Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Microbial physiology
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At the end of this unit, you should be able to:
Define the term bacterial growth
Draw and explain the growth curve of microorganisms in a batch
culture
Identify chemical and physical conditions required for microbial
growth.
Explain what means by culture medium, types of culture medium
and their purpose.
Describe staining techniques used in microbiology laboratory.
Explain the concepts of microbial metabolism.
Describe the methods of measuring microbial growth
State the advantage and disadvantages of the different methods of
microbial growth measurement
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2.1. Microbial growth
Microbial growth is an increase in the amount of protoplasm the
formation of new structures, and eventually the formation of new
cells
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Binary Fission
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Figure 6.11
• Batch Culture
• Comprises a liquid growth medium in a closed
container
• Microbial inoculums is allowed to grow with no net
input into the culture except for exchange of gases
• No waste products are removed
• Growth stops after sometime
• Continuous Culture
• The culture divides continuously due to supply of
fresh medium and removal of spent medium and toxic
products
• A microbial population can be maintained in the
exponential growth phase for extended periods
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Phases of growth
Bacterial population growth in a closed system (batch
culture).
Growth curve: plots of logarithmic cell number versus
incubation time.
The time required for a cell to divide and its population
to double is called the generation (doubling) time.
Arithmetic number of cells in each generation is
expressed as a power of 2, the exponent tells the number
of doublings that have occurred.
Generation time differs in different species, for e.g., The
average generation time of E.Coli is 20 minutes and that
of M. Tuberculosis is about 15-20 hours.
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There are four basic phases of growth.
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Figure 6.14
1. Lag phase
When bacteria are inoculated in to a new medium, reproduction
usually doesn’t begin immediately, means No cell division but
cells increase in size very little
The lag phase is a period of adaptation to the environment, and its
duration may vary from a few minutes to several days.
The cells are not dormant only lag in multiplication. The
microbial population has intense metabolic activity in particular,
new enzyme and several molecules are synthesized.
The length of time depends on the -kind of bacteria, the age of the
culture, and the available nutrients in the medium provided (if the
same medium used)
Time of recovery from effects of toxic products
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2. Logarithmic Growth phase (Log phase)
The log phase of growth is the period of most rapid
reproduction.
During the log phase, cells begin to show their visible
characteristics – the shape, color, density and grouping of
their colonies
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The generation time (doubling time) is constant for a
given environment for each species.
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3. Stationary phase
The overall number of bacteria remains constant due to
the rate of reproduction equals the rate of cell death
As the culture grows older and approaches the
maximum population of bacteria the medium can
support, the rate of reproduction slows and some cells
die.
The reason for cessation of the phase:
Accumulation of toxic waste products
Exhaustion of required nutrients
Changes in pH, temperature and oxygen
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4. Death phase (logarithmic decline phase)
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Each bacterial species grows at a particular minimum,
optimum, and maximum temperatures which can be referred
as cardinal temperatures.
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Temperature and Microbial Growth
Cardinal
temperatures
minimum
optimum
maximum
Temperature is a major
environmental factor
controlling microbial
growth.
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Three groups of microbes on the basis of their preferred
range of temperature
Psychrophiles :cold loving microbes
grow
grow
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C. Osmotic Pressure
and Isotonic
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The growth of the cell is inhibited as the cytoplasmic
membrane pulls away or turgid into cell wall
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The only common solute in nature that occurs over
a wide concentration range is salt [NaCl], and
microorganisms are named based on their growth
response to salt as:
Halophiles- organisms that require some salt
(NaCl) for growth.
Extreme halophiles- organisms that require high
salt concentrations for their growth.
Halotolerants- organisms that are able to grow at
moderate salt concentrations.
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Osmophiles- organisms that are able to grow in
environments high in solutes.
Xerophiles- organisms which live in dry
environments.
2. Chemical requirement
A. Oxygen
It is an important respiratory gas, and it is also a
powerful oxidizing agent that exist in many toxic
forms.
