Microbiology – Lect. 21-25 (ecology/biotech) – Flashcards

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Microbes exist as
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communities in nature, not pure cultures
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Quorum Sensing
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always on

Production of: light, virulence factors, and biofilm; energy costly!

  1. molecule is always inside and is diffused out.
  2. once population density is high enough, QSM diffuses back inside and is represented

ex. Vibrio fischeri

 

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Nutrients
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environments are not constant

microbes prefer to form on surfaces

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Nutritional Stress

Interaction with other organisms

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Competition

predation/parasitism:  Bdellovibri

Synergism/mutualism: dental biofilms


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Nutritional Stress

starvation survival

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Rapid growth vs. survival

 Lab generation time vs. nature gen. time

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Nutritional Stress

high affinity uptake

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Siderophores (Fe)

Active transport via specific binding proteins

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Nutritional Stress

habitat selection

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chemotaxis

motility: actin "rockets"

organisms selected for survival (evolution)

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Nutritional Stress

Alternative Metabolism

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Allows growth on unfavorable nutrients
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In Situ Techniques

Direct Observation

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In Situ = in the situation

observe with microscope & staining

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In Situ Techniques

Metabolic Function

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Dissapearance of food

Appearance of byproducts (acid/NO3)

radioactive substrates: tagged sugars

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In Situ Techniques

FISH

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Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization

specific or general probes used

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Lab Techniques

Culture and Growth

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grow organisms from the environments
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Lab Techniques

Enrichment Culture Technique

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enriched media for specific growth
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Lab Techniques

Model Environment

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Mimic environmental condition in Lab

Wingradsky Column (core sample) for sedimentorgansims

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Aspects of microbial Ecology
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physical, chemical, biological properties

ecology= interactions within environment

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Microbial Community Examples
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Root-surface organisms: Rhizospheres (symbiotic)

Plant Diseases: Agrobacterium tumefaciens; induces opine production

Hydrothermal vent: worms with bacteria

Aquifer and subsurface

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Nutrient Cycling

 

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Microbes can cycle:

Carbon, Nitrogen, Phosphorous, Iron, Sulfur

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Nitrogen Cycle
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Nitrogen required for:

protein synthesis

nucleic acid synthesis

other cell components

 

N2 = 78% atmosphere: microbes use NO3- / NH/ R-NH2

 

 

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Nitrogen Fixation
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N2  NH3

Enzyme: Nitrogenase 

highly regulated; energy extensive (16 ATP/N2)

O2 sensitive (no O2 present)

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Denitrification
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NO3 → N2 or NH3

most common

Nitrate used as final electron acceptor


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Carbon Cycle

 COfixation

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 COorganic Carbon

 COmajor reservior of carbon

 COfixation done by primary producers; Autotrophs (photosynthetic and lithotrophs)

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Carbon Cycle

 

Carbon Mineralization

(Decomposition)

 

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Organic Carbon → CO2

Sugar/protein/lipid decomposition

carbon trapped in complex molecules; cellulose, lignan

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 Sulfur Cycle

Sulfur Oxidation

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 H2S → elemental sulfur

 Beggiatoa, Thiothri


 H2 SO42-

 Thiobacillus

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Sulfure Cycle

Sulfur Reduction

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 SO42- S2-

 

SO42- is used as an electron acceptor; "dissimilatory sulfate reduction"

ex: Desulfovibrio / some Clostridium sp.

 

SO42- can also be used as a sulfur source; "assimilatory reduction"

 

 

 


 

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Aquatic Microbiology

Impacting Factors

Temperature

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 Ocean water range: -2° → 100° (most below 5°C)

Deep sea thermal activity

growth on ice as well

 

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Aquatic Microbiology

Impacting Factors

Hydrostatic Pressure

 

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Barotolerant and Barophilic

most = psychrophiles (grow in extreme conditions)

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Aquatic Microbiology

Impacting Factors

Light and Turbidity

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photosynthetic organism live in Photic Zone 

Turbidity impacts range of photic zone

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Aquatic Microbiology

Impacting Factors

Salinity

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Range: 0% (fresh) – 3.7% (sea)

Saturated = Great Salt Lake 32%

Halotolerant and Halophilic

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Aquatic Microbiology

Impacting Factors
pH

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different levels impact community composition

 

Laguna Diamante

– pH 11

– 5X salt concentration

– 20,000X arsenic

– High UV, low O2

microbes and flamingos

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Drinking Water
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Water can be a pathogen reservoir;

