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Characteristics of the Microorganisms

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Major Groups of Parasitic Helminths. Flatworms. no definite body cavity ... Helminth Classification and Identification. Classify according to: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Characteristics of the Microorganisms


1
Characteristics of the Microorganisms
2
Cells
  • Marks the boundary between the living and the
    dead
  • Structural and functional unit of an organism
  • Smallest structure capable of performing all of
    the functions necessary for life

3
All cells.
  • Have an outer plasma membrane
  • Contain DNA
  • Enclosed within the cell somewhere
  • Contain cytoplasm
  • Everything between the plasma membrane and the
    region of DNA
  • Gives cells their shape
  • Assist in movement of cell and organelles

4
Surface Area / Volume Ratio
  • Actively metabolizing cells need to be small
  • The amount of surface area affects the ability to
    get materials in and out of a cell
  • cell in volume surface area

5
Characteristics of Cells and Life
  • All living things (single and multicellular) are
    made of cells that share some common
    characteristics
  • basic shape
  • spherical, cubical, cylindrical
  • internal content
  • cytoplasm, surrounded by a membrane
  • DNA chromosome(s)
  • ribosomes
  • metabolic capabilities
  • Two basic cell types eucaryotic and procaryotic

6
Characteristics of Cells
  • Eucaryotic cells
  • Animals, plants, fungi, and protists
  • contain double-membrane bound nucleus with DNA
  • contain membrane-bound organelles

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Characteristics of Cells
  • Procaryotic cells
  • Bacteria and archaea
  • no nucleus
  • no membrane-bound organelles

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Characteristics of Life
  • Growth and development
  • Reproduction and heredity
  • Metabolism
  • Movement and/or irritability
  • Cell support, protection, and storage mechanisms
  • Transport of nutrients and waste

12
External Structures
  • Locomotor appendages
  • flagella
  • long, sheathed cylinder containing microtubules
  • covered by an extension of the cell membrane
  • function in motility
  • cilia
  • similar in overall structure to flagella
  • shorter and more numerous
  • found only on a single group of protozoa and
    certain animal cells
  • function in motility, feeding and filtering

13
External Structures
  • Glycocalyx
  • an outermost boundary that comes into direct
    contact with environment
  • usually composed of polysaccharides
  • appears as a network of fibers, a slime layer or
    a capsule
  • functions in adherence, protection, and signal
    reception
  • Beneath the glycocalyx
  • Fungi and most algae have a thick, rigid cell
    wall
  • Protozoa, a few algae, and all animal cells lack
    a cell wall and have only a membrane

14
External Boundary Structures
  • Cell wall
  • Rigid, provides structural support and shape
  • Fungi
  • thick inner layer of polysaccharide fibers
  • composed of chitin or cellulose and a thin layer
    of mixed glycans
  • Algae
  • varies in chemical composition
  • substances include cellulose, pectin, mannans,
    silicon dioxide, and calcium carbonate

15
External Boundary Structures
  • Cytoplasmic (cell) membrane
  • typical bilayer of phospholipids and proteins
  • serves as selectively permeable barrier in
    transport
  • Eucaryotic cells also contain membrane-bound
    organelles that account for 60-80 of their volume

16
Prokaryote
Eukaryote
17
Bacteria
18
Bacterial Shapes, Arrangements, and Sizes
  • Prokaryotes
  • Typically described by one of three basic shapes
  • coccus
  • Spherical
  • bacillus
  • Rod
  • coccobacillus
  • vibrio
  • spirillum
  • helical, comma, twisted rod,
  • Spirochete

19
Bacterial Shapes, Arrangements, and Sizes
  • Arrangement of cells dependent on pattern of
    division and how cells remain attached after
    division
  • cocci
  • singles
  • diplococci
  • tetrads
  • irregular clusters
  • chains
  • cubical packets
  • bacilli
  • chains
  • palisades

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The Cell Envelope
  • External covering outside the cytoplasm
  • Composed of two basic layers
  • cell wall and cell membrane
  • Maintains cell integrity
  • Two generally different groups of bacteria
    demonstrated by Gram stain
  • Gram-positive bacteria
  • thick cell wall composed primarily of
    peptidoglycan and cell membrane
  • Gram-negative bacteria
  • outer cell membrane, thin peptidoglycan layer,
    and cell membrane

22
Viruses
23
General Structure of Viruses
  • Size range
  • most lt0.2 µm
  • requires electron microscope
  • Virion
  • fully formed virus able to establish an infection

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General Structure of Viruses
  • Capsids
  • All viruses have capsids
  • Constructed from identical subunits called
    capsomers
  • made of protein
  • nucleoscapsid
  • Capsid nucleic acid
  • Enveloped
  • Naked

26
General Structure of Viruses
  • Two structural types
  • Helical
  • Continuous helix of capsomers forming a
    cylindrical nucleocapsid
  • Icosahedral
  • 20-sided with 12 corners
  • vary in the number of capsomers
  • Each capsomer may be made of 1 or several
    proteins
  • Some are enveloped

27
Helical- rod shaped capsomers that bind
together to form a series of hollow discs
resembling a bracelet
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30
Viral morphology (a) poxvirus, (b)
bacteriophage, (c) mumps, (d) herpesvirus, (e)
rhabdovirus, (f) HIV, (g) adenovirus, and (h)
papillomavirus.
31
Eukaryotic cells and microorganisms
32
Survey of Eucaryotic Microbes
  • Fungi
  • Algae
  • Protozoa
  • Parasitic worms