Bacteria can be divided into several general groups
on the basis of their oxygen requirements.
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1. Obligate aerobes
They require free oxygen in order to grow
They use oxygen as a final electron acceptor in aerobic
respiration.
2. Obligate anaerobes
They will not grow in the presence of free oxygen
Oxygen is a toxic substance for them which either kills
or inhibits their growth
All cells contain enzymes capable of reacting with
oxygen.
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In the presence of oxygen, all organisms normally
produce small amounts of a free radical of oxygen
called superoxide (O2-)
Superoxide is very toxic to the cell, and complete
conversion of superoxide ion into harmless oxygen
requires two step process and two enzymes.
Step 1.
2O2- + 2H+ superoxide dismutase H2O2 + O2
H2O2 is also very toxic and will kill the cells if it is not
destroyed.
Aerobic bacteria break H2O2 down by producing the
enzyme catalase.
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Step 2.
2 H2O2 catalase 2H2O +O2
3. Microaerophile
An aerobes that grow best with reduced oxygen tension. Does
not grow under anaerobic conditions.
Most organisms in this category live in a habitat such as soil,
water, or human body that provides small amounts of oxygen
but is not directly exposed to the atmosphere.
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4. Facultative aerobes
Can switch between aerobic and anaerobic types of metabolism.
Grow by fermentation or anaerobic respiration, but in the
presence of oxygen they switch to aerobic respiration.
They possess catalase and superoxide dismutase.
5. Aerotolerant
These anaerobes are not harmed by oxygen, mainly because
they possess alternative mechanisms for breaking down
peroxide and superoxide. e.g. lactobacilli uses manganese ions
or peroxidases.
They grow in the presence of air but do not possess an oxidative
metabolism
They do not use oxygen in their metabolism but carry out a
fermentative degradation of carbohydrates even in the presence
of oxygen.
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Oxygen (O2)
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B. Carbon source
Carbon is the structural backbone of living matter; it is
needed for organic compounds that make up a living cell
(energy source)
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C. Nitrogen source
Nitrogen is used primarily to form the amino group of
the amino acids of proteins and for syntheses of DNA
and RNA
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F. Trace elements (micronutrients)
Nutrients (mineral elements) required by microbes
in very small amounts
Example: Iron, copper, molybdenum, and zinc
Essential for activity of certain enzymes, usually as
cofactors
G. Water
Water accounts for 80 to 90 percent of the total
weight of cells. It is therefore the major essential
nutrient for cells
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Nutritional types of microorganisms
Most microorganisms can be categorized as belonging to
one of four major nutritional types depending on their source
of carbon and energy
Nutritional type Carbon Energy source Examples
source
Photoautotrophs CO2 Light Photosynthetic bacteria
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Incubation: growing microbes under proper conditions
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Culture media
A nutrient material prepared for the growth of
microorganisms in a laboratory
Some microorganisms can grow well on any culture
medium
Other require special media
Still others can not grow on any non living medium
Microbes that are introduced in to a culture to initiate
growth known as inoculums
The microbes that grow and multiply in or on a
culture medium are known as culture
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The culture medium must meet the following to grow
microorganisms:
It must contain the right nutrients for the specific
microorganism
It should also contain sufficient moisture
A properly adjusted pH, and a suitable level of O2
The medium must initially be sterile
Finally, the growing culture should be incubated at the proper
temperature.
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Culture media can be used to:
Grow a wide range of organisms in a particular group,
e.g. bacteria
Maintain organisms in a culture collections
Distinguish between different types of microorganisms
Select specific groups or types of microorganisms from
an environment
Help identify organisms
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Media can be classified according to three
properties:
1. Physical state – liquid, semisolid and solid
2. Chemical composition –
Synthetic (chemically defined)- contains pure
organic and inorganic compounds in an exact
chemical formula
Nonsynthetic (complex)- contains at least one
ingredient that is not chemically definable
3. Functional type – general purpose, enriched,
selective, differential, transport etc.,
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Types of culture medium
• General purpose (non-selective) medium
have nutritional content that allow the growth of a wide
range of either bacteria or yeast and moulds,
Used extensively in the laboratory to maintain
cultures and carry out total viable counts.
