Microbiology
Microbiology
Microbiology
MICROBIOLOGY
ROBERT W. BAUMAN
Chapter 1
Fungi
Eukaryotic (have membrane-bound nucleus)
Obtain food from other organisms
Possess cell walls
Composed of:
Molds multicellular; have hyphae; reproduce by
sexual and asexual spores
Yeasts unicellular; reproduce asexually by budding;
some produce sexual spores
Examples of Fungi
Figure 1.4
Examples of Fungi
Figure 1.4
Protozoa
Single-celled eukaryotes
Similar to animals in their nutritional needs and cellular
structure
Typically live freely in water; some live inside animal hosts
Most reproduce asexually; some reproduce sexually
Most are capable of locomotion by
Pseudopodia cell extensions that flow in direction of travel
Cilia numerous, short, hairlike protrusions that propel
organisms through environment
Flagella extensions of a cell that are fewer, longer, and more
whiplike than cilia
Examples of Protozoa
Figure 1.5
Examples of Protozoa
Figure 1.5
Examples of Protozoa
Figure 1.5
Algae
Unicellular or multicellular
Photosynthetic
Simple reproductive structures
Categorized on the basis of pigmentation, storage
products, and composition of cell wall
Examples of Algae
Figure 1.6
Prokaryotes
Unicellular and lack nuclei
Much smaller than eukaryotes
Found everywhere there is sufficient moisture; some
found in extreme environments
Reproduce asexually
Two kinds
Bacteria cell walls contain peptidoglycan; some lack
cell walls; most do not cause disease and some are
beneficial
Archaea cell walls composed of polymers other than
peptidoglycan
Copyright 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Examples of Prokaryotes
Figure 1.7
Figure 1.9
Kochs Postulates
Suspected causative agent must be found in every case
of the disease and be absent from healthy hosts
Agent must be isolated and grown outside the host
When agent in introduced into a healthy, susceptible
host, the host must get the disease
Same agent must be reisolated from diseased
experimental host
Table 1.2
Table 1.2
Biochemistry
Began with Pasteurs work on fermentation and
Buchners discovery of enzymes in yeast extract
Kluyver and van Niel microbes used as model
systems for biochemical reactions
Practical applications
Design of herbicides and pesticides
Diagnosis of illnesses and monitoring of patients
responses to treatment
Treatment of metabolic diseases
Drug design
Copyright 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Microbial Genetics
Avery, MacLeod and McCarty determined genes are
contained in molecules of DNA
Beadle and Tatum established that a genes activity is
related to protein function
How genetic information is translated into protein
Rates and mechanisms of genetic mutation
How cells control genetic expression
Molecular Biology
Explains cell function at the molecular level
Genome sequencing
Pauling proposed that gene sequences could
Provide understanding of evolutionary relationships
and processes
Establish taxonomic categories that reflect these
relationships
Identify existence of microbes that have never been
cultured
Gene Therapy
Inserting a missing gene or repairing a defective one in
humans using viruses that carry the desired gene
Chemotherapy
Fleming discovered penicillin
Domagk discovered sulfa drugs