250 likes | 522 Views
Physical requirements for growth. Prefixes and suffixes: Bacteria are highly diverse in the types of conditions they can grow in. Optimal or required conditions implied by “-phile” meaning “love” Some bacteria prefer other conditions, but can tolerate extremes Suffix “-tolerant”
E N D
Physical requirements for growth • Prefixes and suffixes: • Bacteria are highly diverse in the types of conditions they can grow in. • Optimal or required conditions implied by “-phile” meaning “love” • Some bacteria prefer other conditions, but can tolerate extremes • Suffix “-tolerant” • Note the difference! http://www.kodak.com/global/images/en/health/filmImaging/thermometer.gif
When growing microbes.. • The physical/chemical conditions that are most important • Presence or absence of oxygen • Temperature range • pH range • Water activity (how “wet”) • Note that by changing the conditions to make them unfavorable we can prevent bacterial growth.
Oxygen: friend or foe? • Early atmosphere of Earth had none • First created by cyanobacteria using photosynthesis • Iron everywhere rusted, then collected in atmosphere • Strong oxidizing agent • Reacts with certain organic molecules, produces free radicals and strong oxidizers : • Singlet oxygen, H2O2(peroxide), O3- (superoxide), and hydroxyl (OH-) radical. • Free radicals are highly reactive chemicals that damage proteins, nucleic acids, and other cell molecules.
Protections of bacteria against oxygen • Bacteria possess protective enzymes, catalase and superoxide dismutase. • Catalase breaks down hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen gas. • Superoxide dismutase breaks superoxide down into peroxide and oxygen gas. • Anaerobes missing one or both; slow or no growth in the presence of oxygen. Fe3+ -SOD + O2- → Fe2+ -SOD + O2 Fe2+ -SOD + O2- + 2H+ → Fe 3+ -SOD + H2O2
Relation to Oxygen • Aerobes: use oxygen in metabolism; obligate. • Microaerophiles: require oxygen (also obligate), but in small amounts. • Anaerobes: grow without oxygen; SEE NEXT A: aerobeB: microaerophile • Capnophiles: require larger amounts of carbon dioxide than are found normally in air.
Anaerobes grow without O2 • Classifications vary, but our definitions: • Obligate (strict) anaerobes: killed or inhibited by oxygen. • Aerotolerant anaerobes: do not use oxygen, but not killed by it. • Facultative anaerobes: can grow with or without oxygen C: could be facultative or aerotolerant.D: strict anaerobe
Effect of temperature • Low temperature • Enzymatic reactions too slow; enzymes too stiff • Lipid membranes no longer fluid • High temperature • Enzymes denature, lose shape and stop functioning • Lipid membranes get too fluid, leak • DNA denatures • As temperature increases, reactions and growth rate speed up; at max, critical enzymes denature.
Bacteria and temperature • Bacteria have temperature ranges (grow between 2 temperature extremes), and an optimal growth temperature. Both are used to classify bacteria. • As temperature increases, so do metabolic rates. • At high end of range, critical enzymes begin to denature, work slower. Growth rate drops off rapidly with small increase in temperature.
Terms related to temperature • Special cases: • Psychrotrophs: bacteria that grow at “normal” (mesophilic) temperatures (e.g. room temperature” but can also grow in the refrigerator; responsible for food spoilage. • Thermoduric: more to do with survival than growth; bacteria that can withstand brief heat treatments.
pH Effects • pH = -log[H+] • Lowest = 0 (very acid); highest = 14 (very basic) Neutral is pH 7. • Acidophiles/acidotolerant grow at low pH • Alkalophiles/alkalotolerant grow at high pH • Most bacteria prefer a neutral pH • Many grow well from pH 6 to 8 • Some bacteria create their preferred conditions • Lactobacillus creates low pH environment in vagina
Low water activity:halophiles, osmophiles, and xerotolerant • Water is critical for life; remove some, and things can’t grow. (food preservation: jerky, etc.) • Halophiles/halotolerant: relationship to high salt. • Marine bacteria; archaea and really high salt. • Osmophiles: can stand hypertonic environments whether salt, sugar, or other dissolved solutes • Fungi very good at this; grandma’s wax over jelly. • Xerotolerant: dry. Subject to desiccation. Fungi best • Bread, dry rot of wood • Survival of bacterial endospores.
