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Microbial growth

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There are no organisms that can grow at all temperatures ... Facultative psychrophiles ... Facultative anaerobes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microbial growth


1
Microbial growth
  • Dependent on both physical and chemical factors

2
Environmental factors which exert the greatest
influence on the survival of microorganisms
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • The ability to survive in environmental
    conditions and reproduce is called________________
    _________

3
Temperature
  • There are no organisms that can grow at all
    temperatures
  • Survival in very hot environments is difficult
    due to the fact that even a slight increase in
    temp speeds up enzyme reactions and may cause
    denaturation of the protein enzymes
    (denaturation means ____________________)

4
Temperature
  • Each species has a
  • Minimal
  • Maximal
  • Optimal
  • Most bacteria will grow in the range of 30-40
    degrees
  • Temperature has an effect on growth rate,
    metabolism, reproduction rate, metabolism and
    morphology

5
Psychrophiles
  • Group I- can grow at 0oC with an optimum of 15o.
  • Grow in oceans, glaciers and other constantly
    cold environments
  • Can exist in cold environments because they have
    high concentrations of _________ fatty acids in
    the phospholipids of their cell membranes which
    helps maintain fluidity
  • Seldom cause problems in food preparation
  • No bacterial growth occurs in frozen solid
    conditions but remain dormant or in a state of
    suspended animation

6
Psychrophiles
  • Group II optimal temperature range is 20-30o
    and cannot grow above 40oC.
  • Spoilage microbes in this group
  • Can be termed
  • Psychotrophs
  • Moderate psychrophiles
  • Facultative psychrophiles
  • Some mesophilic bacteria that continue to grow in
    cold environments (refrigerator) are termed
    _______________ mesophiles

7
Refrigeration
  • Most common method of preserving food supplies
  • Will prevent the growth of all but a few
    pathogenic bacteria
  • Freezing- organisms become dormant
  • Spoilage in refrigerator due to psychotrophs are
    mold mycelium, slime on food surfaces, off
    colors, off tastes

8
Mesophiles
  • Most common type of bacteria
  • Optimum temperature range 25- 40 oC
  • Saprophytes also known as __________ grow best at
    _____ oC
  • Human pathogens grow best at _____ oC. This group
    includes most of the spoilage and disease-causing
    organisms

9
Thermophiles
  • Optimum growth temperature is between 50-60 oC,
    the temperature of hot tap water
  • Some members of Archaea grow optimally at tempgt
    80 oC and are considered _________________________
    __and grow near hydrothermal vents in the ocean,
    sulfur is important in their metabolic activity
    (record is 110oC near vent, kept from boiling due
    to ocean water pressure)

10
Thermophiles
  • Grow on soil surfaces that get to 50-70oC in
    deserts, power plants, compost heaps, hot springs
  • To survive denaturation of proteins, bacteria
    rapidly regenerate enzymes lost to high
    temperature and use more heat- stable amino
    acids. Cell membranes have high concentrations
    of _________ fatty acids
  • Many cannot grow at temperatures lt 45 oC
  • Thermophilic bacteria are not considered a public
    health problem

11
pH
  • In microbial growth media, ___________ are often
    used to maintain the relative constancy of the
    media (usually phosphate because it also
    provides _____, an essential nutrient.
  • _____________ media employs pH indicators to
    distinguish between bacterial species and the
    enzymes they contain

12
pH
  • Most bacteria grow best in a narrow range near
    neutrality (Enterics are neutrophiles)
  • Foods such as sauerkraut, pickles and cheeses are
    preserved from spoilage by acids produced in
    bacterial _______________
  • Acidophiles are tolerant of acid pH
  • Thiobacillus a true acidophile (pH5)
  • Bacteria that produce acids and are obligate
    acidophiles- love pH levels lt 6.5
  • Fungi appear to be more tolerant of acid
    conditions (ph 5-6) than bacteria
  • Alkalophiles like pH levels above 7.5
  • Ex Bacillus pH gt 9

13
Water
  • All organisms need water to survive
  • Osmosis- movement of water from an area of higher
    concentration to lower (or lower solute
    concentration to higher)
  • High osmotic pressure will remove necessary water
    from a cell
  • Plasmolysis- cells placed in a hypertonic
    solution will cause the __________________ to
    shrink away from the cell wall and can result in
    cell death
  • Therefore, addition of salts are used to preserve
    foods such as ___________________

14
Water
  • Halophiles- like ______________
  • Staphylococcus __________can be differentiated by
    its ability to transform energy on MSA. It is a
    ___________ halophile
  • Haloanaerobium likes 30 NaCl
  • Osmophiles- high ___________ environment Ex
    bacillus
  • Xerophile- can live in ________ environments Ex
    mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Use intracellular solutes to absorb any available
    water from the environment

