FST 305 General Microbiology: by Prof. Olusola Oyewole and Dr. Olusegun Obadina
FST 305 General Microbiology: by Prof. Olusola Oyewole and Dr. Olusegun Obadina
GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY
By
Prof. Olusola Oyewole
And
Dr. Olusegun Obadina
Know Your Lecturers
Prof. Olusola Oyewole Dr. Olusegun Obadina
Class organization
1. Learners Introduction.
2. Explanation of the Learner- Based learning.
3. Expectations.
4. Lectures
5. Practical
6. Assessment
Course Content
• Historical development and scope of microbiology.
• Functional classification and morphology of micro-
organisms, microbial nomenclature-fungi, algae,
bacteria, viruses, protozoa, Rickettsia and cultivation
and isolation of micro-organism –
• Use of microscopy, culture media, staining methods,
maintenance of cultures.
• Microbial physiology and biochemistry; reproduction;
useful and harmful micro-organisms.
• Public health considerations of micro-orgnisms.
This Course
LECTURES PRACTICALS
• Basic knowledge of the • The theory aspects of the
diversity of microorganisms. module will be elaborated
These are; bacteria, viruses, through relevant laboratory
protozoa and fungi. Their exercises to illustrate the
biology as it relates to their principles and concepts of
economic importance in the the subject matter
environment are discussed
in detail.
General Overview. I
This Course is a study of organisms that
can not be seen with the unaided eye
unless with the help of a microscope.
They are referred to as
microorganisms. More commonly
they are called microbes. These are
bacteria, viruses, protozoa and fungi.
Although viruses are strictly not
organisms, they too will be discussed
under the same title for convenience.
Mycology which is the study of fungi
includes some groups like the
mushrooms with macroscopic fruiting
structures, which appear seasonally
above the ground. The study of
microbes is called microbiology.
General Overview. II
The module starts with the history of
microbiology; the discovery of
microbes and the development of
sterile culture techniques, and goes
on to explore the diversity of
microbes, their major biological
characteristics and economic
importance. Examples of laboratory
exercises meant to familiarise the
students with microbiological
techniques such as, media
preparation, isolation, identification,
culture maintenance, growth
measurements, staining techniques
and preservation are presented
What Is Needed To Benefit from the
Course
• ● Attendance in Lectures – Learner Based Approach
• Relevant reference text books.
• Students Home assignments and
• ● Laboratory equipment such as a microscope, an
autoclave, oven, an incubator (various temperatures),
Petri plates, materials for bacterial and fungal media
preparations, various staining chemicals,
identification manuals and other laboratory
equipment and materials for standard microbiology
work
• ● Capacity to facilitate for site visits/field trips.
The Learning Plan I.
Topic Practical
Viruses
Structure and characteristics Study typical drawings of lambda
virus
Classification Compare drawings of different
structures of viruses
Fungi
Structure and characteristics Study visit to a University laboratory
to observe prepared slides
Classification of fungi Study pictures and drawings of
various types of fungi
Identification Study visit to a research institutes for
identification demonstrations
The learning Plan. III
Protozoa
Structure and Comparative pictures
characteristics and videos
classification Examine classification
cladograms
Nutrition Examples of malaria
parasites
Growth and Life cycle of a malaria
reproduction parasite
Module 1
• you will learn about the history of microbiology and appreciate the
discoveries of microbes, microscopes and the development of the
sterile culture technique. Microorganisms are quite diverse in their
distribution, appearance, physiology and metabolism, including
their genetics. Bacteriology is a branch of microbiology, which deals
with bacteria, which can be classified on the basis of their structure,
cellular metabolism or differences in their cellular chemistry.
However, classification based on these parameters has limitations
in use as a difficulty arises whether the separation of bacteria is
between species or between strains of the same species. A more
reliable form of bacterial classification uses molecular systematics
based on genetic techniques. As a result of this work prokaryotic
microbes are taxonomically divided into two groups called Bacteria
and Archaea,
A Brief History
• Early Food Preservation
• 900 AD – “Food Poisoning” Recognized
• 1795-Appert Developed Canning
• 1854-1864-FOOD MICROBIOLOGY BECOMES A
SCIENCE
– Louis Pasteur
Food Preservation Methods
Cheese, Beer, Bread, Sauerkraut, Summer
Sausage
• 5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascomycota nilvi.
• 6. http://www.kcom.edu/faculty/chamberlain/Website/
Lects/Fungi.htm Lecture notes on Fungi. Accessed on
(02/04/2007).
• 7. http://pathmicro.med.sc.edu/mycology/mycology-1.htm A
book of Mycology.
Module 3
VIRUSES
Specific learning Objectives
After going through this unit, the learner should be
able to;
• 1. describe the basic structure of viruses.
• 2. compare and contrast the structure of
viruses with that of bacteria.
