Title: Understanding the medical microbiology
1?????? 2012???????????????
???????? Understanding the medical microbiology
Dr. Jing Qian Zhejiang University School of
Medicine April 09, 2014
2Definitions
- Microorganisms(Microbes) ???
- Microbiology ????
- Medical Microbiology ??????
3Microorganisms/Microbes
- The word microbe comes from the Greek words
mikros, meaning small, and bios, meaning life. So
microorganisms/microbes are small living things
that are too small to be seen with the unaided
eye.
- Microorganisms were probably the first organisms
to appear on the earth.
- However, these organisms were not seen until
about 3 centuries ago when lenses powerful enough
to make them visible were made.
- Viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa and some algae
are all in this category.
4 Distribution
- The distribution of microorganisms is universal
in nature including air, soil, water, animals,
human body.
5Relationship with human beings
- There is a close relationship between
microorganisms and human beings.
- Beneficial activities Most microbes are of
benefit to human beings, some are necessary. eg.
nitrogen, carbon cycles, etc.
- Harmful activities Only a small portion of
microbes cause diseases and are poisonous to
human, and these pathogenic microbes are really
that concern us in the study of medicine.
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7Microbes in carbon cycle
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9 Organizational structure
- Background knowledge
- Cell is the fundamental unit of all living things
to carry out metabolic processes that transform
energy and materials for growth and propagation
(multiplication).
- There are two fundamental types of cells
Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes with the major
difference in whether or not the cell have
membrane bound organelles and nucleus.
10Differences between prokaryotes/eukaryotes
- The prokaryotic cell, in contrast to the
eukaryotic cell, has no nuclear membranes,
mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi body,
phagosomes and lysosomes.
- Prokaryotes generally possess only a single
circular chromosome. Since there is no nuclear
membrane, the chromosome is bound to a specific
site on the cell membrane - the mesosome.
- Prokaryotic ribosomes are 70S (S means Svedberg
unit, a measure of size for centrifugation),
whereas eukaryotic ribosomes are larger (80S). - Prokaryotic ribosomal subunits are 30S and 50S
(eukaryotic are larger). The 30S ribosome has 16S
RNA, while the 50S ribosome contains 23S and 5S
RNA.
11 Classification of microbes
- According to organizational structure, microbes
can be divided into three types - Prokaryotes (Eubacteria and Archaebacteria)
- Eukaryotes (fungi, Protozoa, algae)
- Acellular entities (viruses)
12 Eubacteria and Archaebacteria
- Eubacteria are "True" bacteria which include
Bacteria, Chlamydiae, Mycoplasmas, Richettiae,
Spirochetes, and Actinomycetes. Some of them
cause human diseases.
- Members of the Archaebacteria are often found in
extreme environments (methane-containing, high
salt or hot temperature) environments. They are
not human pathogens and will not be discussed
further.
13 Viruses
- Viruses are not living organisms because they do
not contain all the enzymes required for their
replication and possess the biologic equipment
necessary for the production of metabolic energy.
- Morphologically, viruses are very small particles
and have no basic cell structure. A simplest
virus consists of one core and one protein coat
(capsid). The core composed with a nucleic acid
molecule, either DNA or RNA.
- Viruses are non-cellular microbes. They are
obligate parasites totally dependent on their
host for replication.
14 Fungi
- Fungi is a kind of eukaryotic cells. So they have
various organelles, for examples, nuclear
membranes, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum,
Golgi body, phagosomes and lysosomes.
- There are more than 100, 000 species of fungi,
but most of them are beneficial to humankind.
They reside in nature and are essential in
breaking down and recycling organic matters.
- Only a few of fungi can cause human diseases.
15Microbiology
- Microbiology is the biology of microorganisms.
- It is a bioscience for the study of various
characteristics or activities of microorganisms
including microbial morphology, cytology,
physiology, ecology, genetics, molecular biology
and taxonomy.
- It has an impact on medicine, agriculture, food
science, ecology, genetics, biochemistry, and
other fields.
- Branches of Microbiology are Medical
Microbiology, Food Microbiology, Public health
Microbiology, Industrial Microbiology and
Agricultural Microbiology
16Medical Microbiology
- The medical microbiology is the study of
pathogenic microbes. - It concerns the biological characteristics of
microorganisms and their relationships with human
hosts including - Pathogenicity and immunity
- Laboratory diagnosis
- Prevention and treatment
- etc.
