Title: Microbial Ecology and Controlling Microbial Growth
1Microbial Ecology and Controlling Microbial Growth
2Microbial Physiology
- Physiology the study of the vital life processes
of organisms - Nutritional Requirements
- Nutrients chemical compounds used to sustain
life - Essential nutrients compounds that an organism
must obtain from its environment
3Energy Source
- Phototrophs use light as energy source
- Chemotrophs use either organic or inorganic
chemicals as energy sources
4Carbon Source
- Autotrophs use CO2 as their sole source of
carbon - Heterotrophs use organic compounds other than
CO2 for their carbon source - All medically important bacteria are
chemoheterotrophs
5Metabolism and Enzymes
- Metabolism All the chemical reactions that occur
in a cell - Enzymes are proteins that catalyze reactions.
- Enzymes are specific for particular substrates
- Enzymes are not altered during a chemical
reaction.
6Enzyme Efficiency
- Enzymes need optimal conditions to work properly.
- Limited pH range
- Limited temperature range
- Optimal concentration of enzyme and substrate
7Metabolism
- Metabolism catabolism anabolism
- Define
- Metabolite
- Catabolism/ catabolic reaction
- Anabolism/ anabolic reaction
- ATP
8Bacterial Genetics
- Genetics the study of heredity
-
- Define
- Genotype
- Phenotype
- Genes direct ALL functions of the cell,
providing it with its own particular traits and
individuality.
9Mutations
- A change in the characteristics of a cells caused
by a change in the DNA that is transmissible to
the offspring - Beneficial mutations
- Harmful and lethal mutations
- Silent mutations
10Mutagens
- Physical or chemical agents that affect the
chromosome - X-rays, UV, radioactive substances
- Mutants organisms that contain the mutation
- Ames Test a mutant strain of Salmonella is used
to learn if a chemical is a mutagen - Reversal of the organisms mutation demonstrates
that the chemical is mutagenic (and may therefore
be carcinogenic)
11Antibiotic Resistance
- R-factor plasmid containing multiple genes for
antibiotic resistance - Recipient of a R-factor plasmid becomes a
superbug - Transduction, transformation, and conjugation are
all used as tools by scientists to manipulate
bacterial genomes
12Factors that Affect Microbial Growth
- Availability of nutrient
- Moisture vs. desiccation
- Temperature
- pH
- Osmotic pressure
- Tonicity (salinity)
- Barometric pressure
- Gaseous atmosphere
13Nutrients and Moisture
- Nutrients provide energy
- Sources of C, O, H, N, P, S
- 25 of the naturally occurring elements are
essential
- Cells are 70-95 water
- Desiccation
- Produce spores/cysts
- Re-hydrate to bring back to life
14Temperature
- Mesophiles (moderate)
- Thermophiles (high)
- Psychrophiles (low)
- What are the ranges for these bacteria?
- What is optimum temperature?
15pH
- Acid Alkaline
- Neutral to slightly alkaline (pH 7.0-7.4)
- Acidophiles (pH 2-5)
- Alkaphiles (pH gt8.5)
- V. cholerae only human pathogen that grows well
above pH 8
16Osmotic Pressure and Salinity
- Osmotic pressure
- Solutes and solvents
- Osmosis
- Tonicity (hypertonic, isotonic, hypotonic)
- Crenation (cell has crenated)
- Plasmolysis
- Hemolysis
- Halophilic organisms
17Barometic Pressure and Gaseous Atmosphere
- Barophiles
- Where do they live?
- Aerobic v. anaerobic
- What are the different conditions/names for
bacteria that require different atmospheric
environments?
18Encouraging microbial growth in vitro
- Generation time (10 minutes 24 hours)
- Culture media
- Artificial media (synthetic media)
- Chemically defined medium
- Complex medium (brain-heart infusion)
- Enriched media
19Media
- Selective
- MacConkey (inhibits gm)
- PEA and CNA (inhibit gm-)
- Blood and Hb agars
- Mannitol salt agar (MSA), salt-tolerant
- Differential
- MacConkey (fermentation of lactose)
- MSA (fermentation of mannitol)
- Blood agar (hemolysis)
We can combine groups Enriched and differential
selective and differential
20Bacterial Growth in vitro
- Inoculation of culture media
- Sterile technique (contaminants)
- Incubation
- Pure culture
21Bacterial Population Counts
- To determine degree of contamination
- Turbidity (spectrophotometer)
- Viable plate count (use of dilutions)
- Used in urine culture
- 1ml 220 colonies
- 110,000 was used
- 220 x 10,000 2,200,00 bacterial/ml
22Population growth curve
- Pure culture grown as constant temperature,
samples collected at fixed intervals - Four phases
- A. Lag phase
- B. Log phase
- C. Stationary phase
- D. Death phase
23Obligate IC Pathogens in the lab
- Microbes that only grow in host cells
- Viruses
- Two groups of gm- bacteria
- Rickettsia and chlamydia
- Inoculate into embryonated chicken eggs, lab
animals or cell culture
24Inhibiting Growth in vitro
- Sterilization complete destruction of all
microbes (cells, spores, viruses) - Disinfection destruction or removal or pathogens
- Disinfectants chemical substances, can not be
used on living tissue - Antiseptics chemicals used to disinfect skin
- Sanitization reduction of microbial populations
to levels considered safe
25Microbicidal Agents Kill
- Germicides, biocides, microbicides kill microbes
- Bactericides specifically kill bacterial (but
not endospores) - Sporicides kill endospores
- Fungicides and algicides
- viricides
26Microbistatic Agents inhibit
- Microbistatic inhibits growth and reproduction
- Bacteriostatic agent specifically inhibits
metabolism and reproduction of bacteria - Lyophilization a process that freeze-dries
organisms (does NOT kill, just prevents
reproduction storage for future use)
27Sepsis and Asepsis
- Sepsis presence of pathogens in blood or tissue
- What is sterile technique?