E.g. nutrient agar/ broth, plate count agar for bacteria
MEA/ MEB, PDA for growing moulds/ yeasts
• Selective medium
Are often used to isolate a particular groups of
microbes.
Contains ingredient that inhibit or suppress the growth
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Cont…
A wide variety of different chemicals can be added to media to
Enrichment medium
mixed culture.
It is designed to increase very small numbers of the desired types
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of organisms to detectable levels. 12/19/2023
Cont…
Differential medium
metabolism
The change helps to distinguish colonies of one organism from
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Cont…
Living medium
Some microorganisms, e.g Viruses will only grow
in the living cells of their hosts
To grow them in a laboratory a living culture of
host cells needs to be provided, e.g. chick
embryos or tissue cultures
E.g. Treponema pallidum and Mycobacterim
leprae-in live animals
Transport (carrying) medium
Used for the temporary storage of specimens
being transported to the laboratory for the
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cultivation 12/19/2023
Cont…
• Such medium ideally maintain the viability of all
organisms in the specimen with out altering their
concentration
• Contains only buffer and salt.
• The lack of carbon, nitrogen, and organic growth
factors prevents microbial multiplication
• Pure culture techniques
• Culture: population of microorganisms grown under
well defined conditions
Pure culture- one that contains one type of
microorganism
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Mixed culture-more than one microorganism 12/19/2023
Cont…
• Most microbiological works requires pure cultures
• Simpler methods for isolation of a pure culture
include: (i) pour plate method and (ii) streak
plating with a loop
• The isolation method most commonly used to get
pure cultures of bacteria is the streak plate method
• The streak plate method works well when the
organism to be isolated is present in a large
numbers
• The number must be greatly increased by selective
enrichment before it can be isolated with the streak
plate method
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Pure culture preservation and maintenance
methods
Refrigeration can be used for short term storage of
microbial cultures
Two common methods of preserving microbial cultures
for long periods are deep-freezing and lyophilization
Deep-freezing:- is a process in which a pure culture of
microbes is placed in a suspension liquid and quickly
frozen at temperature ranging from -500c to -950c
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Staining techniques
• Wet mount versus stained smear
Many microorganisms are motile and colorless, they are
invisible because of their lack of contrast with the water in
which they may reside.
Thus, staining is necessary in order to make them readily
visible.
Staining means coloring a microorganisms with a dye to make
some structures more visible.
Fixing uses heat or alcohol to kill and attach microorganisms to
a slide.
Microbial smear is a dried preparation of microbial cells on a
glass slide.
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Cont…
Bacteria are slightly negatively charged at pH 7.0
Basic dye stains bacteria
Acidic dye stains background
Simple stain
The use of a single stain or dye to create contrast
between the bacteria and background
It is aqueous or alcohol solution of single basic dye
It is used to make cellular shapes and
arrangement visible
The basic dye such as crystal violet, carbol fuchsin
or methylene blue are of the used
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Cont…
Differential stains
Differential stains such as the Gram stain and
acid-fast stain differentiate bacteria according to
their reactions to the stains
Gram stain procedure uses
Crystal violet: primary stain
Lodine: modant
Alcohol or acetone- alcohol: decolorizer
Safranin: counterstain
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Cont…
Gram positive retain the puple stain after decolorization
step
Gram negative do not and thus appear pink from the
counter stain.
