Lecture 1 Intro to Microbiology: History and Taxonomy.

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Lecture 1 Intro to Microbiology: History and Taxonomy

Transcript of Lecture 1 Intro to Microbiology: History and Taxonomy.

Page 1: Lecture 1 Intro to Microbiology: History and Taxonomy.

Lecture 1Intro to Microbiology: History

and Taxonomy

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Microbiology

• The study of organisms to small to be seen without a microscope

• Includes living microorganisms: bacteria, algae, fungi, protozoa

• AND non-cellular infectious agents: viruses, viroids, prions

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Why study Microorganisms?

• Microorganisms are the foundation for all life on earth

• They effect your everyday life

• Only a minority of microorganisms are pathogenic

• Microorganisms are found almost everywhere

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Microbes and Human Welfare

• Recycle chemical elements

• Decompose organic matter

• Bioremediation

• Biotechnology

• Gene therapy

• Genetic engineering

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Microbes can be used to clean up oil spills such as this one in Alaska

Courtesy of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council/NOAA

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Microbes and Human Disease

• Everyone has microbes in and on body

• Person may or may not contract disease once they are in contact with it

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Infectious Disease

• Pathogens invade susceptible host

• Emerging infectious diseases

• Ebola

• BSE, Mad cow disease

• Know other emerging infectious diseases from book for exam

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Major Groups of the Microbial World1. Bacteria

2. Archeae

3. Fungi

4. Algae

5. Protozoans

6. Helminths

7. Viruses

8. Major Features9. Small size

10. Diverse appearance

11. Diverse genetics

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Bacteria

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Archaea

• Found in extreme environments

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Fungi

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Fungi

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Algae

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Protozoa

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Helminths

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Viruses

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The Spectrum of Microorganisms is Diverse

- There are over 10 million species of prokaryotes

- There are over 3600 known viruses- There are about 70,000 described species of

fungi

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Discovery of Microorganisms

• Robert Hooke published Micrographia (1665)

• Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723)

• He peered at a drop of lake water through a lens that he carefully ground

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Hooke’s Micrographia

© Library of Congress [LC-USZ62-95187]

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Cork cells

© Library of Congress [LC-USZ62-95187]

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Anton van Leeuwenhoek

Courtesy of Pfizer, Inc.

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Leeuwenhoek’s drawings of bacteria

Courtesy of Royal Society, London

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Next Question: Where did microorganisms originate?

• Spontaneous generation: Life originates from non-life, believed from the time of Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)

• Works of Redi, Pasteur, and Tyndall refute this theory

• Prove Germ Theory of Disease

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Francesco Redi (1626-1697)

• Proponents of spontaneous generation believed that worms in rotting meat came from meat itself

• Redi debunked this theory

• Experiments with meat

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New Experiments Needed to Refute Spontaneous Generation

• Typical Experiment: used nutrient broth (infusion): contains nutrients needed for microorganisms to grow

• 1. boil to kill all forms of life• 2. seal vessel• If cloudy after standing: spontaneous

generation• If clear: no spontaneous generation• Different investigators: Different results

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Louis Pasteur (1822-1894)

• Father of microbiology

• Demonstrated air is filled with microorganisms

• Demonstrated that sterile infusions will stay sterile in specially constructed flasks even when they were left open to the air

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John Tyndall

• Explained differences in results obtained from different laboratories

• Proved Pasteur correct

• He concluded that different infusions require different boiling times to be sterilized

• Because of heat resistant microorganisms: Endospores

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Endospores

• Some microorganisms exist in two forms: – 1. a cell that is readily killed by boiling– 2. one that is heat resistant

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Golden Age of Microbiology

• Rapid advances by Pasteur and Robert Koch

• Discovery of agents of many diseases and role of immunity in prevention and cure of disease

• Discoveries include:– Fermentation and pasteurization– Germ theory of disease– Vaccination

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Fermentation and Pasteurization

• Pasteur- why did wine sour?

