Title: Elements of Microbial Nutrition, Ecology and Growth
1- Elements of Microbial Nutrition, Ecology and
Growth - Chapter 7
2Microbial nutrition
- ____________ process by which chemicals
(nutrients) are acquired from environment and
used by organism - ________________________ must be provided can
be in elemental or molecular form - Elements needed for life ________________ Ca Fe
Na Cl Mg and some others
3Nutrients
Microbial nutrition
- ____________ required in large quantities
principal roles in cell structure metabolism - proteins, carbohydrates
- ____________or trace elements required in small
amounts involved in enzyme function
maintenance of protein structure - manganese, zinc, nickel
4Nutrients
Microbial nutrition
- ____________nutrients atom or molecule that
contains a combination of atoms other than carbon
and hydrogen - metals and their salts (magnesium sulfate, ferric
nitrate, sodium phosphate), gases (oxygen, carbon
dioxide) and water - ____________nutrients- contain ____________and
____________atoms and are usually the products of
living things - methane (CH4), carbohydrates, lipids, proteins,
and nucleic acids
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6Microbial nutrition
7Chemical composition of cytoplasm
Microbial nutrition
- 70 water
- proteins
- 96 of cell is composed of 6 elements
- ____________
- ____________
- ____________
- ____________
- ____________
See Table 7.2 for E. coli
88
9How do organisms obtain carbon?
Microbial nutrition
- 6 major elements
- ____________ an organism that must obtain carbon
in an organic form made by other living organisms
(proteins, carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic
acids) - ____________- an organism that uses CO2, an
inorganic gas as its carbon source - not dependent on other living things
10Nitrogen
6 major elements
- Main reservoir is nitrogen gas (N2)
- 79 of earths atmosphere is N2
- Nitrogen is part of the structure of proteins,
DNA, RNA ATP these are the primary source of
N for heterotrophs - Some bacteria algae use inorganic N nutrients
(NO3-, NO2-, or NH3) - Some bacteria can fix N2
- Regardless of how N enters the cell, it must be
converted to NH3, the only form that can be
combined with carbon to synthesis amino acids,
etc.
11Oxygen
6 major elements
- O2 makes up ______ of atmosphere
- essential to metabolism of many organisms
- major component of carbohydrates, lipids and
proteins - plays an important role in structural enzymatic
functions of cell - component of inorganic salts (sulfates,
phosphates, nitrates) water
12Hydrogen
6 major elements
- major element in all organic compounds several
inorganic ones (water, salts gases) - gases are produced used by microbes
- roles of hydrogen
- maintaining ________
- forming H bonds between molecules
- serving as the source of free energy in
oxidation-reduction reactions of respiration
13Phosphorous
6 major elements
- main inorganic source is phosphate (PO4-3)
derived from phosphoric acid (H3PO4) found in
rocks oceanic mineral deposits - key component of ____________, essential to
genetics - serves in energy transfers (ATP)
14Sulfur
6 major elements
- widely distributed in environment rocks,
sediments contain sulfate, sulfides, hydrogen
sulfide gas and sulfur - essential component of some vitamins and the
amino acids methionine cysteine - contributes to stability of proteins by forming
disulfide bonds
15Important mineral ions
- Potassium
- Sodium
- Calcium
- Magnesium
- Iron
16Growth factors
- organic compounds that cannot be synthesized by
an organism must be provided as a nutrient
(essential ____________ nutrient) - essential amino acids 20 obtained from food
- vitamins
17How microbes feed
- Nutritional type is based carbon and energy
sources - Example
- ____________ use inorganic carbon (CO2)
- Photoautotrophs make their own energy using
light (photo) - Chemoautotrophs Make their own energy using
chemicals rather than light
18terminology
How microbes feed
- Prefixes
- Troph- food, nourishment
- Auto- self
- Hetero- other
- Photo- light
- Sapro- rotten
- Halo- salt
- Thermo- heat
- Psychro- cold
- Aero- air (O2)
- Suffixes
- -phile to love
- -obe to live
- -troph food
- examples
- Autotroph
- Chemoautotroph
- Halophile, thermophile
- Aerobe, saprobe
- Aerophile (aerophilic)
19Facultative vs. obligate
How microbes feed
- ____________ organism is able to adapt to a wide
range of metabolic conditions therefore it can
facultatively switch its niche, habitat,
nutrition etc. - ____________or strict has a narrow niche,
habitat due to limitations in its nutrition or
metabolism. Microbe can only grow under those
conditions.