Acid-fast stain
Type of differential stain that has important medical
applications
The acid-fast staining procedure is based on the
presence of a waxy lipid in the cell wall of some
bacteria called mycolic acid
If this substance is present the primary dye in the acid-
fast procedure, carbol fuchsin, will bind very tightly to
the mycolic acid and stain the cells a very bright
purple-pink color
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Cont…
If there is no mycolic acid present the cell will not
retain the dye and will stain the color of the
counter stain which is blue
Special stain
Spore and capsule stain
By simple stain the spore appears as unstained
structure in the stained cell
o They are difficult to stain by ordinary methods
The spore can be stained with a hot dye of
contrasting color, the spore appear as green
where as vegetative cell stained with counter
stain and appear as pink.
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Capsule staining
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Mainly two methods of bacterial counting
1. Direct counting methods
2. Indirect counting methods
1. Direct counts( total counting)
A. Direct microscopic count
For this purpose there are specially designed slides, Petroff
Hauser counter (slides).
A shallow well of known volume is indented in to the
surface of a microscope slide and covered with a thin
glass inscribed with squares of known area. The well is
filled with the bacterial suspension.
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The average number of bacteria in each of a series
of these squares is calculated, and then multiplied by
the factor that produces the count per milliliter.
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Advantage of the method
1. It is a quick method since no incubation time is required
to count the cells
2. It provides an idea of the total number of organisms and
the diversity with in the population.
Disadvantage of the method:
1. It is difficult to count motile bacteria
2. Since direct counts do not permit differentiation between
living and dead cells, they usually yield higher number
than a count of viable cells.
3. High concentration of cells is required, about 10
million bacteria per milliliter
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B. Electronic cell counters
Bacteria can be counted electronically by passing a
culture through a very small opening in a Coulter
particle counter
Advantage
1. For grading milk because it is quickest
2. For diagnosis of urinary tract infections
3. Used to estimate the microbial populations which
are not cultivated in lab media
Disadvantages
1. Very expensive
2. Counts the debris as one of the living bacteria
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C. Plate count (viable count)
of bacterial populations
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• Plate Counts: Perform serial dilutions of a sample
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After incubation, count colonies on plates that have 25-300 colonies
(CFUs), When too many colonies are present, cells are
overcrowded and cause inaccuracies in the count
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Pour plate
Dilutions of the bacterial suspension in the amounts of 1
ml or 0.1ml are introduced into a Petri dish.
The nutrient medium, in which the agar is kept liquid by
holding it in a water bath at about 45 - 50oC, is poured
over the sample, then mix it by gentle agitation of the
plate.
When the agar solidifies, the plate is incubated
colonies grow on the surface the agar plate as well as
deep (beneath) into the nutrient agar
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Limitation of the method
1. Some relatively heat sensitive microorganisms may
be damaged by the melted agar
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Spread plate
A 0.1 ml inoculum is added to the surface of a prepoured, solidified
agar medium. spread inoculum uniformly over the surface of the
medium with a specially shaped sterilized glass
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Disadvantages
1. It is not effective because a single cell may bring a
number of colonies if the bacterium is motile
2. This method fails for organisms that can’t be cultured
in artificial lab media
3. No single medium or incubation condition will allow
growth of all bacteria
4. Organisms that form colonies that swarm together
can’t be counted with this technique.
5. It fails for organisms that multiply very slowly
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D. Filtration
This method is used to quantitate the number of
bacteria present in a sample of water.
Membrane filters are usually employed for such
purposes.
The membrane will be placed (after filtering the
sample through it) directly onto suitable agar
medium.
The plate is then incubated, and each viable
bacterium able to grow under the conditions used
will produce a visible colony
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2. Indirect methods
A. Turbidity
Measuring turbidity (cloudiness) of a growing culture
using a colorimeter or spectrophotometer
Depends on the fact that the amount of light transmitted
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C. Metabolic activity
bacteria present
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Microbial Metabolism: Basic Concepts
Definition: Metabolism is the sum of the chemical
reactions in an organism.
1) Types of Metabolism
A) Anabolism: The enzyme-regulated energy-
requiring reactions involving the building
of complex organic molecules from
simpler ones.
• These reactions are called anabolic, or
biosynthetic, reactions
o Often involve dehydration synthesis reactions
(reactions that release water).
