Introduction To Microbiology: Mary Lou Dullona-Basa
Introduction To Microbiology: Mary Lou Dullona-Basa
MICROBIOLOGY
MARY LOU DULLONA-BASA
MICROBIOLOGY
Study of living things too small to be seen without magnification
Living things – microorganism or microbes - less than 1mm in diameter
Bacteria
Algae
Protozoans
Viruses
Fungi
Organisms are
divided into
three domains
Bacteria
Archae
Eukarya
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
ROBERT HOOKE
Crude microscope – 1665
Most important discovery of biology
abiogenesis
some forms of life could arise from “vital
forces” present in nonliving or decomposing
matter
organisms can arise from non-living matter.
LOUIS JABLOT
1670 - conducted an experiment in which he divided a hay
infusion that had been boiled into two containers:
a heated container that was closed to the air
a heated container that was freely open to the air
Only the open vessel developed microorganisms
helped to disprove abiogenesis.
REDI’S and JABLOT’S EXPERIMENTS
Disproved by:
Schwann, Friedrich Schroder and von Dusch (1830s)
Air allowed to enter flask but only after passing through
a heated tube or sterile wool
John Tyndall (1820-1893) – Omission of dust no growth.
Demonstrated heat resistant forms of bacteria
(endospores)
LOUIS PASTEUR (1822 - 1895)
Vaccination:
Inoculation of healthy individuals with weakened (or attenuated) forms of microorganisms,
that would otherwise cause disease, to provide protection, or active immunity from disease
upon later exposure.
Edward Jenner in 1796 discovered that cowpox (vaccinia) induced protection against
human smallpox
Called procedure vaccination
Pasteur and Roux reported that incubating cultures longer than normal in the lab
resulted in ATTENUATED bacteria that could no longer cause disease.
Working with chicken cholera (caused by Pasteurella multocida), they noticed that animals
injected with attenuated cultures were resistant to the disease.
Pasteur and Chamberland developed other vaccines:
Attenuated anthrax vaccine
Chemical and heat treatment (potassium bichromate)
Antiserum recovered
Contains antibodies specific for the toxin
Protection from disease when injected non -immune subject.
JOHN TYNDALL (1820 – 1893)
In 1876 discovered that there were two different types of bacteria.
a) Heat sensitive or heat labile forms (vegetative cells)
easily destroyed by boiling
b) Heat resistant types known as an endospore
Tyndall demonstrated that alternate process of heating & cooling
if repeated five times, can kill all the endospores.
This is known as Sterilization process or Tyndallization
FERDINAND COHN
1860 to 1900
Golden Age of Microbiology
rapid advances, spear-headed by Louis Pasteur
and Robert Koch
led to the establishment of microbiology as a
science.
LOUIS PASTEUR - 1822 – 1895
1864
Pasteurization
established the relationship between microbes and disease in preventing wine
from spoiling
kills bacteria in the alcohol by heat, thus preventing the formation of acetic acid
(vinegar).
His discovery of pasteurization, lead Pasteur to introduce the “germ theory of disease”
in 1864. Pasteur stated that diseases are caused by the growth of microbes in the body
and not by sins, bad character, or poverty, etc.
Joseph Lister (1827 - 1912)
1867 Antiseptic Surgery( Carbolic acid- Phenol)
developed a system of surgery designed to prevent
microorganisms from entering wounds – phenol (Carbolic
Acid) sprayed in air around surgical incision
Decreased number of post-operative infections in patients
his published findings (1867) transformed the practice of surgery
PAUL EHRLICH
Binary fission
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
For energy, use of organic
chemicals, inorganic
chemicals or
photosynthesis
Ex: Escherichia coli
Domain Archaea
Prokaryotes
Lack peptidoglycan
Live in extreme environments
(extremophiles)
Include:
Methanogens
Extreme halophiles
Extreme thermophiles
Domain Eukarya
Eukaryotes
Mycelia – hyphae -
filaments
Eukaryotes
Eukaryotes
Cellulose cell walls
Photosynthetic QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
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Primary producers
Produce molecular oxygen
and organic compounds
Part of food chain
Helminths
Eukaryotes
Multicellular animals
Parasitic flatworms and QuickTime™ and a
roundworms called TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
helminths
Microscopic stages in life
cycles
Viruses
Acellular
Obligate intracellular parasites
Genome consist of DNA or
RNA called Core QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
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Core surrounded by protein
coat called Capsid
Virion (coat) may be enclosed
in lipid envelope
Replicated only when they are
in a living host cell
Prions
Proteinaceous infectious
agents
Causes Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy (BSE) QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Opportunistic pathogen
is a microbe that cause disease in immunocompromised hosts or when the
normal microbiota is altered.
Emerging Infectious Diseases
West Nile Encephalitis, first diagnosed in Uganda in 1937; appeared in New York
City in 1999.
Invasive Group A Streptococcus, also known as the “flesh eating bacteria”
Escherichia coli 0157:H7, causes “bloody diarrhea” and hemorrhagic uremic
syndrome (HUS)
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) or “mad cow” disease caused by prions
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) caused by HIV and Africa is
hardest hit
Anthrax caused by Bacillus anthracis was sensationalized in 2001 when spores were
disseminated via the mail