0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes) 182 views13 pagesMCB 305
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content,
claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
Aa s9sene no THE LABORATORY
should be constantly aw
isms ~ which may include a%
‘adhesive labels.
and the rest of the laboratury ~ cl
Hi necessary, use
3. Keep the bench
4. Dispose of all con
into the proper container.
5, Leave contaminated pipettes, slides etc. in a suitable,
for an appropriate time before washing/ster
Avoid contaminating
bacteria/spoces. An aerosol cunsists of minute
to the insteuctor or demon-
strator.
8. Wash your hands thoroughly before leaving the laboratory.
(142, BACTERIOLOGICAL MEDIA
ia) is any solid or Squid prepa
growth, storage or transport of bacteria; when 1
ology is safe bacteriology, ancl it
‘any practical work:
44 Some practical bacteriology
that he or she is
or potential
‘wise to get to
ory coat to protect
un and tidy.
inated wastes by placing them (not throwing them)
active disinfectant
ng them,
enviconment with aerosols containing live
omauroso
1m made specifically
ised for growth, the
ch hasasimple:
jin seaweeds). A sol
fabout 9 cm. The medium, ina molten
eterotrophs (6
ot grow in basa! media, but may de so aft
auedia.
‘hare used very commonly in bacteriology; this
of asimple laboratory procedure.
medium is commonly used
lustrated in Fig. 16.2) ~ usually the size which has
utile (Fig, 14.1) isa cylin
(liquid) state, is poured into
i dish containing the solid medium is
th as E. cull) neud
lia (Table V4.1). Many bacteria
ter the addition of substances
mm or blood; media which have been supplemented in this,
unis one.which supports the growth of certain bacteria in
ence to others. An example is MacConkey’s broth (Prble 141) = in
yateriec bacte
1a but do not whibit entericom
BACTERIA IN BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOLOGY AND MEDICINE OME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY
of typhoid. Suppose, for example, that we need to
imen of faeces from a suspected case of typhoid. The
few cells of S. typhi, so that it may be difficult or
impossible to detect them among the vast numbers of non-pathogenic enteric
bacteria. However, ifan inoculum from the specimen is incubated in selenite
trot, the proportion of cells of S. typhi increases to the point at which they
“canbe detected more readily.
F Ksolid medium isused, forexample,
particular species, Many
typi, the causal agent
detect S. typhi in a speci
specimen may contain only a
Table 141 Some common types of bacteriological medium!
Peptone water
m oth?
Nuttient agar
Differential medium
‘MacConkey's agar MacConkey’s broth (see below) gelled with 15-2% agar
Peptone 1%;
Nutrient broth gelled with 15-2% agar
to obtain the colonies (section3.3.1) ofa
Enriched medium
Blood agar
Natren aga (ose medium) containing 5-10%
fibrinated or citrated blood J %
(By contrast
at 37°C.) One widely used agar-based
a general-purpose medium used for
sowing) many types of bacteria; it can alsobe enriched and/or
appropriate substances.
5-10% blood;
Chocolate agar
Serum agar lar medium) containing 5% (v/¥)
is (causal agent of whooping cough), and also to detect
Chocolate agar is made by heating blood agar to
‘ocolate brown in colour; it is more suitable than
sg Neisseria gonorrhoene).
i.e. one on which
wed from one another by
Conkey’s agar,
. For example,
3) a mixture of homogenized
tance medium ~ie,2 wedi
given organism. Do
ther agar nor
ence, coagulatinyLOGY AND MEDICINE 2
con widely used for the storage of Mycobact
om tuberculosis. 1
rn substances (eg. peptone, tgp water) whose ext et
unknown, Sometimesitis necessary touse amedius, ; | /
OME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY
8
SACTERIA IN BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOL
as
keh voding those ace amounts arequantiatvd f\ ise
Cn ecrttoen cluding ie ute ae
red fom known amount of Pu aaumast
sean wn Ug inergnic sas, glucose, amino acid ete. in distilled oi
es oe ea ol
jonel requirement
temperature toallow growth; the lope can
medium is used P 5K
tor at4_6°C until needed eg as asource of
viability
Support growth; in fact, growth may be disadvantageous since waste
products formed may adversely affect the survival of the organisms. Ore
Eich medium, Starts transport medium (Table 14.1) issuitable e.g. for arang
bf anaerobic becteriaand for ‘delicate’ organisms such s Neisseria gonorthos
separately by filtration (section 15.1.3) before being added to the rest of the
“outlaved) medium.
