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Microorganisms

Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

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Page 1: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microorganisms

Page 2: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbes

• too small to be seen with the naked eye

• aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Page 3: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbes

• are found almost anywhere

• are more abundant than any other life form

• they are forms on which all others depend.

Page 4: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Recycle elements required for life

• N - Nitrogen

• O - Oxygen

• P - Phosphorus

• S - Sulfur

• C - Carbon

Page 5: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbes produce

• food

• fuel

• air

Page 6: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

4 major categories

• bacteria

• fungi

• protists

• viruses

Page 7: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Pathogens

• disease causing agents• AIDS - Acquired Immune

Deficiency Syndrome• Botulism - food poisoning• Tuberculosis• Polio

Page 8: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Pathogens

• Typhoid FeverSyphilis

Page 9: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Disease

• Microbes cause disease by directly damaging tissues and weakening bodily functions or by producing toxins that do.

Page 10: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Pathogenic microbes

• the proportion of pathogenic microbes on earth is very small

Page 11: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Producers

• produce carbohydrates

• break down starch into sugar

• convert sugars into alcohol

Page 12: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Water Dwelling microbes

• algae and bacteria

• largest producers of carbon containing compounds through photosynthesis

Page 13: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Some microbes

• are unable to take in Carbon Dioxide from the air.

• They get Carbon from bicarbonate in the water

Page 14: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Ion

• an atom that carries a positive (+) or a negative (-) charge

• carries the charge because it has gained or lost one or more electrons

Page 15: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbes use CHO’s (carbohydrates)

• synthesized during photosynthesis (Ps) to make cell structures and as an energy source

• Provide food for larger organisms

• Replenish Oxygen supply

Page 16: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Single Celled Fungi

• Yeasts

• Producers in wine making, bread baking or beer brewing.

• Convert sugar to alcohol in fermentation process

Page 17: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Cheese Making

• bacteria convert lactose (milk sugar) to lactic acid

Page 18: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Contribute to production

• of food and other substances by their enzymes

Page 19: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Enzymes

• organic molecules that speed up biochemical reactions without being used up or becoming part of the end product.

• A catalyst - causes a reaction to take place

Page 20: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Examples

• foods

• medicines

• vitamins

• leather processing

• textile production

Page 21: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Decomposers and Recyclers

• world’s greatest recyclers

• Keep elements like C and N cycling through the environment

• Used to treat sewage, clean up toxic wastes, processing materials

Page 22: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Recyclers

• more than one type of bacterium is needed to convert atmospheric N into a form useable by plants.

• Requires three different chemical reactions.

Page 23: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Production through decomposition

• Methane - decomposition of organic matter

• Methanogens - swampy areas, land fills, digestive tract of ruminants.

Page 24: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Production through decomposition

• Linen fabric is made from flax stems

• Stems are immersed in water

• Bacterium digests pectin that makes the stalks stiff

Page 25: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Linen Fabric Production

• remainder is washed dried and spun into thread and then woven into fabric

Page 26: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Basic features of MO’s (microorganisms)

• 4 major groups

–bacteria, fungi, protists, viruses

• Viruses are not made up of cells and are not considered organisms by many microbiologists.

Page 27: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Bacteria, fungi and protists

• have a cellular structure, a membrane surrounding cytoplasm

Page 28: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Protists

• have an inner compartment nucleus

• DNA in non circular chromosomes

• unicellular or multicellular

• protozoans, algae, others resemble fungi

Page 29: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Fungi

• have cellular structure

• non circular chromosomes

• in fungi with many cells, walls between cells are sometimes not complete

• cytoplasm and nuclei can stream from one cell to another within slender filaments of cells called hyphae

Page 30: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Fungi

• have cellular structure

• non circular chromosomes

• in fungi with many cells, walls between cells are sometimes not complete

Page 31: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Fungi

• cytoplasm and nuclei can stream from one cell to another within slender filaments of cells called hyphae

Page 32: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Yeasts

• unicellular

Page 33: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Molds

• have many cells

Page 34: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Fungi

• visible to the naked eye

–mushrooms

–bracts

–puffballs

–toadstools

Page 35: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Viruses

• not cellular

• particles made up of nucleic acid and protein

• Include short length of DNA or RNA - never both!

Page 36: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Viruses

• On their own they cannot reproduce at all

• Inject their nucleic acid into a host cell

Page 37: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Viruses

• Injected DNA or RNA tricks host cell into using the viruses chemical instructions to make substances needed for the virus to reproduce

Page 38: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Viruses

• Host cell is damaged when newly reproduced virus particles break out of cell (lyse)

Page 39: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

What does it take to keep a microbe alive?

