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Microbial physiology is the study of vital life processes representative of all organismsNutritional needsMetabolic pathwaysEnvironmental conditions necessary and inhibitory to life itselfEvery life form strives to live, reproduce to make more like itselfIn 24 hours, a single bacterium with ad
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1. Elements of Microbial Nutrition, Ecology and Growth
Chapter 7
2. Microbial physiology is the study of vital life processes representative of all organisms
Nutritional needs
Metabolic pathways
Environmental conditions necessary and inhibitory to life itself
Every life form strives to live, reproduce to make more like itself
In 24 hours, a single bacterium with adequate water, nutrients, and favorable conditions can produce progeny more numerous than all the humans on Earth!
3. Nutritional Requirements Nutrients are chemical substances used in metabolism and growth
Source of energy
Source of ‘building blocks’ to make cellular materials
Different organisms require different nutrients in different amounts
All organisms share common elements of nutrition
4. Nutrients Nutrients may be required in various amounts, for various uses
Macronutrients – required in large quantities;
important in cell structure and metabolism
proteins, carbohydrates, lipids
Micronutrients or trace elements – required in small amounts;
involved in enzyme function & maintenance of protein structure
manganese, zinc, nickel
Essential Nutrients are materials that cannot be synthesized by an organism but necessary to sustain life must be supplied by the diet.
essential amino acids
essential fatty acids
vitamins
5. Chemical composition of cytoplasm Cellular analysis of E. coli
70% water
96% of cell is composed of 6 elements
Carbon -- Nitrogen
Hydrogen -- Phosphorous
Oxygen -- Sulfur
Organic compounds account for 97% dry weight
Organic nutrients contain carbon and hydrogen atoms and are the products of living things
Hydrocarbons like methane (CH4)
Macromolecules including carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids
Inorganic nutrients–
metals and their salts (Potassium, Calcium, Sodium, Magnesium, Iron)
gases (oxygen, carbon dioxide)
water
6. Prokaryote complexity Analysis of E. coli shows the nutritional and metabolic complexity of prokaryotes when compared to eukaryotes
Remember that eukaryotes are more structurally complex
Cytoplasm contains over 5000 different compounds
Growth requires only a few nutrients in diet
Very diverse synthesis capability
7. Nutrient sources may be both biotic and abiotic Environmental sources of nutrients include:
Air (79% N2, 20% O2)
Water (essential to metabolic processes)
Soil (minerals)
Other organisms serve as nutritional sources.
Saprobes – decompose dead organisms (detritus)
Parasites – utilize tissues and fluids of a living host and cause harm
8. Significance of Carbon Carbon is a component of all biological cells
Both organic and inorganic carbon sources
Molecules of carbon function as:
energy sources
structural components (cell building)
Heterotrophs – organisms that must obtain carbon in an organic form
feed on other organisms or the products of other organisms metabolism
Autotrophs - organisms that use CO2, an inorganic gas, as its carbon source
9. Energy All organisms require energy to drive cellular processes
Extraction of energy from organic nutrients is major role of metabolism
Some organisms acquire energy from other sources (light, inorganic compounds)
Prokaryotes are categorized by their source of carbon and source of energy
all combinations exist
(eukaryotes are NOT as diverse)
11. Nitrogen
Main reservoir is atmospheric nitrogen gas (79% N2)
Nitrogen is a structural component of Proteins, Nucleic Acids
Some microbes use inorganic N compounds, (NO3-, NO2-, or NH3)
Some bacteria can fix N2
N must be converted to NH3 (ammonia) before it can be combined with carbon
Oxygen
O2 makes up 20% of atmosphere
Major component of organic compounds
Essential to metabolism of many organisms
Component of inorganic salts (sulfates, phosphates, nitrates) & water
Metabolic uses involve Redox Rx’s, Final Electron Acceptors.