(7 M22 The preparation of media (26 sstenc racenague
ina dehydrated, powdered form. £.
the appropriate
‘before use (section 15.1); if we are
simply not know what is happening in our
logical procedures, instruments
contamination by organisms that are
‘onment. Aseptic technigue involves the pre-use
truments, vessels, media etc,, and avoidance of theit
ct with noa-sterie objects suchas fingers, or the bench top ete
ining sterile contents are kept closed except for the minimum
e agar sets. Blood agar plates are made ed for acess. Before opening a vessel (eg. a sterile bottle, or one
5-10%, by volume (4 cantaininga pure culture), the rim of the screw-cap (or equivalent) is passed
weugh the Bunsen flameto prevent any live contaminating organisms
the vessel when the cap is removed; this procedure is called
eg. whenever an inoculum is withdrawn from a
e medium is being inoculated. Flaming ofthe bottle’s
iniiscaricd out immediately before the vesselis closed, Flaming is generally
natased when working with Petri dishes, and is never used when the
contents of a vessel are likely to catch fice.
He risk of contamination in the laboratory may be further reduced by
ating bench topsete table disinfectant, and by filtering the air to
remove cells and spores of bacteria and fungi etc. Sometimes bacteriological
(=slerile cabinet). In a class UI cabinet, sterile
red) air constantly flows down onto the work surface, and air passes to
exterior after further filtration (Fig. 14.2). Work is conducted via an open
the front ofthe cabinet. A class IIT cabinet is a gas-tight cabinet in
ia ate dispensed to contai
For most agor-based media (e.g, nutrient agar) the powdered medium s
mixed with water and steamed to dissolve the whole is then |
sterilized in an autoclave (sect
about 45°C, a tempera
plate, some 15-20 ml ofthe molten agar medium is poured into ast
‘Topreparea nutrient agar slope o
's allowed to set in a sterile b
angle to the
1.1) whichis steamed bu
slucose or other he
‘medium the sugar solution is seriapicks up only the minute volume
e's surface.
be used for picking up small quantities
growth from a bacterial colony —
e straight wire, into contact,
adheres to the wire will be
dor solid inocula carried by
ther a liquid or a solid
Fig. 142 (2) A class Il safety cabinet, and (b) the
s) dunng use; filtered air
the
A loop: piece of platinum nickelstee)
re end snd Reldinametalhandleof about
ire: themetalhandlecarsesasealght pice of wie
‘K Pasteur pipette: an open-ended glass tube, the narrow
_end of which has an internal diameter Freout | min; the wider end is plugged with
‘ation wool, before sterilization, and a rubber bulb (tat) is fitted immedi
ough after atthe top ofthe
cabinet (Courtesy of Astec ErvironmentalSystems, —~ fy
Weston-super-Mare, Avon, UK)
PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY 33BACTERIA
BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOLOGY AND MEDICINE: SOME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY
jop and straight wire must always be flamed immediately after
jot contaminate the bench or environment.
may occur when flaming a loop or
jue of an inoculum; for
th a special bunsen burner fit
flaming may be carried out in a si
Larger volumes of liquid may be
graduated pipettes;
from a mechanical de’
acteriology are usually plugged with cotton wool (Fig. 14.3), before being
sterilized, in order to avoid contamination from the bulb or from the
mechanical pipetting device during use. Pipettes are usually sterilized (a
‘batches) inside metal canisters or in thick paper envelopes; when a pipetteis
removed irom the container, only the plugged end should be held so as to
avoid contaminating the rest of the pipette. Pasteur pipettes are commonly
used once only and then discarded into of suitable disinfectant
(Graduated pipettes which have been contaminated with bacteria are immersed
in a disinfectant until they are safe to handle, when they can be washed, —
sterilized and reused.