20? PRINT FULL SIZE
How microbes feed
Carbon source Energy source
photoautotrophs CO2 ____________
chemoautotrophs CO2 Simple inorganic ____________
photoheterotrophs organic ____________
chemoheterotrophs organic Metabolizing organic ____________
21examples
How microbes feed
- ____________
- Photoautotrophs photosynthesis
- 6CO2 12H2O light energy ? C6H12O6 6O2
6H2O - Chemoautotrophs methanogens
- 4H2 CO2 ? CH4 2H2O
- ____________
- Chemoheterotrophs
- C6H12O6 6O2 ? 6CO2 6H2O energy
22How microbes feed
- ____________ decompose dead organisms, recycle
elements, release enzymes to digest materials - ____________ utilize tissues and fluids of a
living host and cause harm - parasites and saprobes can be facultative
(opportunistic pathogen) or obligate
23saprobes
How microbes feed
- Cannot engulf large particles of food
- Substrate is digested _________ by secreted
enzymes - Small molecules are transported into cell
24How microbes feed
24
25Symbiosis
How microbes live
- Means ________________________
- Organisms (____________) have close association
- ____________obligatory, both symbionts benefit
- Termite gut flagellates
- ____________commensal receives benefit, symbiont
(host) is neither harmed nor benefited - satellitism, commensal intestinal bacteria
(normal microbial flora) - ____________ parasite benefits, host is harmed
- Intestinal helminths, Rickettsia, all viruses
26Non-symbiotic microbial associations
How microbes live
- organisms are free-living relationships not
required for survival - ____________ members cooperate and share
nutrients - ____________ some members are inhibited or
destroyed by others
27Ecological Associations Among Microorganisms
27
28Interrelationships Between Microbes and Humans
- Human body is a rich habitat for symbiotic
bacteria, fungi, and a few protozoa - normal
microbial ____________ - Commensal, parasitic, and synergistic
relationships
28
29Microbial Biofilms
- ____________result when organisms attach to a
substrate by some form of extracellular matrix
that binds them together in complex organized
layers - Dominate the structure of most natural
environments on earth - Communicate and cooperate in the formation and
function of biofilms quorum sensing
29
30Figure 7.13
30
31How do microbes get their nutrients??What are
the transport mechanisms used to import nutrients
and export waste?
REMEMBER Transport occurs across the
________________________even in microbes with
cell walls, all that is going in or coming out
must cross the cell membrane
32transport mechanisms
- ____________ require no energy input from cell
(uses laws of physics, like entropy) - ____________ require energy input from cell
33Transport mechanisms
- Passive transport do not require energy,
substances exist in a gradient and move from
areas of higher concentration towards areas of
lower concentration - ____________
- ____________ diffusion of water
- ________________________ requires a carrier
34concentration
- Amount solute/solvent
- Solute can be solid, liquid, gas
- Solvent is usually liquid
- Percentage ________________________
- Examples 3 NaCl 3 g in 100 mL 0.3 g/L
- Molarity ________________________
- Examples 1 M NaCl solution, 10 M glucose
solution etc. - Tonicity ____________gt ____________in terms of
amount of solute. ____________means both
solutions have the same amount of solute. - Examples
- 10 NaCl is more hypertonic than 1 NaCl
- 1 M glucose is more hypotonic than 5 M glucose
35diffusion
- Molecules move along gradient
- High ? low concentration
- Due to RANDOM motion increased by heat
(entropy) - Evidence Brownian movement
36Diffusion in cells
Passive transport
- Small, nonpolar molecules can diffuse across cell
membrane (oxygen, small lipids) - Polar molecules ____________ ___________________
_____ (facilitated diffusion still PASSIVE
transport using energy of gradient)
37Facilitated diffusion
Passive transport
- Carrier proteins embedded in membrane
- Specific for a single type of molecule
- Saturation can occur (all binding sites on
carrier proteins are occupied by molecule being
transported) - Competition similar molecules can compete for
binding sites one with higher affinity (or
concentration) will win and be transported
38Facilitated diffusion
38
39osmosis
- ________________________ ________________________
(therefore SOLUTE cannot diffuse so water
moves instead) - WATER moves from High ? low water conc.
(essentially, water moves from low SOLUTE to high
SOLUTE) - Water moves from ______________________________
- ______________________________
Passive transport
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41Tonicity and osmosis
Passive transport
- ____________ low solute (high water) has LOW
osmotic potential (LOW osmotic pressure). PURE
WATER is the most hypotonic - ____________ high solute (low water) has HIGH
osmotic potential (pressure). Concentrated
solutions (salt and sugar preservatives) are
highly hypertonic.
