Chapter 10 Classification of Microorganisms

Chapter 10 Classification of Microorganisms Microbiology is the study of microorganisms / microbes which is visible only with a microscope. The dive...
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Chapter 10 Classification of Microorganisms

Microbiology is the study of microorganisms / microbes which is visible only with a microscope. The diverse group of organisms includes algae, archae, bacteria, cyanobacteria, fungi, protozoa, viruses.

Most of the microorganisms are harmless. 99% are good. Eg: Cynobacteria (blue green algae) 1% are bad. Eg: Pathogens MICROBIOLOGY

Discovery Era

Transition Era

Golden Era

Modern Era

ANTONY VON LEEUWENHOEK (1632-1723) First person - Invented microscope and discovered the microbial world. Draper (cloth merchant), Holland. Hobby - grind lenses and make microscopes. Leeuwenhoek microscopes could magnify objects about 200-300 times

Leeuwenhoek observed a variety of things including rain water, pond water, blood and scrapings from his own teeth using his own microscope He saw minute moving objects which he called ―little animalcules‖. He made accurate sketches and communicated his findings to ―Royal society of London‖.

Origin of Life Controversy

• Where did microbes come from? Many believed they arose from simple materials by process of spontaneous generation. This notion had been posited by Aristotle (382-322 B.C.) and other Greek philosophers to explain decay and appearance of animals such as flies and frogs, and was widely held as common sense even in 1700's and 1800's.

Spontaneous Generation theory

From earliest times, people had believed in spontaneous generation—that living organisms could develop from nonliving matter. Even the great Aristotle (384–322 B.C.) thought some of the simpler invertebrates could arise by spontaneous generation. This view finally was challenged by the Italian physician Francesco Redi (1626–1697),

• Francisco Redi (1626-1697) demonstrated that flies did not arise spontaneously from rotting meat by simple experiment. If jar of meat was covered by fine muslin, maggots did not arise.

However, the simpler life forms discovered by Leeuwenhoek lacked visible complexity, and most people still believed these could arise spontaneously.

Francesco Redi

John Needham (1731-1781), a Scottish clergyman and naturalist, showed that microbes grew in soups exposed to air. Claimed existence of a "life force" present in inorganic matter that could cause

spontaneous generation. One of his more convincing demonstrations was to boil some soup (briefly), pour into clean flasks with cork lids, and show that microbes would soon arise.

Lazzaro Spallanzani (1729-1799) - Italian priest claimed Needham's organisms came from heat-resistant microbes. If flasks were boiled long enough (1-2 h), nothing grew. But Needham countered that prolonged heating destroyed the "life force". Spallanzani said that every form of life takes its origin from their parents, germ cells or seeds. This theory of biogenesis was later proved and supported by Louis Pasteur.

Theodore Schwann (1810–1882) allowed air to enter a flask containing a sterile nutrient solution after the air had passed through a red-hot tube. The flask remained sterile.

Subsequently Georg Friedrich Schroder and Theodor von Dusch allowed air to enter a flask of heat-sterilized medium after it had passed through sterile cotton wool. No growth occurred in the medium even though the air had not

been heated. Despite these experiments the French naturalist Felix Pouchet claimed

in 1859 to have carried out experiments conclusively

proving

that

contamination.

microbial

growth

could

occur

without

air

Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) He developed several experiments that finally deflated claims for spontaneous generation. Pasteur filtered air through cotton to trap airborne materials, then dissolved the cotton and examined the particulate matter under a microscope; many bacteria and spores of other life forms such as molds were present. Since most skeptics kept arguing that overheating killed the life force present in air, Pasteur developed and ingenious experiment using a swan neck flask that allowed fresh air to remain in contact with boiled materials. The long passageway prevented airborne microbes from reaching the nutrient liquid, without impeding access to air. One of Pasteur's flasks is still sterile after 100+ years of being exposed to the air (Pasteur Institute, Paris).