V% 143. METHODS OF INOCULATION
canying the inoculum is move:
zegionofthe plat, fll
dipped into the liquid medium,
‘e medium as shownat? Streakings3 4
ition can also be carried out w'
fed and cooled between each streaking.
eon which largenumbers
nduent growth, as atl, 2 and 3;
‘om te vewer during
nay be inoculated ina variety. particular methods be
‘medium, the inoculum (atthe tip of the wire) is thus distributed along the
,lengthof the stab. This procedure is used e.g. for inoculating deep, microaerobic
‘or anaerobic parts of a medium.
spread plteis made by spreading a small volume of liquid inoculum (eg.
+ 005-0.1ml overthe surface of asolid medium by means ofasterile L-shaped
glass rod (a spreader’).
A flood plate is made by flooding the surface of asolid medium witha liquid
‘inoculum and withdrawing excess inoculum with a sterile Pasteur pipette.
© Ifthe inoculum in a flood plate, or a spread plate, contains enough cells,
incubation will give rise to a lawn plate: a plate in which the surface of the
‘ll-separated colonies
is known to contain a larg
: thinned out
sucha way tha
of the plate -
, fourth or fifth streakings (Fig. 14.4);
well-separated cell gives rise to an individual colony.
on, a solid medium ~ eg. the butt of a slope (Fig. 14.
inoculated with a straight wire by plug rialBACTERIA IN BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOLOGY AND MEDICO: ~ SOME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY 38
yen inthe ja. Since,
canbe inserted upside-down
condensation
this case, there is no vacuum, the plat. visually, with that of a particular tube, and the concentration of the sample is
id-side down) soasto avoid the probleme then read from a table supplied with the tubes.
vbic jars cor
a redox indicator which indi e
la contain a ich indicates the state
ee jars the indicator is placed in a small
through the wall of the pare 2h iMdicator-soaked pad is usually visity Most methods of estimating the viable cell count involve the inoculation of a
Some anaerobes can be solid medium with the sample (or diluted sample). After incubation, the
Robertson's cooked meal mesa ae thout ax anaerobic jar) in media sucha number of cells in the inoculum can be estimated from the number of colonies
(1%), sodium chloride (0576 need beet heart beef extract (1%), peptan | Which develop on oF within the medium. Tt is always assumed that each
thioglycollate) the medium, stertneed beeen ABEM, C6. L-cysteine colony has arisen from a single cel; the numberof cells which actually give
uni bottles which afc nn Zed by autoclaving, is stored in serew-exy tie to colonies depends at least partly on the type of medium used and on the
conditions ater insctlanes, ce ets equilibrated under oxygen conditions of incubation
‘Anaerobic cabinets allow came one Closate- Inthe spread plate (or surface plate) method, an inoculum of about 0.05-0.1 ml
s rae is spread over the surface of a sterile plate, as described earlier; the plate is
's/eultures to be handled,
oxygen-free conditions with control led incubated un
concenteation, items inside the seo Bem berature, humidity and C, Ae! ection 142.2), incubated, and the viable cell count is estimated from
cabinet can be manipil
482° Viable cell count
gestight gloves red ee lated by means q (i) the number of colonies, (i) the volume of ineculum used, and (iii) the
BREMEN gloves fixed into the front panel ddegrce (if any) to which the sample had been diluted, Ifa sample is suspected
Of Containing many cells ~eg, 10 cells/ml ~itcan be diluted in 10-fold steps,
M48 COUNTING BACTERIA and um from each dilution spread onto separate plate; at least one
a countable number of colonies.
Tn the pour plate method, the (liquid) inoculum is mixed with a molten
in a sample is called the total i) agae-based medium (atabout45°C) whichis then poured into Petri dish and
iable cell count. Counts in liquit_tllowed to set; on incubation, colonies develop within (as well as on) the
cells per millilitre (or per 100 mj, -Diedium, and the viable count is calculated as in the spread plate method.
Yet another method for viable count is Miles and Misra’s method (Fig. 14.6).
