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Control of Microorganisms

The document defines various terms related to controlling microorganisms and discusses several physical and chemical methods for doing so, including moist heat, dry heat, filtration, radiation, phenolics, alcohols, halogens, heavy metals, aldehydes, and sterilizing gases.

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Delnaz Behal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views28 pages

Control of Microorganisms

The document defines various terms related to controlling microorganisms and discusses several physical and chemical methods for doing so, including moist heat, dry heat, filtration, radiation, phenolics, alcohols, halogens, heavy metals, aldehydes, and sterilizing gases.

Uploaded by

Delnaz Behal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Control of Microorganisms

Definitions
 Sterilization: A process that kills or removes all
living cells, including viruses and spores, from a
substance or object
 Disinfection: A treatment that reduces the total
number of microbes on an object or surface, but
does not necessarily remove or kill all of the
microbes
Definitions
 Sanitation: Reduction of the microbial population
to levels considered safe by public health
standards
 Antiseptic: A mild disinfectant agent suitable for
use on skin surfaces
Definitions
 -static: A suffix that means “the agent inhibits
growth.” For example, a fungistatic agent inhibits
the growth of fungi, but doesn’t necessarily kill it.

 -cidal: A suffix meaning that “the agent kills.” For


example, a bacteriocidal agent kills bacteria
Physical Methods
 Moist Heat
 Dry Heat
 Low Temperatures
 Filtration
 Radiation
Physical Methods: Moist Heat
 Mechanism of killing > a combination of
protein/nucleic acid denaturation and membrane
disruption
 Effectiveness: Heavily dependent on type of cells
present as well as environmental conditions (type
of medium or substrate)
 Bacterial spores much more difficult to kill than
vegetative cells
Physical Methods: Moist Heat
 Measurements of killing by moist heat
 Thermal death point (TDP): Lowest temperature
at which a microbial suspension is killed in 10
minutes
 Thermal death time (TDT): Shortest time needed
to kill all organisms in a suspension at a
specified temperature under specific conditions
Physical Methods: Moist Heat
 Methods of Moist Heat
 Boiling at 100°C
• Effective against most vegetative cells; ineffective
against spores; unsuitable for heat sensitive chemicals &
many foods
 Autoclaving/pressure canning
• Temperatures above 100°C achieved by steam pressure
• Most procedures use 121.1°C, achieved at approx. 15 psi
pressure, with 15 - 30 min autoclave time to ensure
sterilization
• Sterilization in autoclave in biomedical or clinical
laboratory must by periodically validated by testing with
spores of Clostridium or Bacillus stereothermophilus
Physical Methods: Moist Heat
 Methods of Moist Heat
 Pasteurization
• Used to reduce microbial numbers in milk and other
beverages while retaining flavor and food quality of
the beverage
• Retards spoilage but does not sterilize
• Traditional treatment of milk, 63°C for 30 min
• Flash pasteurization (high-temperature short term
pasteurization); quick heating to about 72°C for 15
sec, then rapid cooling
Physical Methods: Moist Heat
 Methods of Moist Heat
 Ultrahigh-temperature (UHT) sterilization
• Milk and similar products heated to 140 -
150°C for 1 - 3 sec
• Very quickly sterilizes the milk while
keeping its flavor & quality
• Used to produce the packaged “shelf milk”
that does not require refrigeration
Physical Methods: Dry Heat
 Incineration
 Burner flames
 Electric loop incinerators
 Air incinerators operated at 500°C