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o Anabolic reactions are endergonic (consume
more energy than they produce).
E.g. formation of proteins from amino acids, nucleic
acids from nucleotides, and
polysaccharides from simple sugars.
B) Catabolism: Enzyme-regulated chemical
reactions that release energy by
breaking down complex organic
compounds into simpler ones.
• These reactions are called catabolic, or
degradative, reactions.
o Are generally hydrolytic reactions (reactions
which use water and in which chemical bonds
are broken),
o Are exergonic (produce more energy than they
consume).
Catabolism provides the building blocks and furnish
the energy needed for anabolism
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Figure 5.1
2) Energy Production
Oxidation-Reduction
Nutrient molecules have energy associated with the electrons
that form bonds between them
To extract energy from organic compound and store it in chemical
forms, organisms pass electrons from one compound to another
through a series of oxidation – reduction reaction
This energy which extracted from organic compound is
concentrated into ATP bonds and serve as energy source for
energy requiring reactions
o Oxidation is the removal of electrons.
o Reduction is the gain of electrons.
Redox reaction is an oxidation reaction paired with a reduction
reaction.
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Figure 5.9
In biological systems, the electrons are often
associated with hydrogen atoms.
Biological oxidations are often dehydrogenations
Cells use oxidation reduction reactions in
catabolism to extract energy from nutrient
molecules
Figure 5.10
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The Generation of ATP
Much of the of the energy released during
oxidation- reduction reaction is trapped within the
cell by formation of ATP
ATP is a “currency of energy” for many cellular
reactions
ATP is generated by the phosphorylation of ADP
Phosphorylation – addition of P04- to a
chemical compound
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ATP + H2O ADP + Phosphate + Energy (7.5 kcal/mol)
Definition: Enzymes are organic or biological catalysts produced by all
living cells. Specific for a chemical reaction
Enzyme Components
Apoenzyme: protein portion
Cofactor: Nonprotein component
Coenzyme: Organic cofactor. Assist the enzymes by accepting
Hydrogen atoms removed from the substrate
Holoenzyme: Apoenzyme + cofactor
Important Coenzymes
NAD+= Nicotine Amide Adenine Dinucleotide
NADP+= Nicotine Amide Adenine
Dinucleotide Phosphate
FMA: Flavine Mono nucleotide
FAD: Flavine Adenine Dinucleotide
CoA: Coenzyme A
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Energy production (catabolism) in microbes
Microbes are distinguished by their great metabolic diversity
Some can sustain themselves on inorganic substances by using
pathways that are unavailable to either plants or animals
This is why they can live in diverse environments
They can catabolize various organic molecules including
carbohydrates, lipids and proteins for energy production
However, most microorganisms oxidize carbohydrates as their
primary source of cellular energy
Glucose is the most common carbohydrate energy source used
by the cells
To produces energy from glucose microorganism use two
general process:-
Cellular respiration and Fermentation
Both start with the same first step glycolysis but follow different
subsequent path way
1. Respiration
Respiration is ATP generating process in which molecules are
oxidized and the final electron acceptor is inorganic molecule
The respiration of glucose typically occurs in three principal
stages: Glycolysis, the Tricarboxylic acid cycle and the Electron
transport chain (system)
There are two types of respiration, depending on whether an
organism is an aerobe or anaerobe
1.1. Aerobic Respiration
It is characteristics of many bacteria, fungi ,protozoa and algae
Aerobic respiration is a series of enzyme catalyzed reactions in
which electrons are transferred from fuel molecules such as
glucose to oxygen as a final electron acceptor
Aerobic respiration in microorganisms can be summarized by an
equation
Glucose (C6H12O6) + 6o2+38ADP+38pi 6CO2+6H2O+38ATP
1.1.2. Glycolysis
The first stage in respiration of glucose