1481 Tot sou: ‘Asample likely to contain small numbers of bacteria (eg, water from aclean
Fone sive may be passed thcough asterle membrane fterof pore size about 0.2
{fhe total cell count in a liquid sample (e.g. a broth culture) can be estimate! ##m-which retains ells on the uppersurface; a volume of, say, 100ml ormore
by direct counting in a counting chamber (Fig. 145). tay be filtered. The membrane is then placed (cel-side uppermost) onto an
Another method ~ the direct epifluorescent filter technique (DEFT) ~is usel:, absorbent pad saturated with a suitable medium; on incubation, nutrients
renweeunting organisms in milk. Essentially, the mille is passed throughs dfs through the membrane, and colonies develop fom those cells capable
Magetane filer, and the cells retained on the filter are stained with «of growih under such conditions. The viable cell count can then be estimated
Muorescent ye; ultraviolet radiation is then beamed onto the filter, and the’. {70m (i) the number of colonies on the membrane, and (ti) the volume of
dar background gah thougha microscope) asbright particles againste, smote tered
e ‘ound. (For DEFT, the milk is pre-treated to disrupt fa 5
'Suleh would otherwise Slack the flee) snipt it globule
sample with that of each oe mated By comp:
‘The total number of (living and dead) cel
count; the number of living cells is the vi
samples are usually given as the number of
4483 Counting cells in (or on) solids
Sometimes we need to count the bacteria ina sample of fod or fabric ee. In
Srfhr to-do this, the particles of food etc. must be broken up and/or the
“bacteria must be separated from the sample; ideally, clumps of bacteria
ould also be broken up. The sample and a diluent (uch a5 Ringers
‘Tution) can be sealed int a sterile plastic bag (@stmcher which i then
tbjecte to mechanical agitation; inthis way atleatsome ofthe bas
e brought into suspension in the diluent.SOME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY an
P BACTERIA IN BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOLOGY AND MEDICINE
nooml]==
fore contains 1254000000 ca
cle and averaged
ination (because itwastoo concentrated),
by the dilution factor for examples i ented
tbe multiplied by 10.
bed above isthe Thoma chamber; in a Heller chanber the
distance between centel plateau and coverslip ie OO oe
ee
STAINING
is often used to detect, categorize or identify bacteria, or to observe
ic bacterial components; in most cases the cells are killed and ‘fixed’
before being stained,
‘Dyes etc are usually applied to a thin film of cells on a glass microscope
le. Cells from a pure culture may be examined as follows. A loopful of
lsplaced on a cleanslide, and (using the loop) a speck of growth from
the water to form a suspension of
the suspension is spread over an area of one or two square
es and allowed to dry — forming a smear. The smear is then fixed by
'git quickly through a bunsen flame twice; itis then ready for staining
subsequent examination under the microscope.
smear may also be made directly from the sediment of centrifuged urine,
us from an abscess.
t
i Iment, seen from
Fig 445 A typical counting chamber (haemocytometer). The instrument, see
onesie a a) cons of Secale las lock in wich te conta
de. The cent
precisely 0.1 mm below the level ofthe shoulders on eithe
‘The Gram stain
background to this stain is given in section 2.29. One of many versions of
procedure is as follows.from () thenumberof colonies
“wsea throughoutifthe drops ace taken frst frome
se aig done by drawing into the pips
nv say, 20 drops, then each drop i
‘Aheat-fxed smear (see above) is
ed briefly under running
tution of odine and potassium
mis then attempted by t
stained for Lminute with crys!
(about 1-3 seconds); t
vesnaaitiobe Gest Toad ep sre
Ln any bac ie
a arvum-typenegative according £0 whether heir cell walls are of the
Gram-positive or Gram-negative tYP& respectively (section 22.9).