• Lots of variation in environmental and nutritional condition requirements

Page 40: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Nutritional needs

• energy sources

• basic elements to make and replace cell structures

Page 41: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Heterotrophs

• organic compounds to meet energy needs

• Carbon source to make own organic molecules

• get energy from sugars, starches, fats and other organic compounds

Page 42: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Saprobes

• live in soil, get nutrients from dead organic matter

• Clostridium botulinum - botulism, food poisoning

Page 43: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Autotrophs

• build their own organic compounds if they have an available source of inorganic compounds

Page 44: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Phototrophs

• generate their own food using sunlight and inorganics such as carbon dioxide

Page 45: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Chemotrophs

• don’t require sun

• get energy from carbon dioxide, salts, water and others

Page 46: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Nitrosomonas bacteria

• live in soil

• use ammonia (NH4) as energy

Page 47: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

hetero, chemo and phototrophs

• use energy from the environment

• light and heat energy from the sun

• energy stored in chemical bonds or organic or inorganic compounds

Page 48: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Six major elements in cells

• C - Carbon• H - Hydrogen• N - Nitrogen• O - Oxygen• P - Phosphorus• S - Sulfur

Page 49: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Also -

• K- potassium

• Ca - Calcium

• Fe - Iron

• Na - Sodium

Page 50: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Trace elements

• Co - Cobalt• Zn - Zinc• Mo - Molybdenum• Cu - Copper• Mn - Manganese• Si - Silicon

Page 51: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

hetero, chemo, and phototrophs

• some require organic compounds that they cannot make themselves

• must be added to culture in isolation - called growth factors

• Vitamins

Page 52: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbial nutrition in the lab

• hardened gel - called agar

• nutrients are added to the agar

• called growth medium

Page 53: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Pure Cultures

• Grow only one kind of microbe

• Must use aseptic technique to avoid contaminating the culture

Page 54: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Mixed cultures

• may be grown on selective media

• nutritious to some and not to others

• allows researchers to isolate a certain species of microbe

Page 55: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Environmental conditions for microbial growth

• Oxygen - require Oxygen - aerobic

• some microbes live in Oxygen poor environment - anaerobic

Page 56: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Anaerobic processes

• fermentation

• O2 atoms in compounds are rearranged and made available to microbes

Page 57: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Anaerobes

• made up of molecules containing O2 but don’t produce free or gaseous O2

Page 58: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Anaerobes

• free oxygen may be toxic

Page 59: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

pH• favorable range - 6-8

• acidophillic - acid loving used in mining operations.

• Oxidize Cu, Fe and other metal sulfides in the process of pulling out the ore

Page 60: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Temperature

• 37 degrees C (98 degrees F)

• some can survive a wide range of temps ranging from 32 degrees F to 212 degrees F

Page 61: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Moisture

• dissolve minerals, ions, gases and organic compounds

Page 62: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Moisture

• in extremely dry conditions microbes form spores that hold the genetic information and some cytoplasm.

Page 63: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Spores

• when moisture is added the spore breaks down and bacteria resume their normal activity

Page 64: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Salt concentrations

• most microbes can’t survive in high salt or sugar concentrations

Page 65: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbe sex

• or - how microbes reproduce

• process is known as binary fission

Page 66: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Binary fission

• increase in size, extend cell wall material down center and divide in two.

Page 67: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Speed of reproduction

• in 24 hours some species of bacteria can go from one cell to 16,777,216 cells

Page 68: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Single celled protists

• have a more difficult reproductive process

• DNA in nucleus is fist replicated then divided into 2 identical sets (mitosis)

Page 69: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

continued

• cytoplasm of cell then divides to form 2 identical daughter cells.

Page 70: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Fungi• reproduce by a number of

methods

• yeasts - budding - cytoplasm pinches off on one side of cell to form a new cell

• or fuses with another cell

Page 71: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Fungi

• after fusing with a cell, nuclei fuse and divide to form spores when released from the cell

Page 72: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Yeast

• spores become cells on their own

Page 73: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Many celled fungi• hyphae or filaments fuse to form

sporagia

• cases in which nuclei from 2 parent molds excahange pieces of chromosomes

• a type of sexual reproduction

Page 74: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Microbial populations

• can and do change over time

• bacterial populations adapt to changes in the environment

Page 75: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Mutations

• change in DNA

• alteration of base sequence

• occur spontaneously

Page 76: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Genetic recombination

• exchanging or recombining genetic information

• two bacterial cells become connected by a thin strand of cell material called a pilus

Page 77: Microorganisms Microbes too small to be seen with the naked eye aggregations or colonies can be seen without the aid of a microscope

Genetic recombination

• DNA can travel from one microbe to another

• gene enters a microbe that did not initially have it