Contributions of Louis Pasteur • Disproved the SG theory • Discovered that fermenting fruit to alcohol by microbes • He selected a particular strain (Yeast) for high quality wine. • He developed a method to remove the undesired microbes from juice without affecting its quality. Heating the juice at 62.8°C for half-an hour did the job. This technique is called as Pasteurization, which is commonly used in the field of milk industry. • He discovered that parasites (protozoa) causing pebrine disease of silk worm. • He isolated the anthrax causing bacilli from the bloods of cattle, sheep and human being. • He also demonstrated the virulence (ability of microbe to cause disease) of bacteria • He developed vaccine (a killed or attenuated microbe to induce the immunity) against rabbis from the brains and spinal cord of rabbit

The English physicist John Tyndall (1820–1893)

dealt a final blow to spontaneous generation in 1877 by demonstrating that dust did indeed carry germs and that if dust was absent, broth remained sterile even if directly exposed to air. During the course of his studies, Tyndall provided evidence for the existence of exceptionally heat-resistant forms of bacteria. He also developed a sterilization method ―Tyndallization‖, referred as intermittent or fractional sterilization. The subsequent cooling and heating by steam for 3 days will remove the germs and their spores. Working independently, the German botanist Ferdinand Cohn (1828–1898) discovered the existence of heat-resistant bacterial endospores .

Robert Koch (1893-1910) He demonstrated the role of bacteria in causing disease.

He perfected the technique of isolating bacteria in pure culture.

Robert Koch used gelatin to prepare solid media but it was not an ideal because

(i) Since gelatin is a protein, it is digested by many bacteria capable of producing a proteolytic exoenzyme gelatinase that hydrolyses the protein to amino acids. (ii) It melts when the temperature rises above 25°C.

Koch’s Postulates 1. A specific organism should be found constantly in association with the disease. 2. The organism should be isolated and grown in a pure culture in the laboratory. 3. The pure culture when inoculated into a healthy susceptible animal should produce symptoms/lesions of the same disease.

4. From the inoculated animal, the microorganisms should be isolated in pure culture. 5. An additional criterion introduced is that specific antibodies to the causative organism should be demonstrable in patient’s serum.

Joseph Lister (1878) He is the father of antiseptic surgery. Lister concluded that wound infections were due to microorganisms. Developed Pure culture technique. Pure culture referred as the growth of mass of cells of same species in a vessel. He developed the pure cultures of bacteria using serial dilution technique. He also discovered that carbolic acid (phenol) to disinfect the surgical equipments and dressings leads the reduction of postoperational deaths/infections

Alexander Fleming (1928)

• identified Penicillium notatum inhibiting Staphylococcus aureus and identified the antibiotic Penicillin • Discovered antibiotic penicillin –important milestone in medical microbiology • Found that natural substances having antimicrobial activitySaliva,Nasal mucous • Worked on Staphylococcus aureus,-inhibition of growth due to Penicillin

Fanne Eilshemius Hesse (1850 - 1934) One of Koch's assistant first proposed the use of agar in culture media. It was not attacked by most bacteria. Agar is better than gelatin because of its

higher melting pointing (96°c) and solidifying (40 – 45°c)points.

Richard Petri (1887) He developed the Petri dish (plate), a container used for solid culture media.

Edward Jenner (1749-1823) First to prevent small pox.

He discovered the technique of vaccination.

Paul Erlich (1920) He discovered the treatment of syphilis by using arsenic He Studied toxins and antitoxins in quantitative terms & laid foundation of biological standardization.

Bacterial Classification

Early Systems of Classification Taxonomy  branch of biology that names and groups organisms according to their characteristics and evolutionary history

First classified 2,000 years ago by Greek philosopher Aristotle

Aristotle’s Classification First classified either plant or animal

Then classified animals as: Land dwellers Water dwellers Air dwellers

Classified plants into 3 groups according to stem structure

th 15

and

th 16

Centuries



More and more species discovered



Artistotle’s sytem not sufficient

Also common names provided a problem •

Language differences – Fish/pla, etc



Didn’t describe accurately – Jellyfish = fish

Linnaeus’s System Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus (17071778) made system of grouping organisms into hierarchical categories Used mostly morphology (form and structure)

Levels of Classification •

Linnaeus made heirarchy of 7 levels



Largest category  kingdom –

Two kingdoms, plant and animal



Each subset in kingdom  phylum/division; animal/plant



class



Order



Family



Genus



Species

Want to remember the levels? Remember ―Kings Play Chess On Funny Green Squares‖ Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species

The Taxonomic Hierarchy

Binomial Nomenclature •

In Linnaeus’s system, the species name (also called the scientific name) of an organism has 2 parts