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43Adaptations to osmotic effects
Passive transport
- In a hypotonic environment
- Bacteria, algae have cell walls so they wont
burst they just become ____________. - Amoebas, ciliates have contractile vacuoles
constantly pumping water OUT - In a hypertonic environment
- Halobacteria actually absorb salt to try and stay
isotonic so they wont LOSE water (ex. Dead sea,
Great Salt Lake)
44Transport mechanisms
- ____________transport requires ____________ and
carrier proteins, gradient ____________ - Examples against gradient, faster than
diffusion, large, charged molecules that cant go
through membrane all require energy - Carrier-mediated active transport (permeases/
pumps) - Group translocation transported molecule
chemically altered - Bulk transport ______________________
______________________________________
45Carrier mediated active transport
Group translocation
See Na/K pump movie
45
46Bulk transport (________________) involves
vacuole/vessicle formation
Active transport
Liquids, solutions apicomplexans
Large particles, whole cells Amoeba
46
47Active transport
4848
49MICROBIAL GROWTH
50Microbial growth
- Environmental influences on growth
- Biology stages of growth
511. Environmental influences on microbial growth
- temperature
- oxygen requirements
- pH
- electromagnetic radiation
- barometric pressure
52a. Temperature 3 cardinal temperatures
Environmental influences
- Minimum temperature lowest temperature that
permits a microbes growth and metabolism - Maximum temperature highest temperature that
permits a microbes growth and metabolism - ____________temperature promotes the fastest
rate of growth and metabolism
533 temperature adaptation groups
Environmental influences
- __________________ optimum temperature below
15oC, capable of growth at 0oC - ________________ optimum temperature 20o-40oC,
most human pathogens - ________________ optimum temperature greater
than 45oC
543 temperature adaptation groups
Environmental influences
55Thermus aquaticus
- DNA polymerase (known as Taq polymerase) used in
PCR (polymerase chain reaction) - ________________(1983) Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- 1993 - Enzyme is HEAT STABLE so during cycling of the
PCR machine (95-55-77C) it does not get
destroyed - Huge advance in biotechnology
56b. Oxygen requirements
Environmental influences
- Depends on whether cell can handle toxic
byproducts (superoxide, peroxide) - ________________________________
- ________________________________
57Aerobes vs. anaerobes
Environmental influences --Oxygen requirements
- ______________ grown in normal O2, can handle
by-products. Some are facultative anaerobes.
Microaerophile cannot grow under anaerobic
conditions, but can handle some O2. - ________________
- strict die in presence of O2.
- Aerotolerant cannot perform aerobic
respiration, but are not killed by O2
58Environmental influences
_____________________ broth absorbs O2
from air
59- Aerobic (Pseudomonas)
- Facultative anaerobe (Staph aureus)
- Facultative anaerobe (E. coli)
- Obligate anaerobe (Clostridium)
60- Anaerobic environmental chamber
- Anaerobic jar uses gas packs that provide a
defined atmosphere - O2 removed from atmosphere H2 ? water
- Also used for ________________
61c. pH, pressure and EM radiation
Environmental influences
- pH majority grow between 6-8
- Acidophiles, Alkalinophiles
- Osmotic pressure most are in hypotonic or
isotonic - Osmophiles/halophiles grow in hypertonic (high
osmotic pressure) can cause food spoilage - Hydrostatic pressure barophiles (deep sea)
- EM radiation UV and ionizing rays are used in
microbial control. Damage DNA.
622. Biology of microbial growth
- a. Cell division binary fission
- b. Population growth rate
- Generation/doubling time
- Growth curve stages
- c. Methods for analyzing growth
63a. ______________________ dividing in two
Biology of microbial growth
64b. Population growth rate Exponential growth
Biology of microbial growth
- Nf total number of cells at some point
- Ni starting number of cells
- n generation number
- elapsed time / generation time (t/gen)
- 2n number of cells in that generation
65b. Population growth curve
Biology of microbial growth
- Shows growth progress over a time period ?
cells/time - Steps
- Inoculate culture and incubate
- Sample (volume) at time intervals
- Plate onto solid media
- Count number of cells (get cells/volume)
66b. Stages of Growth curve
Biology of microbial growth
67Growth curve
Biology of microbial growth
- ________ phase flat period of adjustment,
enlargement little growth - ____________ growth phase a period of maximum
growth will continue as long as cells have
adequate nutrients a favorable environment - ______________ phase rate of cell growth equals
rate of cell death cause by depleted nutrients
O2, excretion of organic acids pollutants - ___________ phase as limiting factors
intensify, cells die exponentially in their own
wastes
68Importance of growth curve
Biology of microbial growth
- Antimicrobials more effective on exponential
phase - Infectivity early, middle stages more likely
to pass microbe to others - Course of infection fast growing microbes can
overwhelm host defenses
69c. Methods for analyzing growth
- Inoculate culture
- Count cells
- ________________ use spectrophotometer
- ________________
- Direct, total cell count (hemocytometer)
- Viable plate count (look at CFUs)
- Coulter counter/Flow cytometer
70Turbidity
Biology of microbial growth
71Enumeration - Direct microscopic count
Biology of microbial growth
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73Enumeration - Electronic counting
Biology of microbial growth