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The Microbial World and You

The Microbial World and You. Chapter 1. Microbes in Our Lives. Microbes (microorganisms) Too small to be seen with the unaided eye Ubiquitous Includes viruses, Bacteria, Fungi, Protozoa Pathogenic microbes represent only a small number of all known microorganisms

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The Microbial World and You

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  1. The Microbial World and You Chapter 1

  2. Microbes in Our Lives • Microbes (microorganisms) • Too small to be seen with the unaided eye • Ubiquitous • Includes viruses, Bacteria, Fungi, Protozoa • Pathogenic microbes represent only a small number of all known microorganisms • Most microbes are beneficial and crucial for life • Basis of food chain in aquatic environments • Recycle chemical nutrients (saprobes) • Commercial uses – vitamins, alcohols, drugs, food and beverages and much, much more

  3. Naming Microorganisms • Binomial system of nomenclature • Developed by Carolus Linnaeus (1735) • All organisms are assigned two names • Genus and specific epithet (species name) • Staphylococcus aureus(Staphylococcusaureus) • Escherichia coli (Escherichiacoli) • Penicilliumchrysogenum(Penicilliumchrysogenum)

  4. Three Domains of Life • Carl Woese (1978) – classification based on cellular organization of organisms • Bacteria – Prokaryotic with Peptidoglycan cell walls • Archaea – prokaryotic without peptidoglycan cell walls • Eukarya – Eukaryotic • Protists, Fungi, Plants, and Animals

  5. Check Your Understanding • What are microbes? How can they impact our lives (for better and worse)? • Differentiate between a pathogenic and non-pathogenic organism. • Distinguish between a genus and specific epithet. • Compare and contrast the three domains of life.

  6. Types of microorganisms

  7. Bacteria (Bacterium) • Prokaryotic • Peptidoglycancell wall • Reproduce via binary fission • Motile species move via flagella Haemophlusinfluenzae

  8. Archaea • Prokaryotic • May possess cell walls, but lack peptidoglycan as a cell wall component • Not known to cause disease • Commonly found in extreme environments • Methanogens • Extreme Halophiles • Extreme Thermophiles

  9. Fungi (Fungus) • Eukaryotic • Molds, yeast, true fungi • Cell wall composed primarily of chitin • Unicellular or multicellular • Multicellular forms consist of hyphae arranged into mycelia • Can reproduce asexually or sexually Mucorsp.

  10. Protozoa • Eukaryotic • Unicellular • Move via flagella, cilia, or pseudopods • Used for classification • Can reproduce asexually or sexually Naegleriafowleri

  11. Algae (Alga) • Photosynthetic eukaryotes • Important members in the balance of nature • Reproduce sexually and asexually • Cell wall composed primarily of cellulose Volvoxsp.

  12. Viruses • Most can only be seen with an electron microscope • Acellular • Consist of DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat • Can only reproduce after entering a host cell and commandeering its cellular machinery • Parasitic Human Immunodeficiency Virus

  13. Helminths • Flatworms and roundworms • Eukaryotic • Multicellular animal parasites • Classified on differences in mouth structures and larvae • Requires a microscope to see

  14. Check Your Understanding • Which groups of microbes are prokaryotic? Which are eukaryotic? • Differentiate between the true bacteria and the prokaryotic Archaea. • Distinguish between the major groups of eukaryotic microbes. • How are virus unique among the other microbes?

  15. A Brief History of Microbiology

  16. The First Observations • Robert Hooke (1665) – “cells” after viewing cork • Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1673-1723) • Constructed over 400 microscopes (~300X magnification) • First to view and draw living microbes (“animalcules”) from rainwater, feces, plaque scrapings from teeth • Cell Theory – all living things are composed of cells

  17. Disproving Spontaneous Generation • Rudolf Virchow (1858) – Biogenesis • Living cells can only come from other living cells • Louis Pasteur (1861-1914) • Used aseptic techniques to finally put to rest the debate over spontaneous generation • Repeated John Needham’s (1745) experiments • Used Swan-necked to further validate the results • Discovered microorganisms are responsible for fermentation • Developed pasteurization to prevent wine spoilage

