is obligate aerobes,
facultative organisms grow throughout the medium
and anaerobes grow only at the bottom of the
tubes - Also use resazurin in the medium to indicate if
O2 is present should see only near the top
53Anoxic Jar or Anaerobic Hood
- Use a tightly sealed jar or bag that you use a
chemical reaction to remove all the O2 from it to
grow anaerobes - Hood uses a series of vacuum pumps to remove O2
and replace usually with N2
54Toxic Forms of O2 and Enzymes
55Enzymes
- Catalase is the most common enzyme to remove H2O2
- Used in conjunction with superoxide dismutase
which generates H2O2 when combining 2 superoxide
ions, also makes O2 - Peroxidase removes H2O2 but requires NADH to make
water - Superoxide reductase in Archaea reduce
superoxide to H2O2 without the production of O2,
remove H2O2 with peroxidase-like enzyme