4491.1. Gram staining living cells
‘the Gram reaction of Hiving cells has eet determined by differential
Be Gam, ace VE satight bac lar
Probes Ine, Bugene, Oregon, USA) wses WY, fluorescent dyes, one of which
(hexdiu age, Oegor posivecls(vhih rest AMEE)
(Gram-negative cells fuoresce green
jyg2 The Zichl-Neelsen stain (acid-fast stain)
‘ac fst’ bacteria (AFB) differ from all other bacteria in that once they are
Ae wit Rot, concentrated carbolfuchsin they ‘cannot be decolorized by
nea acid OF and ethanol; such bacteria include e.
be
volfuchsin, and the slide is heated until th
sae potbol,Theslide i kept hot for about min leftto cool, and t
sn rnning water. Decolorization is attempted PY passing the slide
{toough several changes ofacid-alcohol (eg; "3% /v concentrated hydrochloric
25d. 90% ethane i easing ater the smear is counterstained
s rastng stan (such'as malachite green), washed 252 and di
‘fei fast cells stain red, others green. aa aga and ane
3493 Capsule stain
gules may be demonstrated e.g; by negative
‘Theeells are emulsified with aloopful
scunsldeand are See overlaid with a cover-sliprunder the oil-immersion
sag ey’ (=) objective lens of the microssoPE Me ‘capsule appears as a
ight zone between a cell and its dark ‘background.
4494 Endospore stain
‘ee section 16.114.
blotted dry and 5 > a
secope (magrification | 1495 pistinguishing live from dead cells by staining
bacteria do not give a clear oF
ct ering postive, sometimes negatively: these
sand dead bacteria canbe distinguished s& bbyasimpleonestepstaining
Tesnique (BaLight™, Moleculae Probes Tne, Eugene, Oregon, USA). The
wets are treated with a mixture of WO iuorescent dyes: SYTO 9 and{14.10 MICROSCOPY
BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOLOGY AND MEDICINE =; SOME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY
~~ gacreRia IN
a“ se
—S=—S
aperture diaphragm
L7_Oilimmersion objective lens: the reason for using oil. In the diagram, th
1) specimen lies between slide and covergass, and rays from one nett
shown travelling towards the objective lens
‘When immersion oil refractive index (Rl) approx,
and cover glass tighthhand side of diagram), says of ight
las (lee Nand side of dings ——
righthand side of the di idea
is reflected back int the pes
fement
cpator (NA) oa harec ofl geen
where n is the refractive index ofthe material between lens and cover-glass, and Oi} tin
Biepodsetigeateicyemerbelasintc agen ohciagess, efter nde tea fomenystenfoncee meron
by eee ar fogs et up ae ens te secnen oes
ae a ta eas wed tts NA Eereriten pc pine atin fed ep soul
i with this lave isan ins dapheapes
of the substage condenser unt, Becsuce fer
= Whatis the oil for? A powerful objective lens has a very short focal len;
aadlghtrom the specimen mustenterthelensatawide angle thsi pescee
ony pace between lens andspecimen i filed witha atv
«pull reactive index Fig. 1.75
The maximum useful magnification obtainable rom a given objective lens
100 times its numerical aperture (NA) Fig. 1427)
propidium iodide. Under the fluorescence microscope, SYTO 9 fluores
green when bound to DNA in living cells; propidium iodide, which
generally excluded from living cells, fluoresces red when bound to DNA ia
dead cells. Living cells fluoresce green, dead cells red.
[Methods forassessing the viability of microorganisms have been discusse
by Lloyd & Hayes (1995) FEMSML 133 1-7,]
14.101 Kébler illumination
For the best image, the specimen must be illuminated evenly, regardless of
any unevenness in the source of light. K6hler illumination, which is optimal,
‘usesalamp fitted with a condensing lens and an adjustable diapheagm (=field
t determines the diameter of the illuminating beam; when
an image of the lamp's filament s formed in the lower focal plane of
oil-immersion objectives, a drop of immersion oil ills the space between | the microscope's substage condenser, and rays from eack point of this image
Jens and the top of the cover-glass (or, as is often the case, between lens andj’ pass through the condenser to emerge as parallel rays which illuminate the
© specimen and enter the objective lens (Fig. 148).
smear)
gE
In bacteriology there is often a need to use high magnification (e.
and for this tie microscope must have an oil-immersion objec
about 100x) and a suitable eyepiece (about 10x). When usingan tie,
lo ‘olory, Si ins
by ’sy and Molecular Biol ,, Singleton & Sa!