  18. Pasteur’s Experimental Design

  19. Germ Theory of Disease • Joseph Lister (1860s) – used phenols to disinfect surgical equipment between patients • Greatly reduced post-operative infections • Robert Koch (1876) – Koch’s Postulates • Bacillus anthraciswas isolated from infected cattle • B. anthraciswas then cultured outside infected animal • B. anthraciswas inoculated into a healthy animal and caused the same disease affects originally seen • B. anthraciswas re-isolated from newly infected animal

  20. Vaccination • Edward Jenner (1796) used cowpox to protect patients against the deadly smallpox epidemic • Basis for immunity • Protection from a disease provided by vaccination or natural recovery from the disease itself • Actual mechanism for immunity provided by vaccinations was discovered by Pasteur (1880) • Lab strains of microbes can become avirulent, but still provide immunity against pathogenic strains

  21. Check Your Understanding • What is the Cell Theory? • Compare spontaneous generation and biogenesis. • How did Pasteur disprove the theory of spontaneous generation? What were some of his other contributions to the field of microbiology? • What is the germ theory of disease? What is the importance of Koch’s postulates? Explain his four postulates in your own words. • Explain Jenner’s contribution to microbiology.

  22. The birth of modern chemotherapy

  23. Chemotherapy • Use of chemical substances to treat disease • Relies on the fact that some chemicals are more poisonous to the microbes than the infected host • Antibiotics – chemicals naturally produced by bacteria and fungi to act against other microbes • Synthetic Drugs – chemotherapeutic agents prepared from chemicals in the lab

  24. The First Synthetic Drug • Paul Erlich speculated on the existence of a “magic bullet” in medicine • A drug that could kill pathogens without harming the infected host • Discovered the compound salvarsan (1910), an effective chemotherapeutic against syphillis • Chemical derived from arsenic

  25. Penicillin – The First Antibiotic • Discovered by Alexander Fleming (1928) • Produced by Penicilliumchrysogenum • Formerly known as P. notatum • Inhibited bacterial growth on media • Not clinically tested and mass produced until 1940s

  26. Problems with Antibiotics • Some are as toxic, if not more so, to the host as to the microbe • Especially true with viral chemotherapeutics • Emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains of microbes • Produce chemicals that inactivate the antibiotic • Change in cell surface receptors that the antibiotic can bind to • Prevent antibiotic from accumulating in the microbe • Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Enterococcus faecalis are two worrisome examples

  27. Check Your Understanding • Differentiate between a synthetic drug and an antibiotic. • Explain the importance of Fleming’s discovery. • What mechanisms have pathogens developed to overcome antibiotics?

  28. Modern Developments in microbiology

  29. Bacteriology • Study of bacteria • Heide Schulz (1997) discovered a bacterium large enough to see with unaided eye • Thiomargarita namibiensis • Thiomargarita namibiensis

  30. Mycology • Study of fungi • Fungal infections now account for 10% of nosicomial(hospital-acquired) infections • Coccidioidesimmitis infections have risen 10-fold in California • Causes coccidioidomycosis (flu-like symptoms with accompanying rash to pneumonia and death) and, rarely, meningitis in immunocompromised individuals

  31. Parasitology • Study of protozoa and parasitic worms • Caduceus may have been designed based on method for removing guinea worms • 16-year old girl recently succumbed to a Naegleriafowleri infection • Received after swimming in the St. John’s River in Brevard County Dranunculusmedinensis

  32. Immunology • Study of immunity and the human immune system • World Health Organization (WHO) effectively eradicated smallpox by the late 1970s • Additional vaccines have be developed for measles, mumps, chickenpox, tetanus, tuberculosis, influenza, polio, and hepatitis B • Interferons (1960s) inhibit the replication of viruses • Currently used in treatment of viral disease and cancer

  33. Virology • Study of viruses • Infectious particles too small to be seen by the unaided eye were first proposed by Pasteur • Coined the term virus from Latin word for poison • Electron microscope (1940s) helped further the study of viruses by elucidating their structure