33
Structures
  • Appendages
  • Glycocalyx
  • Cell wall
  • Cell membrane

34
Fungi
35
Kingdom Fungi
  • 100,000 species divided into 2 groups
  • macroscopic fungi (mushrooms, puffballs, gill
    fungi)
  • microscopic fungi (molds, yeasts)
  • Majority are unicellular or colonial
  • Few have cellular specialization

36
Microscopic Fungi
  • Exist in two morphologies
  • yeast
  • hyphae
  • Some exist in either form
  • dimorphic
  • characteristic of some pathogenic molds

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39
Fungal Nutrition
  • All are heterotrophic
  • Majority harmless saprobes
  • Live off dead plants and animals
  • Some are parasites
  • Live on the tissues of other organisms, but none
    are obligate
  • Mycoses
  • Growth temperature 20o - 40oC
  • Extremely widespread distribution in many habitats

40
Fungal Reproduction
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Spores are formed following fusion of male and
    female strains and formation of sexual structure
  • Sexual spores and spore-forming structures are
    one basis for classification
  • Zygospores
  • Ascospores
  • Basidiospores
  • Deuteromycota
  • Asexual
  • Majority are yeasts and molds
  • Conidia

41
Fungal Identification
  • Isolation on specific media
  • Macroscopic and microscopic observation of
  • asexual spore-forming structures and spores
  • hyphal type
  • colony texture and pigmentation
  • physiological characteristics
  • genetic makeup

42
Roles of Fungi
  • Adverse impact
  • mycoses, allergies, toxin production
  • destruction of crops and food storages
  • Beneficial impact
  • decomposers of dead plants and animals
  • sources of antibiotics, alcohol, organic acids,
    vitamins
  • used in making foods and in genetic studies

43
Protists
44
Kingdom Protista
  • Algae
  • Protozoa

45
Algae
  • Photosynthetic organisms
  • Kelps, seaweeds, euglenids, green algae, diatoms,
    dinoflagellates, brown algae, and red seaweeds
  • Microscopic forms
  • Unicellular
  • Colonial
  • filamentous
  • Macroscopic forms
  • colonial
  • multicellular
  • Contain chloroplasts with chlorophyll and other
    pigments
  • Cell wall
  • May or may not have flagella

46
Algae
  • Most are free-living in fresh and marine water
  • Plankton
  • Provide basis of food web in most aquatic
    habitats
  • Produce large proportion of atmospheric O2
  • Dinoflagellates
  • Cause red tides and give off toxins
  • Cause food poisoning with neurological symptoms
  • Classified according to types of pigments and
    cell wall
  • Used for cosmetics, food, and medical products

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48
Protozoa
  • 65,000 species
  • Vary in shape, lack a cell wall
  • Most are unicellular
  • Colonies are rare
  • Most are harmless, free-living in a moist habitat
  • Some are animal parasites
  • Spread by insect vectors
  • All are heterotrophic
  • Feed by engulfing other microbes and organic
    matter

49
Protozoa
  • Most have locomotor structures
  • flagella, cilia, or pseudopods.
  • Exist as trophozoite
  • motile feeding stage
  • cyst
  • Dormant resting stage when conditions are
    unfavorable for growth and feeding
  • All reproduce asexually, mitosis or multiple
    fission
  • Many also reproduce sexually
  • conjugation

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53
Parasitic Helminths
54
Parasitic Helminths
  • Multicellular animals
  • Parasitize host tissues
  • Organs for reproduction, digestion, movement,
    protection
  • Mouthparts
  • Attachment
  • Digestion of host tissues
  • Well-developed sex organs that produce eggs and
    sperm
  • Fertilized eggs go through larval period in or
    out of host body

55
Helminths
  • 50 species parasitize humans
  • Acquired though
  • Ingestion of larvae or eggs in food
  • Soil or water
  • Carried by insect vectors
  • Afflict billions of humans
  • Distributed worldwide
  • Some restricted to certain geographic regions
  • Higher incidence in tropics

56
Life Cycles
  • Hermaphroditic
  • Transmission
  • Definitive host
  • Fertilized eggs

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59
Major Groups of Parasitic Helminths
  • Flatworms
  • no definite body cavity
  • digestive tract a blind pouch
  • simple excretory and nervous systems
  • Groups
  • cestodes (tapeworms)
  • Trematodes or flukes, are flattened ,
    nonsegmented worms with sucking mouthparts.
  • Roundworms (nematodes)
  • round, a complete digestive tract
  • protective surface cuticle
  • spines and hooks on mouth
  • excretory and nervous systems poorly developed

60
Helminth Classification and Identification
  • Classify according to
  • shape, size, organ development, presence of
    hooks, suckers, or other special structures, mode
    of reproduction, hosts, and appearance of eggs
    and larvae
  • Identify by
  • microscopic detection of adult worm, larvae, or
    eggs

61
Other infectious agents
62
Unconventional Viruslike Agents
  • cause spongioform encephalopathies
  • transmissable, fatal, chronic infections of the
    nervous system
  • Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
  • New variant CJD
  • kuru
  • caused by prions infectious proteins

63
Prions
  • Prions
  • proteinaceous infectious particles
  • misfolded proteins
  • contain no nucleic acid
  • cause transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
  • common in animals
  • Extremely resistant to usual sterilization
    techniques
  • Cause transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
    (TSEs) in humans and animals
  • Neurodegenerative diseases with long incubation
    periods

64
Prions
  • Variant CJD became apparent in the late 1990s
    after eating meat from cattle afflicted with
    bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)
  • Difficult to diagnose
  • requires examination of biopsied brain or nervous
    tissue
  • Prevention relies on avoidance of contaminated
    tissue
  • Treatment focuses on easing symptoms

65
New Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD)
  • Fatal brain disorder in humans
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