Bacterial growth defined • Since individual cells double in size, then divide into two, the meaningful increase is in the population size. • Binary fission: cell divides into two cells. No nucleus, so no mitosis. • Cells do not always fully detach; produce pairs, clusters, chains, tetrads, sarcina, etc. • “GROWTH” = increase in number of bacteria
Mathematics of bacterial growth • Because bacteria double in number at regular intervals, they grow exponentially: • N = N0 x 2n where N is the number of cells after n number of doublings and N0 is the starting number of cells. • Thus, a graph of the Log of the number of bacteria vs. time is a straight line.
The Bacterial Growth Curve • Bacteria provided with an abundant supply of nutrients will increase in number exponentially, but eventually run out of nutrients or poison themselves with waste products. • Lag phase • Exponential or • Log phase • Stationary phase • Decline or Death • phase. 4 3 2 1
Growth curve (continued) • Lag phase: growth lags; cells are acclimating to the medium, creating ribosomes prior to rapid growth. • Log phase: cells doubling at regular intervals; linear graph when x-axis is logarithmic. • Stationary phase: no net increase in cell numbers, some • divide, some die. Cells preparing for survival. • Decline phase: highly variable, depends on type of bacteria and conditions. Death may be slow and exponential.
More about Growth • The Growth curve is true under ideal conditions; in reality, bacteria are subject to starvation, competition, and rapidly changing conditions. • Generation time: the length of time it takes for the population to double. • Growth of bacteria is nonsynchronous, not every bacterium is dividing at the same time. • Instead of stepwise curve, smooth curve
Exponential growth • “Balanced growth” • Numbers of bacteria are doubling at regular intervals. • All components of bacteria are increasing in amount at the same rate • 2x as many bacteria = 2x as much protein, 2x as much peptidgolycan, 2x as much LPS, etc. • During exponential growth, bacteria are not limited for any nutrients, i.e. they are not short of anything.
Measurement of cell numbers • Direct methods: cells actually counted. • Petroff-Hausser counting chamber (right), 3D grid. Count the cells, multiply by a conversion factor. • Dry a drop of cells of known volume, stain, then count.
Coulter Counter Coulter-counter: single-file cells detected by change in electric current.
Counting cells with plates • Viable plate count • Relies on bacteria being alive, multiplying and forming colonies. • Spread plate: sample is spread on surface of agar. • Pour plate: sample is mixed with melted agar; colonies form on surface and within agar. • Colonies counted with a colony counter. biology.clc.uc.edu/.../Meat_Milk/ Pour_Plate.htm
Filtration and plate counting • Membrane filters are very thin with a defined pore size, e.g. 0.45 µm. • Bacteria from a dilute sample are collected on a filter; filter placed on agar plate, colonies counted. • Used when concentration of bacteria is low. http://dl.clackamas.cc.or.us/wqt111/coliform-8.jpg http://www.who.int/docstore/water_sanitation_health/labmanual/p25bs.jpg
Spectrophotometry • Bacteria scatter light, making a turbid (cloudy) suspension. • Turbidity is usually read on the Absorbance scale • Not really absorbance, but Optical Density (OD) • More bacteria, greater the turbidity (measured as OD) Based on www.umr.edu/~gbert/ color/spec/Aspec.html
More about Spectrophotometry • Does NOT provide an actual number unless a calibration curve (# of bacteria vs. O.D.) is created. • Indirect counting method • Quick and convenient, shows relative change in the number of bacteria, useful for determining growth (increase in numbers). • Does NOT distinguish between live and dead cells. To create a calibration curve, best to plot OD vs. number of cells determined with microscope (not plate count).
Biomass: • Measure the total mass of cells or amount of any component such as protein, PS, DNA, KDO. • Especially when cells are doubling, the amounts of all the components of a cell are increasing at the same rate, so any could be measured. • Not so in stationary phase. In this example, total biomass increases exponentially over time. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/pagerender.fcgi?artid=242188&pageindex=10#page