- Who was Joseph Lister?
- Asepsis absence of pathogens in blood or tissue
- Antisepsis prevention of infection
28Physical Methods to Inhibit Growth
- Heat (time and temperature)
- Thermal death point (TDP)
- Thermal death time (TDT)
- How might pus, feces, vomitus, mucus, blood be
protective to microbes during heating procedures?
29Dry v. Moist Heat
- Dry
- Metal, powder, oils, waxes
- 160-165 for 2 hours
- 170-180 for 1 hour
- INCINERATION
- Moist
- Faster and more effective
- Causes protein coagulation
- Boil 30 minutes
- AUTOCLAVE
30Physical Methods
- Cold
- Desiccation
- Radiation
- Ultrasonic waves
- Filtration
- Gaseous atmophere
31Chemical Methods
- Disinfectants
- Prior cleaning
- Organic load
- Bioburden (type and level of contamination)
- Concentration of disinfectant
- Contact time for disinfectant
- Physical nature of object
- Temperature and pH
32Ideal chemical antimicrobial agent
- Wide/broad spectrum
- Fast-acting
- Not affect by presence of organic matter
- Nontoxic to human tissue
- Should leave a residual film on surface
- Soluble in water and inexpensive
- Stable and odorless
33How do disinfectants work?
- Destroy cell membranes
- Destroy enzymes or structural proteins
- Attack cell walls or nucleic acids
34Controversy Antimicrobial Agents
- Drug-resistance
- Animal feed
- Hand soaps, household sprays
- Immune system challenges
35Microbial Ecology Relationships
- Ecology interaction of organisms with
environment (living and nonliving) - Symbiosis interactions of 2 organisms living
close together - Mutualism both organisms benefit
- Parasitism one benefits and the other is harmed
(pathogens and humans) - Synergy 2 or more organism working together
- Examples
- Four (4) bacteria cause trench mouth
- Vaginosis is caused by several working together
36Indigenous Bacteria 500-100 species 10 trillion
cells, 10x10 trillion microbes
- Fetus initially sterile exposure occurs
during and after birth through openings and onto
skin - Blood, lymph, most internal tissue sterile
- Resident normals usually not pathogenic if
they stay in the correct system - Transients may be washed away, killed by toxins
of other microbes, flushed by body excretions, or
the site may not be suitable for growth - (E. coli ? toxin that kills any Salmonella or
Shigella passing thru gut
37Indigenous Bacteria
- Skin
- About 30 types
- Most anaerobes found in deep layers around
hair follicles and oil glands - Examples
- Staph epidermis
- Staph aureus
- P. acnes found in high numbers in acne
38Indigenous Bacteria
- Ears and eyes
- Outer ear and auditory canal skin flora
- Inner ear and middle sterile
- Coughing and sneezing push microbes up Eustachian
tubes to middle ear and cause infection - Eyes tears, mucus, and sebum clean eyes
- Lysozyme enzyme in tears that kills bacteria
39Indigenous Bacteria
- Upper Respiratory Tract
- Nose and pharynx
- Many microbes, most harmless, some opportunistic
- Many residents can become pathogenic in a
weakened person- but only strep is treated in the
carrier state - Neisseria meningitidis normal that transiently
colonizes the area, and becomes invasive in a
very small percentage of people host risk
factors include - new colonization and lack of antibody protection
- Concurrent colonization w a viral upper
respiratory tract infection that allows mucosal
invasion - Certain congenital complement deficiency syndromes
40Indigenous Bacteria
- Mouth
- Aerobes and anaerobes
- Anaerobes gum margins, between teeth, folds of
tonsils - Bacteria on food in unclean mouth cause tooth
decay and gum disease - Alpha hemolytic strept most common
- Lactobacillus produces acid that causes cavities
(dental caries)
41Indigenous Bacteria
- Stomach
- Usually stomach kills microbes passing thru it
because of low pH, but Helicobacter pylori live
there. Cause stomach ulcers - Duodenum few bacteria area of high pH
- Jejunum and ileum more bacteria
42Indigenous Bacteria
- Large Intestine
- Most anaerobes
- But most known about facultatives because are so
easy to grow and study in the lab (Family
Enterobacteriaceae which includes E. coli) - Enterics is the common word for intestinal
bacteria - Coliforms refers to a special group of enterics
- Water is checked for fecal coliforms (aerobic or
facultative anaerobic, gm-,lactose fermenting,
non-endospore forming rods) when checking for
contamination easy test kits - 50 fecal mass is bacteria
43Indigenous Bacteria
- Microbes of GU tract
- Kidneys, ureters, bladder sterile
- Urethra cleaned by urination
- Chlamydia, Neisseria, mycoplasmas introduced by
sex - Vagina before puberty and after menopause
more alkaline - Childbearing years acid Lactobacillus is most
prevalent
44Microbial communities Biofilms
- Complex assortment of organisms
- Secrete polysaccharides
- Water channels to bring in food and get rid of
waste organisms working together - Examples Dental plaque, some of the slippery
coatings on rocks, can be found in many implants
such as catheters - Resistant to antibiotics and disinfectants