15
Oxygen needs
  • Our environment contains approximately 21 oxygen
    and 78 nitrogen. Both exist as diatomic
    molecules (_____________)
  • Thioglycolate media is used to test the oxygen
    requirements for each species
  • Contains the pink dye, resazurin to detect O2 gas
  • Lower levels of media have _____ oxygen than
    higher levels

16
Strict aerobes
  • These organisms produce H2O2 intracellularly as a
    result of cell respiration
  • Have enzymes to remove this toxic peroxide from
    their cells
  • Catalase
  • Commonly used to identify bacteria
  • Human cells also have catalase (when peroxide is
    added to a wound.)
  • H2O2 ? H2O O2 (bubbles) this is the catalase
    test
  • Easy way to distinguish Staphylococcus spp from
    Streptococcus spp
  • Peroxidase
  • does not produce oxygen bubbles
  • H2O2 2 H ? 2 H2O

17
Facultative anaerobes
  • Grow better in oxygen environments but can
    survive in the absence of oxygen gas
  • Use fermentation or anaerobic respiration when
    oxygen is not available (ability to produce
    energy decreases)
  • Examples E coli found in the human intestinal
    tract and many yeasts

18
Microaerophiles
  • Aerobic, do require oxygen
  • Grow only in oxygen concentrations lower than
    air.
  • In solid nutrient media, grow only at a depth
    where small amounts of oxygen has diffused into
    the media
  • Optimum O2 concentration is 1-15

19
Strict anaerobes
  • Killed in the presence of O2 gas
  • Best examples are members of the genus,
    Clostidium
  • C.__________
  • C. __________
  • C. __________
  • In the presence of oxygen, obligate anaerobes
    appear to form some superoxide free radicals
    which are so toxic that those organisms
    attempting to grow in oxygen atmosphere must
    produce SOD to neutralize them (SOD is
    _______________)

20
Microbial nutrition and energy sources
  • How do microbes obtain their nutrients
    (substances necessary for metabolism)?
  • Nutrients are needed in either macro or micro
    quantities
  • Macronutrients C, H, O, P, S (are 96 of cell) K,
    Na, Ca, Mg, Cl, Fe are other macronutrients

21
Carbon
  • One of the most important requirements for growth
  • Structural backbone of all living matter
  • Needed for all organic compounds that make up the
    cell
  • Chemoheterotrophs get most of their carbon from
    the source of their energy, the organic
    materials, __________, ___________ and lipids
    from other organisms

22
Carbon
  • Autotrophs- get their carbon from carbon dioxide
  • Chemoautotrophs- get their energy form inorganic
    compounds such as sulfur, nitrogen or hydrogen
    gas or minerals (lithotrophs)
  • Photoautotrophs get their energy from light

23
Hydrogen
  • Maintains pH levels
  • Forms hydrogen bonds in macromolecules
  • Needed for chemiosmosis- to form a gradient
    across membranes to produce ATP

24
Nitrogen
  • Plants and animals are unable to use the 78
    nitrogen gas available in the air
  • Some bacteria are nitrogen fixing bacteria which
    can convert N2 to a useable form for plants (NO3)
    to use as fertilizer
  • Macromolecules DNA, RNA, ATP, proteins and
    peptidoglycan all contain nitrogen
  • Makes up 14 of the dry weight of a bacterial cell

25
Oxygen
  • Needed for cell respiration (to make ATP, it is
    the final hydrogen receptor)
  • Part of the water molecule which is the solvent
    found in cells

26
Phosphorus
  • Required for ATP, DNA, RNA and phospholipids
  • One of the main ingredients in commercial
    fertilizers along with nitrogen and potassium

27
Sulfur
  • Used to synthesize sulfur-containing amino acids
    and vitamins such as thiamine and biotin
  • Sulfur contributes to the tertiary configuration
    of protein structure

28
Other macromolecules
  • K, Na, Ca, Mg, Cl, Fe
  • Potassium, magnesium and calcium are element that
    microorganisms also require
  • Are often cofactors for enzyme reactions
  • May help catalyze a reaction by forming a bridge
    between an enzyme and a substrate

29
Micronutrients
  • Trace elements- microbes require some small
    amounts of certain mineral elements such as Fe,
    Cu, Mb, Zn, Co, Ni, W, Se
  • Usually cofactors

30
Culture media
  • Nutrient material prepared for the growth of
    microorganisms in the lab
  • Initially must be sterile
  • Inoculate the culture media with the
    microorganism, referred to as a culture when
    grows and multiplies
  • Synthetic media- chemically defined in the
    identity and amount of each component of the
    media
  • Complex- chemically undefined and non-synthetic,
    made up of nutrients such as extracts from yeast,
    meat or plants or digests of proteins from these
    or other sources

