Title: Growth of Bacteria
1Growth of Bacteria
How do bacteria grow?
Measured as increase in cell number not size.
Transverse binary fission or Binary Fission
2Goals for Chapter
How do we measure cell growth?
What are the stages of cell growth?
What is happening in cells during cell growth?
What are the effects of environmental conditions
on cell growth?
3Cell division
What is happening?
4What can we measure to determine if growth is
occurring?
Cell number
Direct methods
Indirect methods
Microscopy
Culture density
Dry cell weight
Viable cell count
5Microscopy measures dead and live cells
Petroff- Hauser counter
Direct method
6Measure Colony Forming Units
CFUs
Viable cell counts
Does each colony represent one cell?
Cell must be alive and able to grow
7Count between 30 and 300 colonies
Dilution plating Why is this necessary?
8Measuring cell turbidity
Spectrophotometer
9Describing growth in a closed system
10What is happening at each stage?
Cells are adapting to environment, enzymes
synthesized DNA replicated All cells are not
physiologically the same
Lag phase
All cells growing at same rate Cells have on
average the same types and number of
macromolecules
Log phase or Exponential phase
Cells are not all dividing at the same time!
Cells are dividing and dying at the same rate
Stationary phase
More cells are dying than dividing
Decline phase
11How do we calculate growth rate?
During exponential phase, growth is by geometric
progression 1, 2, 4, 8, etc. or 20, 21, 22,
23.........2n (where n the number of
generations)
k Growth rate constant generations/timen/t
g generation time or doubling time t/n
t time n number of generations
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14Generation times for some common bacteria under
optimal conditions of growth.
15Chemostat- used to study mixed cultures or
physiological properties of cells
16What kinds of questions can we ask using growth
experiments?
What is the effect of temperature on growth?
What is the effect of pH on growth?
What is the effect of Oxygen on growth?
What is the effect of salt on growth?
What is the effect of ______________ on growth?
A growth experiment
17Effect of temperature on growth
18Temperature
Figure 6.1
19Psychrotrophs
Figure 6.2
20The Requirements for Growth Physical Requirements
- pH
- Most bacteria grow between pH 6.5 and 7.5
- Molds and yeasts grow between pH 5 and 6
- Acidophiles grow in acidic environments
21The Requirements for Growth Physical Requirements
- Osmotic Pressure
- Hypertonic environments, increase salt or sugar,
cause plasmolysis - Extreme or obligate halophiles require high
osmotic pressure - Facultative halophiles tolerate high osmotic
pressure
22The Requirements for Growth Physical Requirements
Figure 6.4
23The Requirements for Growth Chemical Requirements
obligate aerobes Faultative anaerobes Obligate anaerobes Aerotolerant anaerobes Microaerophiles
24What are the effects of Oxygen on growth?
Many forms of life require oxygen for
_________________.
aerobic respiration
Some forms of oxygen can actually be toxic!
Metabolism, UV light, chemical reactions can
create toxic forms of oxygen
Aerobes have enzymes to detoxify toxic forms of
oxygen.
25Toxic Forms of Oxygen
- Singlet oxygen O2 boosted to a higher-energy
state - Superoxide free radicals O2?
- Peroxide anion O22?
- Hydroxyl radical (OH?)
26Superoxide Dismutase
- Catalyzes the following reaction in which
superoxide free radicals are converted into
molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide - O2- O2- 2 H H2O2
O2(g)
27Catalase
- Catalyzes the conversion of hydrogen peroxide to
water and oxygen. - 2 H2O2 2 H2O O2(g)
28Catalase Activity
- Negative Positive
- All photographic material taken from
Bacteria ID - A Computer Simulation of Bacterial
Identification (compact disc), by Konopka,
Furbacher and Gedney.
29Peroxidase
- Also catalyzes the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide
- Differs from catalase - does not produce oxygen
- H2O2 2 H 2 H2O
- ex. Streptococcus
30The Requirements for Growth Chemical Requirements
- Carbon
- Structural organic molecules, energy source
- Chemoheterotrophs use organic carbon sources
- Autotrophs use CO2
31The Requirements for Growth Chemical Requirements
- Nitrogen
- In amino acids, proteins
- Most bacteria decompose proteins
- Some bacteria use NH4 or NO3?
- A few bacteria use N2 in nitrogen fixation
- Sulfur
- In amino acids, thiamine, biotin
- Most bacteria decompose proteins
- Some bacteria use SO42? or H2S
- Phosphorus
- In DNA, RNA, ATP, and membranes
- PO43? is a source of phosphorus
32The Requirements for Growth Chemical Requirements
- Trace Elements
- Inorganic elements required in small amounts
- Usually as enzyme cofactors
33The Requirements for Growth Chemical Requirements
- Organic Growth Factors
- Organic compounds obtained from the environment
- Vitamins, amino acids, purines, pyrimidines
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35Culture Media
- Culture Medium Nutrients prepared for microbial
growth - Sterile No living microbes
- Inoculum Introduction of microbes into medium
- Culture Microbes growing in/on culture medium
36Agar
- Complex polysaccharide
- Used as solidifying agent for culture media in
Petri plates, slants, and deeps - Generally not metabolized by microbes
- Liquefies at 100C
- Solidifies 40C
37Culture Media
- Chemically Defined Media Exact chemical
composition is known - Complex Media Extracts and digests of yeasts,
meat, or plants - Nutrient broth
- Nutrient agar
38Culture Media
Table 6.2 6.4
39Anaerobic Culture Methods
- Reducing media
- Contain chemicals (thioglycollate or oxyrase)
that combine O2 - Heated to drive off O2
40Anaerobic Culture Methods
Figure 6.5
41Anaerobic Culture Methods
Figure 6.6
42Capnophiles require high CO2
Figure 6.7
43Selective Media
- Suppress unwanted microbes and encourage desired
microbes.
Figure 6.9b, c
44Differential Media
- Make it easy to distinguish colonies of different
microbes.
Figure 6.9a
45Enrichment Media
- Encourages growth of desired microbe
- Assume a soil sample contains a few
phenol-degrading bacteria and thousands of other
bacteria - Inoculate phenol-containing culture medium with
the soil and incubate - Transfer 1 ml to another flask of the phenol
medium and incubate - Transfer 1 ml to another flask of the phenol
medium and incubate - Only phenol-metabolizing bacteria will be growing
46- A pure culture contains only one species or
strain - A colony is a population of cells arising from a
single cell or spore or from a group of attached
cells - A colony is often called a colony-forming unit
(CFU)
47Streak Plate
Figure 6.10a, b