First part = name of the genus



Second part = species identifier – –



Usually a descriptive word Homo sapiens  sapiens = ―wise‖

This system of 2-part names is binomial nomenclature

In binomial nomenclature, genus name is capitalized

Both names either underlined or italic

Homo sapiens

Homo sapiens

Because names are in Latin, they are the same throughout the world

Modern Systems of Classification Aristotle classified organisms as either plants or animals, but today we recognize that many forms of life are neither. In this section you will learn about two alternative classification system that are in current use. But remember, organizational systems are imposed by humans and therefore may be flawed. As is true of everything in science, they are subject to change as new information arises.

Taxonomy The science of classifying organisms

Provides universal names for organisms Provides a reference for identifying organisms

3 Domain System •

Compares sequences of rRNA in different organisms



Because all organisms have ribosomes



Domain Archaea  archaebacteria



Domain Bacteria  eubacteria



Domain Eukarya  protists, fungi, plant, animal –

Have true nuclei with linear chromosomes and membrane-bound organelles

The Three-Domain System

Kingdom Archaebacteria Archae- is Greek for ―ancient‖

Unicellular prokaryotes Some species autotrophic, making food by chemosynthesis Many live in harsh environments Hot springs Underwater volcano

Kingdom Eubacteria Eu- is Greek for ―true‖

Unicellular prokaryotes Most bacteria that affects your life (tooth decay, food poisoning, etc) Together with Archaebacteria these are the greatest number of living things on Earth

Kingdom Protista Variety of eukaryotes, mostly single-celled

Some multicellular (giant kelp) Of 50,000 species, none are plant, none are animals

Contains diverse collection of eukaryotic organisms Protozoa – algae – slime molds – water molds

Kingdom Fungi •

Heterotrophic unicellular and multicellular eukaryotes



Absorb nutrients instead of ingesting them



100,000 species



2 basic types 1.

Molds  tangled masses of filaments of cells

2.

Yeasts  unicellular organisms whose colonies resemble those of bacteria

Kingdom Animalia



Eukaryotic, multicellular heterotrophs



Almost all have standard sexual cycle that uses meiosis

Systematics, or Phylogeny The study of the evolutionary history of organisms

All Species Inventory (2001–2025) To identify all species of life on Earth

A Model of the Origin of Eukaryotes

Figure 10.2

Phylogenetics Each species retains some characteristics of its ancestor

Grouping organisms according to common properties implies that a group of organisms evolved from a common ancestor Anatomy Fossils rRNA

Classification of Prokaryotes Prokaryotic species: A population of cells with similar characteristics Culture: Grown in laboratory media Clone: Population of cells derived from a single cell Strain: Genetically different cells within a clone

Phylogenetic Relationships of Prokaryotes

Figure 10.6

Classification of Eukaryotes Eukaryotic species: A group of closely related organisms that breed among themselves

Classification of Eukaryotes Animalia: Multicellular; no cell walls; chemoheterotrophic

Plantae: Multicellular; cellulose cell walls; usually photoautotrophic Fungi: Chemoheterotrophic; unicellular or multicellular; cell walls of chitin; develop from spores or hyphal fragments Protista: A catchall kingdom for eukaryotic organisms that do not fit other kingdoms Grouped into clades based on rRNA

Classification of Viruses Viral species: Population of viruses with similar characteristics that occupies a particular ecological niche

Classification and Identification Classification: Placing organisms in groups of related species. Lists of characteristics of known organisms. Identification: Matching characteristics of an ―unknown‖ organism to lists of known organisms. Clinical lab identification

Identification Methods Morphological characteristics: Useful for identifying eukaryotes Differential staining: Gram staining, acid-fast staining Biochemical tests: Determines presence of bacterial enzymes

Identifying Bacteria

Numerical Identification

Figure 10.9

Serology Combine known antiserum plus unknown bacterium

Slide agglutination test

ELISA Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

Known antibodies Unknown type of bacterium

Antibodies linked to enzyme Enzyme substrate

Figure 18.14

Phage Typing of Salmonella enterica

Genetics DNA base composition Guanine + cytosine moles% (GC)

DNA fingerprinting Electrophoresis of restriction enzyme digests

rRNA sequencing Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

Figure 10.14