31
Media
  • Can be solid or broth
  • Agar (red algae) is used because of its chemical
    properties and is not a source of nutrient (that
    is why gelatin is not used)for microorganism
    (inert gel)
  • Liquifies at 100o, remains a liquid until 40oC
    and once solidified does not liquify until the
    temperature nears 100oC (good for culturing
    thermophilic bacteria)
  • Nutrient broth- complex media in liquid form
    (- the agar)

32
Basic types of media
  • General purpose- non selective used to grow as
    many types of bacteria as possible
  • Nutrient agar- N.A.
  • Trypticase soy agar T.S.A.
  • Enriched media- general purpose with added growth
    factors
  • Compounds such as amino acids or vitamins which a
    particular species of bacteria are unable to
    produce metabolically
  • Those which require growth factors are known as
    fastidious
  • Chocolate agar
  • Blood agar (uses sheep blood)

33
Enriched media
  • Those which require growth factors are known as
    fastidious
  • Chocolate agar
  • Defibrinated sheep blood added to sterile molten
    agar heated at 80oC until chocolate color
    develops
  • Blood agar (uses sheep blood)- cool agar base to
    45-50oC, aseptically add defibrinated blood

34
Selective media
  • Media which contains agents that suppress the
    growth of some microbes while encouraging others
    to grow
  • Mannitol salt agar- (M.S.A.)- contains a high
    salt concentration of 7.5 which is inhibitory to
    most bacteria other than Staphylococci
  • Medium also has a differential function it
    contains the sugar, mannitol which some
    Staphylococci are capable of fermenting and a pH
    indicator, phenol red which changes color when
    acid is produced

35
Selective media
  • Eosin methylene blue agar- (Levine) lactose and
    the dyes, eosin and methylene blue permit
    differentiation between enteric lactose
    fermenters and non-fermenters as well as the
    identification of the colon bacillus, E. coli
  • E. coli are blue-black with a metallic green
    sheen caused by the large quantity of acid that
    is produced and that precipitates the dyes onto
    the growths surface

36
Selective media
  • MacConkey agar- (Mac) the inhibitory action of
    crystal violet on the growth of gram positive
    bacteria allows the isolation of gram negative
    bacteria
  • Incorporation of lactose, bile salts and the pH
    indicator, neutral red, allows differentiation of
    enteric bacteria on the basis their ability to
    ferment lactose

37
Differential media
  • Make it easier to distinguish colonies of a
    desired organism from other colonies growing on
    the same plate
  • Can support the growth of several types of
    bacteria
  • Pure cultures have identifiable reactions with
    differential media
  • These media include M.S.A., E.M.B., B.A.,Mac,
    T.S. I. (triple sugar iron)

38
Differential media
  • Blood agar- used to identify species that destroy
    RBCs
  • Streptococcus pyogenes shows beta hemolysis or a
    clear ring around their colonies
  • M.S.A.- can be used to distinguish Staphylococcus
    aureus which is a mannitol fermenting organism
    from other organisms which are unable to (pH
    indicator phenol red from red to yellow)

39
Differential media
  • MacConkey- lactose containing media which gram
    neg bacteria can metabolize (pink or red color)
    can be differentiated from the non-fermenters
    (colorless)

40
Reducing media
  • Encourages growth of obligate anaerobes
  • Media includes sodium thiogylcolate that
    chemically combines with dissolved oxygen to
    deplete the oxygen levels in the media
  • media is kept in tightly capped tubes which are
    heated prior inoculation to drive off any
    absorbed oxygen

41
Microbial growth
  • Refers to the number of cells, not the growth of
    individual cells
  • Based on the availability of nutrients but may be
    influenced by other factors
  • Due to the asexual reproductive method, binary
    fission
  • Growth in a closed system typically demonstrates
    the following growth curve

42
Bacterial growth curve- closed system
  • Lag phase
  • Log phase (exponential growth)
  • Stationary phase
  • Death phase

43
Generation time
  • The time required for a cell to divide and its
    population to double is called the generation
    time
  • If doubling occurred every twenty minutes, (which
    it does with E. coli) in less than seven hours,
    there would be over one million cells from just
    one cell initially

44
Generation time problem
  • If you had one bacterium that divided every 30
    minutes, after four hours, how many bacteria
    would be present?
  • Nf final number of bacteria
  • Ni initial number of bacteria
  • N the number of generations
  • Generation rate (expressed as generations per
    hour 1/ generation time (in hours)

45
Maintaining a bacterial culture
  • What are ways to maintain the viability of a
    bacterial culture?
  • Temperature
  • Subculturing
  • Continuous culturing using a CHEMOSTAT)-specialize
    d apparatus keeps the population in exponential
    growth phase by draining off spent media and
    adding fresh media (used in industrial
    fermentation)

46
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