  34. Recombinant DNA Technology • Paul Berg (1960s) first demonstrated ability to attach human or animal DNA to a bacterial plasmid • Allows bacteria to make the human or animal protein • Recombinant DNA • Microbial Genetics studies how inheritance of DNA occurs in microbes • Molecular Biology studies how genes are encoded in DNA and how DNA directs protein synthesis

  35. Check Your Understanding • Differentiate between bacteriology, mycology, parasitology, immunology, and virology. • Describe some important “recent” developments that highlight the importance of each sub-discipline of microbiology. • Differentiate between microbial genetics from molecular biology.

  36. Microbes and Human Wellfare

  37. Aid in Recycling Elements • First identified by MartinusBeijerinck and Sergei Winogradsky (1880s) • Showed how bacteria recycle elements between soil and atmosphere • Microbial Ecology • Carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, and phosphorus cycle all rely, at least partly, on microbes

  38. Sewage Treatment • Sewage is 99.9% water • Combines physical processes with beneficial microbes to remove the remaining 0.1% of harmful substances • Organic materials are converted to CO2, nitrates, phosphates, sulfates, ammonia, methane, etc…

  39. Bioremediation • Use of microbes to remove pollutants and toxic wastes produced by industry • Exxon Valdez (1989) and Deepwater Horizon (2010) • Commonly used microbes include Pseudomonas sp. and Bacillus sp. • Bacillus enzymes are used in detergents

  40. Pest Control • Bacillus thuringiensis has been widely used to control caterpillars, bollworms, cabbage worms and other pests • Produce proteins toxic to insect digestive tract • Far less damaging to the environment that chemical insecticides such as DDT

  41. Biotechnology • Recombinant DNA technology has been used to incorporate genes into microbes that normal lack those genes • Allows large-scale production of proteins • Human insulin • Gene Therapy seeks to replace defect genes with healthy ones • Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy • Cystic Fibrosis

  42. Check Your Understanding • Identify several beneficial uses for bacteria. • What is biotechnology? How has it been beneficial to us?

  43. Microbes and human disease

  44. Normal Microbiota (Flora) • Organisms living naturally within our bodies • Provide competition to prevent colonization by harmful microbes • Produce useful substances such as vitamin K • Can cause disease when outside normal habitat • Depends on natural resistance of the subject

  45. Biofilms • Collection of microbes on a solid surface • Plaque on teeth is the world’s most common bacterial infection • Legionellosis (Legionella sp.) in water pipes and misting stations • Endocarditis caused by bacteria on catheters

  46. Emerging Infectious Diseases • New diseases that have “arisen” in recent years • Avian Influenza A (H5N1), or bird flu, came to the world’s attention in 2003 • As of 2008, 242 people have fallen ill (~50% mortality) • Methicillin-Resistant S. aureus(MRSA) began popping up in the 1980s leading to increased use of vancomycin • Vancomycin-Resistant S. aureus was reported in US in 2002

  47. Emerging Infectious Diseases • Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE or Mad Cow Disease) is caused by Prions, small protein particles • Result of cattle feed supplemented with protein • Causes madness and death • Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in humans • Hemorrhagic Fevers • Viral diseases causing weakening of capillaries and spontaneous clotting in blood vessels • Ebola and Marburg viruses

  48. Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) • Caused by Human Immunodefieciency Virus (HIV) • Attacks CD4+ (helper) T cells responsible for coordinating the efforts of the immune system • Patients succumb to opportunist infections • Pneumocystis pneumonia and Kaposi’s sarcoma • By 2007, over 1 million Americans had been diagnosed with AIDS and over 50% had died as a result ~1.2 million Americans are suspected to be HIV-positive

  49. Check Your Understanding • Differentiate between normal microbiota and infectious diseases. • What is a biofilm? How are biofilms important? • What is an emerging infectious disease? What factors contribute to the emergence of an infectious disease? Describe some of the more “recent” emerging diseases that have impacted human society.

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