Title: Microbial Nutrition and Growth
1Chapter 6
Microbial Nutrition and Growth
2Growth Requirements
- Microbial growth
- Increase in a population of microbes
- Result of microbial growth is discrete colony
- An aggregation of cells arising from single
parent cell - Reproduction results in growth
3Growth Requirements
- Organisms use a variety of nutrients for their
energy needs and to build organic molecules and
cellular structures - Most common nutrients contain necessary elements
such as carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen - Microbes obtain nutrients from variety of sources
4Growth Requirements
- Associations
- Organisms live in association with different
species - Antagonistic relationships
- Synergistic relationships
- Symbiotic relationships
5Growth Requirements
- Biofilms
- Complex relationships among numerous
microorganisms - Develop an extracellular matrix
- Adheres cells to one another
- Allows attachment to a substrate
- Sequesters nutrients
- May protect individuals in the biofilm
- Form on surfaces often as a result of quorum
sensing - Many microorganisms more harmful as part of a
biofilm
6Figure 6.17 Binary fission events-overview
7Growth of Microbial Populations
ANIMATION Binary Fission
8Figure 6.18 Comparison of arithmetic and
logarithmic growth-overview
9Growth of Microbial Populations
- Generation Time
- Time required for a bacterial cell to grow and
divide - Dependent on chemical and physical conditions
10Figure 6.19 Two growth curves of logarithmic
growth-overview
11Figure 6.20 Typical microbial growth curve
Stationary phase
Death(decline)phase
Log(exponential)phase
Number of live cells (log)
Lag phase
Time
12Figure 6.21 Schematic of chemostat
Fresh medium witha limiting amountof a nutrient
Flow-rateregulator
Sterile airof othergas
Culturevessel
Culture
Overflowtube
13Growth of Microbial Populations
- Measuring Microbial Reproduction
- Direct methods
- Serial dilution and viable plate counts
- Membrane filtration
- Most probable number
- Microscopic counts
- Electronic counters
14Figure 6.22 Estimating microbial population
size-overview
15Figure 6.23 Use of membrane filtration to
estimate microbial population-overview
16Figure 6.24 The most probable number (MPN)
method for estimating microbial numbers
1.0 ml
1.0 ml
1100
110
Undiluted
Inoculate 1.0 ml intoeach of 5 tubes
Phenol red, pHcolor indicator,added
Incubate
Results
4 tubes positive
2 tubes positive
1 tube positive
17Figure 6.25 The use of a cell counter for
estimating microbial numbers-overview
18Growth of Microbial Populations
- Measuring Microbial Growth
- Indirect methods
- Metabolic activity
- Dry weight
- Turbidity
19Figure 6.26 Spectrophotometry-overview
20Growth of Microbial Populations
- Measuring Microbial Reproduction
- Genetic methods
- Isolate DNA sequences of unculturable prokaryotes
- Used to estimate the number of these microbes
21Case StudyCan a trip to the dentist be life
threatening?
- Details of the case
- Why do we get our teeth cleaned?
- Why does Betty feel so bad?
- What has happened?
- Will the biofilm return?
- How did they figure out Betty had septicemia?