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The Science of Microbiology Classification of Organisms. Chapter 1MicrobiologyLiberty Senior HighMr. Knowles. Two Main Forms of Cells. All cells share certain characteristicsThey are all enclosed by a membraneThey all use DNA as genetic informationThere are two main forms of cells:EukaryoticProkaryotic.
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1. Come to the Back and Check out a Text
3. Two Main Forms of Cells All cells share certain characteristics
They are all enclosed by a membrane
They all use DNA as genetic information
There are two main forms of cells:
Eukaryotic
Prokaryotic
12. Bacteria Domain Unicellular, Prokaryotic
Cell Wall- made of peptidoglycan
Cell Membrane- unbranched fatty chains
Sensitive to antibiotics (different kind of ribosome)
Circular Chromosome
Cannot tolerate extreme temperatures. (> 100° C)
13. Archaea Domain Unicellular, Prokaryotic
Cell Wall- no peptidoglycan.
Cell Membrane- branched fatty chains.
Not sensitive to antibiotics (different kind of ribosome)
Circular Chromosome
Grow in extreme environ. (Extremophiles- thermophiles and halophiles)
16. Bacteria Kingdom Unicellular, Prokaryote
Peptidoglycan Cell Wall
Nutrition- Autotroph and Heterotrophic
Motility- may have bacterial flagella
Asexual Reprod. And Conjugation
No nervous system
Examples: E. coli, Salmonella, etc.
17. Archaea Kingdom Unicellular, Prokaryote
No peptidoglycan in cell wall, muramic acid
Nutrition- Autotrophic and Heterotrophic
Motility- Different Kind of Bacterial Flagella
Asexual Reprod. And Conjugation
No nervous system
Examples: Methanogens, halophiles, and thermophiles
18. Protista Kingdom Mostly Uni- but some multicellular Eukaryotes
Various Types of Cell Wall, no peptidoglycan
Nutrition- Autotrophic and Heterotrophic
Motility- (9 + 2) Cilia or flagella
Meiosis and Fertilization
Nervous system- primitive conduction of some stimuli (light, heat, etc.)
Ex. : Paramecia, Amoeba, Euglena
19. Fungi Kingdom Mostly multi, some unicellular Eukaryotes
Chitin Cell Wall
Nutrition- Heterotrophic
Nonmotile
Meiosis and Fertilization
No nervous system
Ex.: molds, mushrooms, mildew
20. Animalia Kingdom Multicellular, Eukaryote
No cell wall
Nutrition- Heterotrophic
Motility- (9 + 2) Cilia or flagella
Meiosis and Fertilization
Primitive and complex nervous systems
Ex. : worms, fish, birds, YOU!
21. Plantae Kingdom Multicellular Eukaryote
Cell Wall – Cellulose
Nutrition – Autotroph
Most cells are nonmotile, but some make reproductive cells that have (9 + 2) flagella
Meiosis and Fertilization
No nervous system
Meiosis and Fertilization
Ex. : Trees, shrubs, Venus Fly Trap!
23. Question of the Day! Who was the first microbiologist?
24. Holy Moses! Instructed people to bury feces and other wastes.
Bible also refers to isolating lepers. (Deuteronomy, Ch. 13)
25. Hippocrates Greek physician in 400 B.C. who established medical ethics.
Linked symptoms to certain diseases.
Realized diseases could be transmitted by clothing.
26. Bubonic Plague (Black Death) 542-1600’s, spread into Europe by caravan and sea trading routes.
Carried by fleas on ship rats.
28. Xenopsylla cheopis
30. Show me more of the Black Death! Video: Secrets of the Dead- The Mystery of the Black Death
32. Bubonic and Septicemic Plague
33. The First Case of Biological Weapons? Caffa
34. Flagellism and Anti-Semitism
35. Robert Hooke In 17th Century, built the first microscope.
Used the term “cell” to describe what he saw--after the small rooms of monks.
37. Hooke’s First Microscope
38. Anton von Leewenhoek
39. Leewenhoek From 1632-1723, he designed microscopes.
Described “animalcules”
Never sold his microscopes, microbiology didn’t advance for 100 yrs.