 Oven sterilization
 Used for dry glassware & heat-resistant metal
equipment
 160°C for 2 hr > kill bacterial spores by dry heat
 Does not include the time for the glass to reach the
required temp (penetration time) nor does it include the
cooling time
Physical Methods:
Low Temperatures
 Refrigerator:
 around 4°C
 inhibits growth of mesophiles or thermophiles;
psychrophiles will grow
 Freezer:
 “ordinary” freezer around -10 to -20°C
 “ultracold” laboratory freezer typically -80°C
 Generally inhibits all growth; many bacteria and other
microbes may survive freezing temperatures
Physical Methods: Filtration
 Physical removal of microbes and dust particles
from solutions and gasses
 Used to sterilize heat-sensitive solutions or to
provide a sterilized air flow
 Membrane filters: eg. Nitrocellulose, nylon,
polyvinylidene difluoride
 HEPA filters: High efficiency particulate air filters
used in laminar flow biological safety cabinets
Filter Sterilization
Filtration traps microorganisms
Physical Methods: Radiation
 Ultraviolet Radiation
 DNA absorbs ultraviolet radiation at 260 nm
wavelength
 Causes damage to DNA in the form of thymine dimer
mutations
 Useful for continuous disinfection of work surfaces,
e.g. in biological safety cabinets
Physical Methods: Radiation
 Ionizing Radiation
 Gamma radiation produced by Cobalt-60 source
 Powerful sterilizing agent
 Penetrates and damages both DNA and protein
 Effective against both vegetative cells and spores
 Often used for sterilizing disposable plastic labware,
e.g. petri dishes, antibiotics, hormones, and other heat-
sensitive materials
 Used for sterilization of food; has been approved but
has not been widely adopted by the food industry
Chemical Agents
 Phenolics
 Alcohols
 Halogens
 Heavy metals
 Quaternary Ammonium Compounds
 Aldehydes
 Sterilizing Gases
 Evaluating Effectiveness of Chemical Agents
Resistance of microbes to chemical
agents
Chemical Agents: Phenolics
 Aromatic organic compounds with attached -OH
 Denature protein & disrupt membranes
 Phenol, orthocresol, orthophenylphenol,
hexachlorophene
 Disagreeable odor & skin irritation
 Hexachlorophene can be used as an antiseptic but
its use is limited as it causes brain damage
Chemical Agents: Alcohols
 Ethanol; isopropanol; at concentrations between
70 – 95%
 Denature proteins; disrupt membranes
 Kills vegetative cells of bacteria & fungi but not
spores
 Used in disinfecting surfaces; thermometers
 “ethanol-flaming” technique used to sterilize glass
plate spreaders or dissecting instruments at the lab
bench
Chemical Agents: Halogens
 Act as oxidizing agents; oxidize proteins & other
cellular components
 Chlorine compounds
 Used in disinfecting municipal water supplies
(as sodium hypochlorite, calcium hypochlorite,
or chlorine gas)
 Sodium Hypochlorite (Chlorine Bleach) used at
10 - 20% dilution as benchtop disinfectant
Chemical Agents: Halogens
 Iodine Compounds
 Tincture of iodine (iodine solution in alcohol)
 Potassium iodide in aqueous solution
 Iodophors: Iodine complexed to an organic
carrier; e.g. Betadyne
 Used as antiseptics for cleansing skin surfaces
and wounds
Chemical Agents: Heavy Metals
 Mercury, silver, zinc, arsenic, copper ions
 Form precipitates with cell proteins
 Toxic; replaced by less toxic substances
 Examples: 1% silver nitrate was used as opthalmic
drops in newborn infants to prevent gonorrhea;
has been replaced by erythromycin or other
antibiotics
 copper sulfate used as algicide in swimming pools
Chemical Agents: Aldehydes
 Formaldehyde and gluteraldehyde
 React chemically with nucleic acid and protein,
inactivating them
 Aqueous solutions can be used as disinfectants
Chemical Agents: Quaternary
Ammonium Compounds
 Quaternary ammonium compounds are cationic
detergents
 Amphipathic molecules that act as emulsifying
agents
 Denature proteins and disrupt membranes
 Used as disinfectants and skin antiseptics
 Examples: cetylpyridinium chloride,
benzalkonium chloride
Chemical Agents:
Sterilizing Gases
 Ethylene oxide (EtO)
 Used to sterilize heat-sensitive equipment and
plasticware
 Explosive; supplied as a 10 – 20% mixture with either
CO2 or dichlorofluoromethane
 Its use requires a special EtO sterilizer to carefully
control sterilization conditions as well as extensive
ventilation after sterilation because of toxicity of EtO
 Much of the commercial use of EtO (for example,
plastic petri dishes) has in recent years been replaced by
gamma irradiation
Chemical Agents:
Sterilizing Gases
 Betapropiolactone (BPL)
 In its liquid form has been used to sterilize vaccines and
sera
 Decomposes after several hours and is not as difficult to
eliminate as EtO, but it doesn’t penetrate as well as EtO
and may also be carcinogenic
 Has not been used as extensively as EtO

 Vapor-phase hydrogen peroxide


 Has been used recently to decontaminate biological
safety cabinets

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