Hydrogen
Major element in ALL organic compounds & several inorganic ones (water, salts & gases)
H gases are produced & used by microbes
Enterics produce H2 by fermentation
Methanogens combine H2 with CO2
Roles of hydrogen include:
maintaining pH
forming H-bonds between molecules
Phosphorous
Main inorganic source is phosphate (PO4-3), phosphoric acid (H3PO4) found in rocks & oceanic mineral deposits
Key component of nucleic acids (DNA, RNA)
Universal function in energy transfers (ATP)
Sulfur
Widely distributed in environment, rocks, sediments contain sulfate, sulfides, hydrogen sulfide gas and elemental sulfur
Essential component of some vitamins and amino acids
Contributes to stability of proteins by forming disulfide bonds (S – S bridges
12. Nutrients are absorbed by various physical and physiological mechanisms Transport -- movement of substances across the plasma membrane
Passive transport – does not require energy, follows concentration gradient
Diffusion-O2, CO2 are transported freely
Osmosis – passive transport of water
isotonic-zero net
hypotonic-very low solute in environment
adaptations prevent rupture
hypertonic-high solute, brine
antimicrobial
adaptations include absorption of salt to balance intake
Facilitated diffusion – passive, but requires a membrane protein
protein provides channel or changes shape to allow passage
polar molecules like H2O, glucose
13. Active Transport Carrier-mediated active transport requires energy and membrane proteins
gradient independent
transport at greater rates
‘pumps’ molecules across against conc. gradient
14. Environmental Factors Environmental factors affect rate and amount of growth, survival depends on adaptation to changing environments
Factors include:
Temperature
Oxygen availability
pH
Electromagnetic radiation
Barometric and Osmotic pressures
In nature, these factors fluctuate,
in lab, conditions are controlled
15. Temperature Fluctuations in temperature affect metabolism and morphology
Temperature is factor in rates of metabolism and transport, protein configuration
Most microbes are adapted to narrow temperature range, some to wide ranges
Some microbes adapted to extreme temperatures
Most adapted to ‘mid’ range temperatures
16. 3 Cardinal Temperatures Minimum Temperature – lowest temperature that permits a microbe’s growth and metabolism
Maximum Temperature – highest temperature that permits a microbe’s growth and metabolism
Optimum Temperature – promotes the fastest rate of growth and metabolism
17. Temperature Range Adaptations Psychrophiles – optimum temperature below 15oC, capable of growth at 0oC
Mesophiles – optimum temperature 20o-40oC, most human pathogens
Thermophiles – optimum temperature greater than 45oC
18. Availability and Utilization of O2 Many organisms use (require) oxygen in respiratory pathways
Some organisms are poisoned by oxygen
Oxygen is a strong oxidizing agent
Singlet oxygen, superoxide ion, peroxide, and hydroxide radicals are toxic
Cellular damage occurs when molecules are oxidized
Adaptations involve enzymes that detoxify and neutralize the oxidizing agents
Catalase and superoxide dismutase
Some environments are devoid of oxygen, others have an abundant supply
Other environments have intermediate levels
19. Tests for Oxygen Requirements
20. Effects of pH Most microbes adapted to near neutral ranges (6 – 8 pH)
Acids and bases can damage cellular components
Fungi are more tolerant of lower pH than bacteria
Some are adapted to extreme ranges
Acidophiles are adapted to very low range (0 – 2 pH)
Alkalinophiles (ranges up to 10 pH) are found in alkaline soils
21. Pressure Osmotic pressure determines tonicity
Relative solute in the environment
Hypertonic solutions are antimicrobial
plasmolysis, crenation
Halophiles are adapted to high level of salt
Hydrostatic (barometric) pressure
Barophiles are adapted to high barometric pressure
22. Microbial associations Symbiosis – close nutritional relationships between organisms
Essential and beneficial to at least one member
Mutualism – both members benefit
Examples
protozoa digests cellulose for termites
bacteria breakdown cellulose for ruminates
E. coli produces vitamin K in large intestine
23. Commensalism – commensal benefits, other member unharmed
feed on dead cells, residual food in mouth, etc.
Satellitism — a dependent
form of commensalism
one provides growth factors
for other
or break down toxins
Parasitism – parasite benefits; host is harmed
What is a facultative parasite?
24. Other microbial associations Non-symbiotic – organisms are free-living; relationships not required for survival
Synergism – members cooperate and share nutrients, non-essential
Biofilms are cooperatives of many different organisms
Antagonism – one member is inhibited or destroyed by another, competition for resources
25. Microbial Growth Where animal growth refers to an increase in size
from egg to larva, from newborn to adult
a single organism begins as one cell and grows into many
Bacteria ‘grow’ by an increase in population size
one cell divides to become 2 cells, identical to the original, clones of each other
Reproduction is asexual
better referred to as multiplication
Cell division by Binary Fission
26. Rate of Population Growth Different bacterial species divide at different rates (minutes to days)
Generation Time is the time elapsed between formation of a new daughter cell and the time when it divides to form 2 new cells.
The population doubles with each generation.
27. Exponential Growth Logarithms are used to describe the rate of increase in bacterial populations.
The exponent represents the number of generations
Population size is calculated using the equation: Nf = (Ni)2n
28. Nf = (Ni)2n Nf equals the final number of cells
Ni equals the initial number of cells
n equals the number of generations that have occurred in a given elapsed time
30. Normal Growth Curve a graphical representation of changes in population size over time
in liquid medium at constant temperature
Four stages in the Normal Growth Curve
Lag phase
Log phase
Stationary phase
Death phase
31. Normal Growth curve
32. Normal Growth Curve Lag phase – “flat” period of adjustment; little growth
Exponential growth phase – a period of maximum growth will continue as long as cells have adequate nutrients & a favorable environment
Stationary phase – rate of cell growth equals rate of cell death, caused by depleted nutrients & O2, excretion of organic acids & pollutants
Death phase – as limiting factors intensify, cells die exponentially in their own wastes
33. Measurement of bacterial growth Direct, total counts
Dead cells counted along with viable cells
Flow cytometer
Automated, sensitive
Turbidity
Photo detector measures intensity of light passing through cloudy tube