1 / 25

Chapter 6

Chapter 6. Microbial Growth. Lab 2 Goals and Objectives : Lecture: Chapter 6 (Microbial Growth) Learn aseptic technique and pure culture isolation. Exercise 9: Aseptic Technique Exercise 10: Pure Culture Technique Turn in cultures from home for incubation

Download Presentation

Chapter 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6 Microbial Growth

  2. Lab 2 Goals and Objectives: Lecture: Chapter 6 (Microbial Growth) Learn aseptic technique and pure culture isolation • Exercise 9: Aseptic Technique • Exercise 10: Pure Culture Technique • Turn in cultures from home for incubation • Finish microscope worksheet if necessary

  3. Microbiologyis the study of life and organisms that are too small to be seen with the naked eye. • Microbial growth - an increase in the number of cells in a population , not increase in size.

  4. Growing microorganisms 1. Culture Medium: Nutrients prepared for microbial growth • Sterile: No living microbes 2. Inoculation: Introduction of microbes into medium Inoculum: The material used in an inoculation 3. Culture: Microbes growing in/on culture medium

  5. Culture Media • Nutrientbroth- liquid form • Nutrientagar- solid form • Agar - complex polysaccharide • Used as solidifying agent for culture media in Petri plates, slants, and deeps • Generally not metabolized by microbes • Liquefies at 100°C • Solidifies ~40°C

  6. Reproduction of Prokaryotes - Binary fission

  7. Bacterial growth in culture • Bacteria multiply by binary fission • The population grows in geometric progression • 12 • 2 4 • 3 8 • 4 16 • 5 32 • 6 64 • 7 128 • 8 256 • 9 518 • 10 1036 • 11 2064 • 12 4128 • 13 8256 • ……… -Lag phase: initial period of little to no cell division as bacteria acclimate to new media -Log phase: period of exponential growth with a constant generation time -Stationary phase: cell growth is equal to cell death -Death phase: cell death exceeds cell growth

  8. Number of generation

  9. Generation time • Generation time - the time required for a cell to divide, to undergo one round of binary fission • If 100 cells growing for 5 hours produced 1,720,320 cells: • E. coli has a generation time of 20 min • Common bacterial generation times range 1-3 hrs

  10. Quantifying Microbial Growth • Direct Measurements • Plate Counts • Filtration • Most Probable Number (MPN) • Direct Microscopic Count • Indirect Estimations • Turbidity • Metabolic Activity • Dry Weight

  11. Microbial Growth • Physical • Temperature • pH • Osmotic pressure • Chemical • Oxygen • Carbon • Nitrogen • Sulfur • Phosphorus • Trace elements • Organic factors • The requirements for microbial growth

  12. Physical Requirements -Temperature • Minimum growth temperature • the lowest temperature at which the species will grow • Optimum growth temperature • species grow best • Maximum growth temperature • the highest temperature at which growth is possible.

  13. Physical Requirements - pH • Most bacteria grow between pH 6.5 and 7.5 • Molds and yeasts grow between pH 5 and 6 • Acidophiles grow in acidic environments

  14. Physical Requirements - Osmotic Pressure • Osmotic pressure is the hydrostatic pressure produced by a difference in concentration between solutions on the two sides of a surface such as a semipermeable membrane. • Anisotonic environment for a cell is created when the solution outside of the cell is isotonic (having equal accent )with the cytoplasm of the cell. • Hypotonic environment - the solution outside of the cell is hypotonic in comparison to the cytoplasm of the cell. • cause cell lyses for some cells and nothing to bacteria, because of cell wall . • Hypertonic environments - hypertonic solution has more dissolved solute than the cytoplasm of the cell (increase salt or sugar) • cause plasmolysis ( shrink the cells ) • Facultative halophiles tolerate high osmotic pressure • Extreme or obligate halophiles require high osmotic pressure

  15. Chemical Requirements • Carbon • Structural organic molecules, energy source • Autotrophs use CO2 • Chemoheterotrophs use organic carbon sources • Nitrogen • In amino acids, proteins • Most bacteria decompose proteins • Some bacteria use NH4+ or NO3 • A few bacteria use N2 in nitrogen fixation • Sulfur • In amino acids, thiamine, biotin • Most bacteria decompose proteins • Some bacteria use SO42 or H2S • Phosphorus • In DNA, RNA, ATP, and membranes • PO43is a source of phosphorus • Inorganic elements required in small amounts- potassium, magnesium and calcium • Trace Elements - iron, copper, molybdenum and zinc - Usually as enzyme cofactors

  16. Chemical Requirements • Organic Growth Factors • Essential organic compounds an organism is unable to synthesize • Organic compounds obtained from the environment • Vitamins, amino acids, purines, pyrimidines

  17. Chemical Requirements - Oxygen (O2)

  18. Toxic Forms of Oxygen • Singlet oxygen: O2 boosted to a higher-energy state • Superoxide free radicals: O2 • Peroxide anion: O22 • Hydroxyl radical (OH)

  19. Biofilms • Microbial communities • Form slime or hydrogels • Bacteria attracted by chemicals via quorum sensing Clumps of bacteria adhering to surface Migrating clump of bacteria Surface Water currents

  20. Culture Media • Complex Media: Extracts and digests of yeasts, meat, or plants • Chemically Defined Media: Exact chemical composition is known • Differential Media: • Make it easy to distinguish colonies of different microbes. • Enrichment Media Encourages growth of desired microbe • Reducing media for anaerobic culture, Contain chemicals (thioglycollate or oxyrase) that combine O2 Heated to drive off O2

  21. Figure 6.6 A jar for cultivating anaerobic bacteria on Petri plates. Clamp with clamp screw Lid with O-ring gasket Envelope containing sodium bicarbonate and sodium borohydride Palladium catalyst pellets Anaerobic indicator (methylene blue) Petri plates

  22. Obtaining Pure Cultures • A pure culture contains only one species or strain • A colony is a population of cells arising from a single cell or spore or from a group of attached cells • A colony is often called a colony-forming unit (CFU) • The streak plate method is used to isolate pure cultures

  23. Exercise 9: Aseptic Technique • Each person make 3inoculations: • Broth to broth - Escherichia coli- 37°C • Slant to slant - E. coli- 30°C 3. Plate to slant - Serratia marcescens- 30°C (changed) • Exercise 10: Pure Culture Technique • Each person make 2 streak plates: Quadrant Streak Method B, page 82. • Incubate at 25°C • Turn in cultures from home for incubation • Finish microscope worksheet if necessary

  24. Streak Plate Flame the loop, cool it Flame the loop, cool it Flame the loop, cool it Figure 6.10a, b

  25. Each pair will need: 1 broth culture Escherichia coli, 1 slant culture Escherichia coli 1 plate culture Serratia marcescens Each person will need: 1 Nutrient Broth/BHI tubes, 2 Nutrient Agar/BHIA slants • Exercise 9: Aseptic Technique • Each person make 3inoculations: • Broth to broth - E. coli - 37°C • Slant to slant - E. coli - 37°C 3. Plate to slant - S. marcescens - 30°C (changed) • Exercise 10: Pure Culture Technique • Each person make 2 streak plates • Quadrant Streak Method B, page 85. • Incubate plates at 25°C Each pair will need: 1 mixed culture (which contains: Escherichia coli, Serratia marcescensand Micrococcus luteus) Each person will need: 2 Nutrient Agar/BHIA plates Get help now, today, if you are having any difficulty with oil immersion lens use or specimen measurements using the ocular micrometer!!!

More Related