EE SISSSY Of the publisher, john Wiley, Ciches O
y BACTERIA IN BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOL ogy
AND M
ED)
optical! oxis
‘onnular
operture specimen
condenser objective
phase plote image plane
Fig, 149 Phase-contrast microscopy: simplified diagrammatic scheme to show te
rinciple. 1
PiWithina transparent or translucent specimen, the incident light has illuminated;
region which causes diffraction; the first-order waves (dashed line) are retardes a
about one-quarter of a wavelength (1/42). If these first-order waves and
non-difiracted (zero-order) waves interact in a normal (bright-feld) microscope, te
resultant wave would have an amplitude similar to that of the background waves 9
that the feature would not be clearly distinguished; the resultant and background
waves would differ slightly in phase, but this cannot be detected by the eye.
In a phase-contrast microscope the condenser has an-annular-(ting-shaped
aperture in its front focal plane so that a holloz cone of light can be focused (as asa
bright ring) onto a phase plate located in the back focal plane of the objective lens (
diagram), The phase plate is a glass disc on which has been deposited a ring o
areeal (e4g, magnesium fluoride) of such thickness that it retards by 1/4i the light
that passes through it. 3
In the absence of a specimen all the light passes through the phase ring. When
@pecimen (e.g. an unstained cell) is examined, the zero-order and background wave!
(Solid lines) pass through the ring but the first-order waves (dashed lines) past]
through the phase plate via regions outside the ring; thus, by retarding the 2ero-odet
and background waves by 1/47, the phase ting brings all the waves into the same
phase, In the image plane, interaction between zero-order and first-order waves gives
ne toa visible image because the resultant wave has an amplitude greater than thatoli
var round | fie. se image forming wave is brighter than the
a ) ive’ or ‘bright’ phase-contrast microscopy; the oppo s
(mage darker than background) isseen kn ‘positive’ or ‘dark’ phase-contrast microscopy)
Qkimage of greater clarity is obtained when the condenser contains a green filter 5
| Purpose; the telescope is focused on the P™
e 5 Oa
i ntrin, Position of the small bright ri be made €8, PY
ieroscope). "8 SF8WS on the condense” (@epending oa tke pavtielat model
Diagram fr
2nd eiton, 199 'Y of crobin burySOME PRACTICAL BACTERIOLOGY 317
- 410.2 Phase-contrast microscopy
sId) microscopy can reveal fine detail when different parts
Ordinary (bright fie
orb different amounts of light or (perhaps due to staining)
ofthe specimen abs
- Spsord different colours. Unstained cells can sometimes be seen — perhaps
well enough to be counted ~ but with little detail.
Phase-contrast microscopy can reveal fine detail e.g. in transparent/
translucent, unstained living cells by altering the phase difference between
acted and non-diffracted light from the specimen (Fig. 14.9).
14103 Literature on microscopy
Particularly helpful booklets on microscopy (containing both theoretical and
‘practical information) have been produced by the major manufacturers of
= “inieroscopes. These include Microscopy from the Very Beginning, by Friedrich A
X Méllring (Carl Zeiss, Germany), and (a more comprehensive treatment)
The Microscope and its Applications, by Hans Determann and Friedrich
~ Lepusch (Leitz Wetzlar, Germany). f
Le maces Sc havent inOy Ses.
yr
yf BACTERIA IN BIOLO.
‘gable 11 Bukaryotic and prokaryotic cell
Fanaryotic cells
The chromosomes are enclosed within a
slike, double-layered ‘nuclear
membrane
Chromosome structure is complex; the
DNA is usually associated with proteins
called histones
Call division involves mitosis or meiosis
The cell wall, when present, includes
structural compounds such as cellulose
or chitin, but never peptidoglycan
Mitochondria are generally present;
chloroplasts occur in photosynthetic cells
Cells contain ribosomes of two types: a
larger type in the cytoplasm and a
smaller type in mitchondria and
chloroplasts
Flagella, when present, have a complex
NOLOGY AnD
on : MEDICINE
me major differences
Prokaryotic cells
There is no nuclear membrane.”
chromosomes are i
in dire
the cytoplasm ect contact with
Chromosome structure is relatively
simple
Mitosis and meiosis are not involved
The cell wall, when present, usually
contains peptidoglycan (though a
peptidoglycan-like compound occurs in
Some members of the Archaea) but
never cellulose or chitin structural
components
Mitochondria and chloroplasts are never
present
Cells contain ribosomes of only one size
Flagella, when present, have a relatively
International Congress on Extremophiles [see: FEMSMR (1996) 18 89-288).