Glycolysis is oxidation of glucose molecule to Pyruvic
acid
This pathway is a series of ten chemical reactions each
catalyzed by a different enzymes
During glycolysis NAD+ is reduced to NADH and there is
net production of two ATP molecules by substrate level
phosphorylation
Glycolysis does not require O2
It also called Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway
Alternatives to glycolysis
1.Hexose monophosphate pathway
o Also found in most organisms
o Responsible for synthesis of pentose sugars used in nucleotide
synthesis
o Involve two unique enzymes: Transketolase and Transaldolase
o Operates simultaneously with glycoysis
2. Entner-Doudoroff pathway
o Found in Pseudomonas and related genera
o Does not involve glycolysis
3. Phosphoketolase pathway
o Found in Bifidobacterium and Leuconostoc
1.1.2. Tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA)
The TCA is the oxidation of acetyl COA (a derivative of pyruvic
acid) to CO2, with the production of some ATP, energy-containing
NADH and another reduced electron carrier, FADH2
TCA has eight steps, beginning with citric acid formation and
ending with oxaloacetic acid
In TCA four molecules of CO2 liberated by decarboxylation, six
molecules of NADH and two molecules of FADH2 formed by
oxidation –reduction reactions, and two molecules of ATP are
generated by substrate level phosphorylation
1.1.3. Election transport chain
ETC consists of a chain of special redox carriers that receive
electron from reduced carriers (NADH,FADH2) generated by
glycolysis and the TCA cycle
In eukaryotic cells the ETC is contained in the inner membrane of
mitochondria while, in prokaryotic cells, it is found in the plasma
membrane
The ETC regenerates NAD+ and FAD, which can be used again in
glycolysis and krebs cycle
The various electron transfers in the electron transport chain
generate about 34 molecules of ATP from each molecule of
glucose oxidized
In aerobic respiration among prokaryotes, a total of 38 molecules
of ATP can be generated from one molecule of glucose
1.2. Anaerobic Respiration
Some bacteria have evolved anaerobic respiratory system that
functions like aerobic cytochrome system except that it utilizes
oxygen-containing ions rather than free oxygen as the final
electron acceptor
Electron acceptor in an aerobic respiration are : NO3,NO2,
carbonates and sulfates
Pathway Eukaryote Prokaryote
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ATP produced from complete oxidation of 1 glucose using
aerobic respiration
By oxidative
By substrate- phosphorylation
Pathway level
phosphorylation From From
NADH FADH
Glycolysis 2 6 0
Intermediate step 0 6
Krebs cycle 2 18 4
Total 4 30 4
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2) Fermentation
Features of fermentation pathways
Pyruvic acid is reduced to form reduced organic acids or
alcohols.
The final electron acceptor is a reduced derivative of
pyruvic acid
NADH is oxidized to form NAD: Essential for continued
operation of the glycolytic pathways.
O2 is not required.
No additional ATP are made.
Gasses (CO2 and/or H2) may be released
Does not use the Krebs cycle or ETC
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• It is useful as tools in biochemical identification
• It is used in industry ex. Synthesis of certain
organic compounds
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Figure 5.18b
D) Types of fermentation pathways
i- Alcohol fermentation:
Produces ethyl alcohol + CO2
Carried out by a number of bacteria and yeasts
ii- Lactic acid fermentation:
Produces lactic acid
e.g. Streptococcus cremoris, Lactobacillus acidophilus
a- Homolactic fermentation
o Produces lactic acid only
b- Heterolactic fermentation
o Produces lactic acid and other compounds
iii- Formic Acid Fermentation
Produces formic acid and other products
o Formic acid -------- CO2 and H2
Chemolithotrophy
Reduced inorganic compounds serve as electron
donors in energy production
Ex. Hydrogen, reduced nitrogen compounds (nitrifying),
reduced sulfur compounds (sulfur oxidizing), and Ferrous
Iron (Fe 2+) (Iron oxidizing bacteria)
Lipid Catabolism
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Figure 5.20
Protein Catabolism
Extracellular proteases
Protein Amino acids
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