V. cholerae, Shigella, Salmonella, some E. coli

 

Detection is key; pathogens at low levels

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Indicator Organisms Must (8)
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  1. be present only in polluted H2O
  2. be present when pathogens are present
  3. # of IOs correlate with pollution level
  4. Survive longer than pathogen
  5. Uniform & Stable properties
  6. be "harmless" to animals/humans
  7. be present in greater # than pathogen
  8. Relatively easy to detect

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Indicator Organisms

 

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E. coli is the most common:

 

Coliform: a Gram negative, lactose fermenting rod; 

normal inhabitant of the intestinal tract

 

 

 Streptococcus faecalis also used

 

High Coliform counts = water is not potable, lakes closed

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Drinking Water Treatment

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 Filtration: removes particulates

Treatment with chlorine: kills microbes

Optional:

Reverse osmosis or charcoal filtration; Remove chemical contaminants

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Sewage Treatment
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 Aerobic and anaerobic microbes; break down organic matter, methane is byproduct
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Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD)

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BOD= Term for O2 consumption over 5 days

Organic matter dumped into water = problem

aerobic microbes deplete oxygen

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Food and Beverage Microbiology

Bad vs. Good

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Bad: food spoilage, food-borne infections

 

Good: fermentations (beer, cheese, etc.), occasionally microbe is eaten (yogurt)

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Control of Microbes in food/beverages
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Food/beverage= Culture media

Good: milk eggs meat

Bad: flour, sugar, cereal (dry), vinegar (low pH)

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Factors that Impact Contamination
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Initial # of microbes present

Processing/sterilization of food and/or equipment

Damage to containers

Storage conditions

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Food Spoilage
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 Metabolites produced may be harmful;

– Neurotoxin from C. botulinum

– Enterotoxin from S. aureus


Can cause infection;

E. coli, Salmonella, L. monocytogenes

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Food Spoilage Prevention

High Temps - Pasteurization

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Used for: milk, eggs, crabmeat, beer, wine, cheese

 

Milk pathogens: M. bovis, L. monocytogenes

 

Check for milk coliforms (determine fecal contamination)

 

Microwave ovens: ineffective (uneven heating)

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Food Spoilage Prevention

Low Temps

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Refrigeration; bacteriostatic,

Produce: heated before freezing; inactivates oxidase enzymes that alter food quality

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Food Spoilage Prevention

High osmotic pressure

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High salt or sugar content is bacteriostatic; salted fish/jams

*still prone to fungal contamination

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Food Spoilage Prevention

Spices

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Add flavor and cover ‘off’ flavors

enhances preservation

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Food Spoilage Prevention

chemical additives

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Organic acids (sorbic, lactic, citric) control growth 

of molds and bacteria

 

Nitrates and nitrites inhibit growth, also 

contribute to “redness” of meat;

Raises concern about carcinogenic effect

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Food Spoilage Prevention

Radiation

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Foods exposed to UV or gamma radiation

Will either pasteurize or sterilize food; exposure dependent

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Microbes at Work
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Microbes can be grown in batch or continuous culture:

Conditions must be monitored closely;

– Aeration, temperature, pH

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Microbes at Work

Alcoholic Beverages

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Saccharomyces cerevisiae; used for bread

Developing Strains:  

Alcohol tolerance (normal 8-9%)

speed/purity of alcohol production

ability to flocculate (loosely coagulate)

growth rate

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Ethanol Production by

S. cerevisia

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Glucose enters glycolysis

Glucose→ G6P→F6P→→→Pyruvate

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Ethanol Production by

S. cerevisia

Aerobic

 

 

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Pyruvate→ acetyl CoA→ Krebs cycle

Pasteur Effect: cell growth, 0 EtOH production

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Ethanol Production by

S. cerevisia

Anaerobic

 

 

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Pyruvate → acetyl CoA + CO→ Ethanol

Enzyme 1: pyruvate decarboxylase

Enzyme 2: alcohol dehydrogenase

 

0 cell growth, EtOH production

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Vinegar Production
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If O2 is present, ethanol can be oxidized to 

acetic acid by Acetobactre spp.

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Cultured Dairy Products
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Curddling of milk: 4.6 pH

Lactic acid byproduct; enhances taste and preservation

Examples: Buttermilk, yogurt, cottage cheese, cheddar cheese, cream cheese

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