Tre Archaea also includes all the known methane-producing organisms.
pects of archaeal biology are mentioned in various parts of the book ~
inainly in order to give some idea A i i i
of th isms differ
from the ‘trae bacteria’. e way in which these organisms di
1.2 WHY STUDY BACTERIA?
. Bacteria cause some major
meearal the"prevention and 1 of
's depend largely on the efforts Beers veterinary and
e. disease-causing) bacteria are
ortas
ugh they
= are, the patho;
acteria as enic bacteria are_dnly a small
4 Most Bacteria do litle orno harm, and.
sshich have Sorolutionized the treatment ofdiseee r Sot es
eyes Tor Diblogica washing powdeis Some are ee es BONIS
a 2 used qs ‘microbialTHE BACTERIA: AN INTRODUCTION
Prokaryotes
l |
aacteria Archaea
The larger group The smaller group
No species is known to
Includes all the medically
important, prokaryotes
es live High, proportion live in
Low proportion of speci
in extreme environments extreme environments
be medically important
No species is photosynthetic
species can carry out
(but see section 5.2.2)
Some
photosynthesis
All methane-forming species
No species forms methane
are in this group
teria and Archaea: some general features ‘Members of the
(section 2.2.8.2), cell wall
in their cell membrane
(section 16.2.2.2).
.1 The domains Bac!
14.1) and nucleic acids
Fig.
‘Anhaea differ from bacteria eB.
(ection 2.2.9.3), flagella (section 22.
insect pests. Bacteria are even
insecticides’ — protecting cro}
ase et ke biodegradable plastics (‘Biopol’ ~section 13.7) and to leach out
(biomining — section 13.2).
“used to make biodegradable piss"
metals from certain low-grade ot refractory ores
Perhaps surprisingly, acleria-contzibuie alot to the food indore
(Chapter 12). We agli thing of bacteria as = mulsance where f9°e
conchrned, catising ‘spoilage’ and food poisoning’, but certain types of
fotiwin ard actually employed in the production of food. For example, in the
manufacture of butter, cheese and_yoghurt, certain bacteria are used to
convert ‘milk'sugar’ (lactose) to lactic Acid; the bacteria also form compounds
ih give these ‘products their ‘characteristic flavours. Xanthan gum, formed
E a Ee ae of bacteria, is used as a gellin; agent and thickener in the
Tooa dustry. Vinegaris produced from alcohol (ethanol) by bacterial action,
ZEGTbrteis 210 play a part ne a ce era coffee.
ee ee activites can be understood by studying the chemical
Reece lism) of bacterial cells (Chapters 5 and 6). Chapters 12 and
at the activities of some ‘useful’ bacteri
Bacteria (and their com S
ae aa eco ;ponents) also play central roles in biotechnology -
of recombinant DN icine, industry and agriculture. For example, one use
INA_technology is the production of agents_such_as
streptokinase
aS
lot Teast, wets Be for the treatment of thrombosis) (section 8.5.10).
‘ave essential roles in the natural cycles of matter
ps from certain
(Chapter 10),
fe on whicl
which, ultimately, all life depends. In the soil, bacteria affect
fertility and str
ol ‘ucture— ny
ese! acti icultural potental—sothata better understanding
Ns is willbe vt Se ee ange ENE OF and and crops; in the
a S brief summa survival of our ever-expanding population I
Aref Sent vb Should be. clear thatthe more ‘eer about Bacle
Soe BS En oy 38 Ve svete
Ab HO Usa hel chy hese