17Medical Microbiology
- Branches of medical microbiology include Medical
Bacteriology (Six eubacterial categories
Bacteria, Chlamydiae, Mycoplasmas, Richettiae,
Spirochetes and Actinomycetes), Medical virology,
Medical Mycology. - Medical Microbiology contains anti-infectious
immunity in Immunology. - In some countries, Parasitology is enclosed
Microbiology - Understanding and employing the principles of
microbiology and the molecular mechanisms of
pathogenesis enable the physicians and medical
scientists to control an increasing number of
infectious diseases.
18Medical Microbiology
history and current situation
19Infectious Diseases in History
- Tuberculosis
- Plague
- Smallpox
- Syphilis
- Influenza
3700 BC
20Smallpox
- Numerous epidemics in Europe, Asia
- Plague of Athens 430 BC
- Antonia Plague of Rome 165-180
- India c. 400
- Introduced to the Americas in 1520 by Cortés,
killing 25 of Aztec population - Spread to Incan population via roads
- North America in 1633, Plymouth, MA
21Influenza
- Symptoms described by Hippocrates 412 BCE
- Ascribed to unfavorable astrological influences
in Italy in the 15th Century - First pandemic recorded in 1580
- Term influenza used in English in 1743
- Virus discovered by Medical Research Council in
England in 1933
22Influenza Pandemics
- 1918 Spanish flu
- 1957 Asian flu (H2N2)
- 1968 Hong Kong flu (H3N2)
- 1976 swine flu non-pandemic
- ? Avian flu (H5N1)
23New challenge in medical microbiology
- The numerous emerging and re-emerging infectious
diseases such as AIDS, SARS, avian influenza,
tuberculosis, viral hepatitis and so on.
2430 years of emerging viral diseases
25Emerging viral diseases monkey pox virus
A 7 year old girl from Zaire Monkeypox A member
of the orthopox virus (next to Variola) local
outbreaks since 1990 It is a zoonosis in the
Americas prairie dogs
26Emerging viral diseases Kaposi sarcoma
Kaposi-sarcoma origin Human Herpesvirus type 8,
HHV-8 Kaposi-sarcoma-associated
Herpesvirus, KSHV One of the leading diseases in
(untreated) AIDS-patients
27Emerging viral diseases Avian influenza virus
- Influenza
- Hong Kong, 1997 death of 7.000 chicken in 3
farms - Crossing of species barrier of a new influenza
strain (H5N1) from poultry to man -
- 20 humans became infected.
- One third die.
- No human to human transmission.
- Killing of 1,6 millions poultry to prevent
spreading among poultry - Vietnam, Thailand, China, Laos, Korea, Japan,
Kambodscha, Indonesien, 2004 reemergence of H5N1 - Suspected human to human transmission
28Medical microbiology has developed from
Experience phase, Experimental phase to Modern
phase and is still keep developing.
Development of Medical Microbiology
- Some landmarks in each phase are
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31Time line of Microbiology
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33Time line of Microbiology
34Robert Koch Based on his experimental results,
he raised a criteria, called as Kochs Postulate,
to establish the link between a particular
microorganism and a particular disease
- The microorganisms must be present in every case
of the disease but absent from healthy
individuals. - The suspected microorganisms must be isolated and
grown in pure culture. - The same disease must result when the isolated
microorganism is inoculated into a healthy host. - The same microorganism must be isolated again
from the diseased host.
35Time line of Microbiology
36Time line of Microbiology
37Fleming and Florey (1945 nobel price)
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39 Fei-Fan Tang ???(1897-1958)
The first generation of virologist in China. He
is the first scientist who was successful in
isolating and cultivating chlamydia trachomatis
in 1955. So far he is the only Chinese
microbiologist who created a research field in
microbiology.
40Microbiology in nature science
- Microbiology established a closer relationship
with other disciplines during the 1940s because
of its association with genetics and biochemistry.
- More recently, microbiology has been a major
contributor to molecular biology and has been
deeply involved in the elucidation of the genetic
code in studies on the mechanisms of DNA,
ribonucleic acid (RNA), and protein synthesis
and in studies on the regulation of gene
expression and the control of enzyme activity.
- In the 1970s new discoveries in microbiology led
to the development of recombinant DNA technology
and genetic engineering.
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44The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2008
was divided, one half awarded to Harald zur
Hausen "for his discovery of human papilloma
viruses causing cervical cancer", the other half
jointly to Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Luc
Montagnier "for their discovery of human
immunodeficiency virus".