40. Schleiden and Schwann Formulated the Cell Theory- that cells are the fundamental units of all life.
41. Germ Theory Mid-19th Century: Microorganisms can invade other organisms and cause disease.
42. Spontaneous Generation Belief that life arose from nonliving things, a “vital force” found in the air.
Ex: Broth turning cloudy happened spontaneously from nonliving material.
Ex: Rags? rats
Meat ? maggots.
45. Francesco Redi, 1626-1697
47. Francesco Redi Disproved spontaneous generation with the fly and rotting meat experiment.
48. John Needham, 1713-1781
49. Needham and “Vital Atoms” Needham and Georges Comte de Buffon proposed “vital atoms” cause life.
They could be seen in pond water and infusions.
“Vital atoms” escape dying organic material and move into the soil or water to be taken up the the plants.
50. Lazzaro Spallanzani, 1729-1799
52. Needham and others vitalists reply… Argue the experiment only proves that spontaneous generation requires air.
Need the “vital force.”
Even Spallanzani agrees in some cases- regeneration and other cases of microbes.
53. Salamander Limb Regeneration
54. What Spallanzani Might Have Seen!
55. Louis Pasteur
56. Pasteur and Tyndall In the mid-1800’s, disproved spontaneous generation using experiments with “swan-necked” flasks--allowed the air with the “vital force” to enter.
57. Pasteur’s Swan-necked Flask Experiment
59. Pasteur and the Swan-Necked Flask
60. Louis Pasteur From 1822-1895
Developed pasteurization technique of heating wine to kill other microorganisms without killing yeast.
Developed first rabies vaccine- from rabbit spinal cord
62. Robert Koch
63. Robert Koch Developed techniques for isolating bacteria and growing in vitro (out of the body)
Developed different medias for growing cultures.
64. Koch’s Postulates
65. Koch’s Postulates 1.) The specific pathogen (disease-causing) organism must be found in all cases of the disease.
2.) The pathogen must be isolated.
66. Koch’s Postulates 3.) Must inoculate a healthy animal with the pathogen and cause the disease.
4.) Must recover the same pathogen from the inoculated animal.
67. Still use Koch’s Postulates Today! The Story of Lyme Disease-Borrelia burgdorferi
Video: Parasites-The Body Snatchers, #96
68. Ignaz Semmelweis-The Father of Sanitary Practices
69. Ignaz Semmelweis 1800’s, Autopsy to child birth; puerperal (childbed) fever.
Encouraged sanitary practices by physicians.
Ridiculed, had a nervous breakdown, asylum and died of an infection.
70. Joseph Lister Developed aseptic technique for surgeons
Used carbolic acid to sterilize instruments.
71. The First Vaccines Came Out of an Epidemic! The Story of Smallpox
Video: Plagues: The Smallpox Curse, #36
72. Smallpox Skin Lesions
73. How Do We Protect Ourselves? Immunology Ancient Chinese- inhaled ground smallpox scabs--develop a mild case of smallpox but survive later exposure.
74. Smallpox and Edward Jenner In late 1100’s, smallpox had been carried back to Europe with the Crusaders from the Near East.
Late 1700’s, Jenner realized milkmaids with cowpox did not get smallpox.
First “tested” vaccine (vacca means cow) against smallpox.
75. Sarah Nelmes- Cow Pox Lesion and James Phipps
76. Edward Jenner- Ethics are Relative?
77. Eli Metchnikoff In the 1880’s, discovered that the human body has cells which can ingest microbes.
Called them phagocytes or “cell-eating.”
78. Virology and Beijerinck Called microbes that could pass through filters “viruses.”
Established that they needed host cells for their own replication.
79. Viruses and Cancer Rous discovered that certain viruses can cause cancer.
Won the Nobel Prize in 1966. Human Papilloma
Virus- warts and
cervical cancer.
80. Viruses and Cancer Human Hepatitis B virus
Can cause liver cancer.