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Microbial Nutrition and Growth: Nutrition Obtaining Required Substances From The Environment

This document discusses microbial nutrition and growth. It defines essential nutrients for microbial survival and reproduction, including inorganic nutrients like metals and gases, and organic nutrients like carbohydrates and proteins. It describes macronutrients and micronutrients needed in large and small quantities. The document also examines bacterial cytoplasmic composition, nutrient sources, nutritional types of microbes, environmental influences on growth, and stages of normal microbial growth.

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Dawit Getahun
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views38 pages

Microbial Nutrition and Growth: Nutrition Obtaining Required Substances From The Environment

This document discusses microbial nutrition and growth. It defines essential nutrients for microbial survival and reproduction, including inorganic nutrients like metals and gases, and organic nutrients like carbohydrates and proteins. It describes macronutrients and micronutrients needed in large and small quantities. The document also examines bacterial cytoplasmic composition, nutrient sources, nutritional types of microbes, environmental influences on growth, and stages of normal microbial growth.

Uploaded by

Dawit Getahun
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Microbial Nutrition and

Growth
Assist. Prof. Dr. Abbas Obaid Al-Janabi
College of Anbar Medicine
IRAQ-2020

Nutrition = Obtaining Required


Substances from the
Environment
Essential Nutrients Must be
Provided for an Organism to
Survive and Reproduce
Nutrients
• Inorganic nutrients– atoms, ions or
molecules 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
• Organic nutrients- contain carbon bonded to
hydrogen and are usually the products of
living things
– methane (CH4), carbohydrates, lipids, proteins,
and nucleic acids
Macronutrients
• Required in Large Quantities
• Play principle roles in cell structure and
metabolism
• Proteins (source of amino acids)
• Carbohydrates
Micronutrients

Needed in Small Amounts – like


Minerals
Points about Bacterial
Cytoplasm
• Mostly water
• Large proportion of protein
• 97% of dry weight is organic matter
• 96% of bacterial cell is composed of C,
H, N, O, P and S
Challenge for Bacteria

How to get enough nutrients in


forms that they can use to make
cell components
Bacteria Must Make
• Proteins
• Carbohydrates
• Lipids
• Nucleic Acids
Sources of Essential Nutrients
• Carbon – obtain in organic form, or
reduce CO2
• Nitrogen – Fix N2 or obtain as NO3--
NO2-, or NH3
• Oxygen – Atmospheric or
dissolved in water
• Hydrogen – Minerals, water,
organic compounds
Nutrient Sources - Continued

• Phosphorous – Mineral
deposits
• Sulfur – Minerals, H2S
• Metal Ions - Minerals
Mineral Nutrients Important in
Microbial Metabolism
• Potassium – essential to protein synthesis
and membrane function
• Sodium – used in some types of cell
transport
• Calcium – cell wall and endospore stabilizer
• Magnesium – component of chlorophyll;
membrane and ribosome stabilizer
• Iron – component of proteins of cellular
respiration
• Zinc, copper, nickel, manganese, etc.
Growth Factors
• Organic compounds that cannot be
synthesized by an organism & must be
provided as a nutrient
– essential amino acids, vitamins
Nutritional Types

• Autotrophs - use CO2, an


inorganic gas as carbon
source
• Heterotrophs - obtain carbon
in an organic form made by
other living organisms
Autotrophs – “Self-Feeding”
• Phototrophs use light
energy to reduce carbon or
make ATP
• Chemotrophs use energy
stored in inorganic chemical
bonds to reduce carbon or
make ATP
Heterotrophs

• Obtain reduced carbon


compounds made by
another organism
• Chemoheterotrophs –
oxidize reduced carbon to
make ATP
Two Kinds of Bacterial
Heterotrophs

• Saprobes – Obtain nutrients


from dead, decaying matter
• Parasites – Feed off a host
organism
Environmental Influences on
Microbial Growth
• Temperature
• Oxygen requirements
• pH
• Barometric pressure
3 Cardinal Temperatures
• Minimum temperature
• Maximum temperature
• Optimum temperature
3 Temperature Adaptation
Groups
1. Psychrophiles – optimum temperature
below 15oC, capable of growth at 0oC
2. Mesophiles – optimum temperature
20o-40oC, most human pathogens
3. Thermophiles – optimum temperature
greater than 45oC
Ecological Groups by Temperature of
Adaptation
Oxygen in the Microbial
Environment
• Oxygen required by aerobic species
(Bacillus, Pseudomonas) but produces
toxic by-products; these species have
efficient de-tox enzymes
• Facultative anaerobes can exist in
presence of oxygen but have no
requirement for it (E. coli,
Staphylococcus, etc.)
Anaerobes – no Need for Oxygen
• Strict anaerobes cannot tolerate
oxygen (Clostridium sp.)
• Aerotolerant anaerobes have atypical
oxygen detox systems (Lactobacillus
sp.)
• Capnophiles require higher CO2
pressures (Neisseria, Brucella, S.
pneumoniae)
pH Effects on Growth
• Acidophiles require low pH
(Thermoplasma)
• Alkalinophiles require high pH
(Proteus)
Osmotic Effects

• Most microbes exist under hypotonic


or isotonic conditions
• Halophiles – require a high
concentration of salt
• Osmotolerant – do not require high
concentration of solute but can tolerate
it when it occurs
Miscellaneous Environmental
Factors
• Barophiles require high environmental
pressure (like deep sea Archae)
• Dehydrated Cell Stages – Spores
• Extreme radiation conditions -
Dinococcus radiodurans
Ecological Relationships
• Symbiosis – existing together
• Mutualism – both parties benefit
• Commensalism – one party benefits
without impacting the other
• Parasitism – one party benefits at
expense of the other
• Synergism – multiple organisms
working together
Microbial Biofilms
• 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
• Microorganisms communicate and
cooperate in the formation and function
of biofilms – quorum sensing
Ecological Relationships -
Continued
• Antagonism – one party acts to inhibit
or eliminate the other
• Example of antagonism:
Antibiosis – producing substances toxic
to other organisms
Microbial Growth

Growth of a population at an
exponential rate under optimal
conditions
Stages in Normal Growth
• Lag phase
• Exponential/log phase
• Stationary phase
• Death or decline
Mathematics of Population Growth
Growth Curve
Methods for Monitoring Growth
• Dilution Plating
• Turbidity analysis using
spectrophotometer
• Direct count with hemacytometer
• Optical detection – Coulter Counter
Turbidity
Direct Microscopic Count
Electronic Counting
It is Ideal to Perform Most
Manipulations of a Culture When
it is Growing in Log Phase

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