• Believed at time, that converted sugars into alcohol

• Yeasts do the work of fermentation

• Bacteria cause spoilage

• Pasteurization

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Germ Theory of Disease

• Pasteur: to fight silkworm disease

• Ignaz Semmelweis: Instructed hospital staff to wash hands

• Lister: treated surgical wounds with phenol solution

• John Snow: Interviewed sick and healthy Londoners during cholera epidemic

• Robert Koch

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Ignaz Semmelweiss encouraged hospital staff to wash their hands

Courtesy of Pfizer, Inc.

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Robert Koch (1843-1910)

• Demonstrated that anthrax caused by Bacillus anthracis– Usual means of transmission: resistant endospores

• Introduced use of pure culture techniques for handling bacteria in lab

• Cultured bacteria on agar• Discovered Mycobacterium tuberculosis –

causative agent for tuberculosis• Proved germ theory of disease

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Vaccination

• Edward Jenner:

• Introduced vaccine for smallpox

• Inoculate with fluid from cowpox blisters prevented smallpox

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Modern developments in Microbiology

• Bacteriology

• Mycology

• Parasitology

• Immunology

• Virology

• Recombinant DNA technology

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Taxonomy

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Taxonomy

• Involves three steps:– 1. Identification– 2. Classification– 3. Nomenclature

Objective is to arrange organisms into categories that reflect the similarities of the individuals within the groups

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History

• Carolus Linnaeus: 1700’s: Two Kingdoms: Plants and Animals

• Ernst Haekel: 1866: Kingdom Protista

• R.H. Whittaker: 1969: Five Kingdoms

• Carl Woese: 1990: Three Domains

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Taxonomic Hierarchy

• Species: basic unit– Group of related species: strain

• Genus: group of similar species

• Family: group of similar genera, ends in - aceae• Order: group of similar families, ends in - ales• Class: group of similar orders, ends in - ia• Phylum: group of similar classes• Kingdom: group of similar Phyla• Domain: group of similar Kingdoms

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Page 44: Lecture 1 Intro to Microbiology: History and Taxonomy.

Domains of the Living World

• Bacteria

• Archaea

• Eucarya– Bacteria and Archaea look identical

– Also both are prokaryotes, however differ in chemical composition and are unrelated

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Eucarya

• All members of living world that are not prokaryotes are in domain eukarya

• May be single celled or multi-cellular

• Always contain true membrane-bound nucleus and other internal organelles

• Far more complex than prokaryotes

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Four Kingdoms within Domain Eukarya

• Animalia– Multicellular, heterotrophic

• Plantae– Multicellular, heterotrophic

• Protista: many single celled eukaryotes– Ex. Paramecium, algae, protozoa

• Fungi– Single celled: yeast– Multicellular: molds and mushrooms

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Bacteria

• Single-celled prokaryotes

• Most have specific shapes: cylindrical, spherical, and spiral

• Most have rigid cell walls

• Multiply by binary fission

• Many move using appendages

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Archaea

• Have same size, shape, and appearance as bacteria

• Multiply by binary fission and move primarily with flagella

• Also have cell walls, but differ from bacteria: no peptidoglycan

• Interesting Feature: able to grow in extreme environments

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Identification of Microorganisms

• Microscopic examination

• Culture characteristics

• Biochemical tests

• Nucleic Acid Analysis

• Serological Tests

• Person’s symptoms also play a role

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Classification of Microorganisms

• Phenotype: Physical appearance• Genotype: Genes

– Development of molecular techniques has made this possible

• Bergey’s Manual of Systematic Bacteriology– All known species described here– If properties of newly isolated organism do not

agree with any description, considered new organism

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Nomenclature

• International code for Nomenclature of Bacteria• Uses two-word naming system: Binomial

Nomenclature– First name is the Genus, capital– Second name is the species, lower case– Both are italicized– Example: Escherichia coli, or E.coli– Strains; minor differences with in species:

• E. coli strain B or E.coli strain K-12

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Nonliving Members of Microbial World

• In order to be considered alive, must be composed of one or more cells

• Viruses, Viroids, and prions are termed agents

• Viruses: – Piece of nucleic acid surrounded by protein

coat– Can only multiply inside human host cells– Obligate intercellular parasites

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Non-living members of the bacterial world

• Viroids:– Simpler than viruses– Single short piece of RNA– No protective coat– Can only multiply inside cells

• Prions:– Appear to only be protein without nucleic acid– Possible another agent is causing the disease

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