• 3. state the characteristics used to classify
viruses.
• 4. list the taxonomic groups of viruses.
• 5. explain the process of viral reproduction.
Learning Activity
In this activity you will learn that viruses are
clearly much smaller in size than most
bacteria. They possess characteristcs that are
different from bacterial cells. While bacteria
are living organisms, viruses are non-living
agents or particles that can infect all forms of
life, including members of the Bacteria,
Archaea and Eukaryotes.
Lecture Scope
• 1. The structure of Viruses
• 2. Classification of viruses and criteria used
for their classification
• 3. Cultivation and different assays; plaque,
counting, quantal, and hemagglutination
• 4. Reproduction method in viruses
• 5. The importance of viruses in the
environment
Shapes of Virus
• Some are isometric or rod- • Virus classification is based
like and others are helical. on the genomic structure
Viruses contain either the (RNA or DNA), particle
ribonucleic acid (RNA) or structure and the presence
deoxyribonucleic acid or absence of a viral
(DNA), but never both, envelope. In this activity,
hence they are referred to you will learn about the
as either DNA or RNA different taxonomic groups
viruses. of viruses, their methods of
• Check:http:// cultivation, quantification
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virus (assay) techniques, their
reproduction and finally
economic importance.
Lecture Focus . I
1. Viruses are intracellular obligate parasites, which
means that they cannot reproduce or express
their genes without the help of a living cell.
2.A large diversity of phage structures and
functions exist.
3. Since viruses are nonliving, they are commonly
referred to by the organisms they infect; and
each virus particle, often called a virion, consists
of nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) surrounded by a
protective protein coat, the capsid.
Lecture Focus. II
1.Bacteriophage: Viruses that infect bacteria (‘phago’ means ‘to eat’).
Bacteriophages have been studied extensively since bacteria affected by
them could be cultivated much more readily.
2. Virion: A virus particle when it is on the outside of its host cell, and
consists of either DNA or RNA surrounded by a protective cover called
capsid.
3. Nucleocapsid: The viral capsid together with the nucleic acid that is tightly
packed within the protein coat.
4. Cytopathic effect: Are characteristic changes of the cells’ appearance
observed in tissue culture cells when they are attacked by viruses. It
is one of the methods used to identify viruses in cultured cells.
5.Titer: The titer of the virus, or the endpoint, is the dilution at which 50% of
the inoculated hosts are infected (ID50, infective dose) or killed
(LD50, lethal dose).
6. Hyperplasia: Is excessive cell division or the growth of abnormally large
cells, resulting in the production of swollen or distorted areas of the
organism.
Viral Structure
Drawing Electron Micrograph
Drawing Electron Micrograph
Helical ( Tobacco mosaic virus
CLASSIFICATION
1. The most widely used classification criteria for animal
viruses are based on a number of characteristics: i)
genome structure, ii) particle structure, and iii)
presence or absence of viral envelope.
2. Based on these criteria, animal viruses are divided into
a number of families, whose names end in –viridae (14
families of RNA-containing viruses and 7 families of
DNA-containing viruses).
3. Other non-taxonomic groupings of viruses include;
animal, plant or bacteria-infecting viruses. The
groupings are based on the route of transmission
(enteric, respiratory, sexually transmitted, etc).
Classification Continued
• The primary difficulty in studying animal viruses is not so much in
purifying the virions as it is in obtaining enough cells to infect the
host tissue. Some viruses can only be cultivated in the living tissues
of animals.
• Others may be grown in embryonated chicken eggs. When animal
viruses can be grown in isolated animal cells, the host cells are
cultivated in the laboratory by a technique called cell culture or
tissue culture. In order to quantify the amount of virus present in
any sample, the method commonly used is known as the plaque
essay. A number of other methods can be used for quantifying the
number of virions in a sample. These include the counting of virions
using an electron microscope, quantal essays, and in the case of
some animal viruses, the hemagglutination method is used.
Viral Replication
Reproduction
• The process of reproduction in viruses is divided into
five stages as follows; attachment (adsorption),
penetration, replication, assembly and release.
• A virus attaches to the host cell and enters by
endocytosis.
• The capsid protein dissociates and the viral RNA is
transported to the nucleus.
• In the nucleus, the viral polymerase complexes
transcribe and replicate the RNA. Viral mRNAs migrate
to cytoplasm where they are translated into protein.
• Then the newly synthesized virions bud from infected
cell.
Importance of Virus
• Viruses attack a number of plants and animals, causing
enormous economic loss.
• Check: http://en.wikipendia.org/wiki/PorcineReproductive
and Respiratory Virus explains how the Porcine
Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus (PRRSV) has
caused enormous financial and economic losses in the USA.
• There are several possible consequences to a cell that is
infected by a virus, and ultimately this may determine the
pathology of a disease caused by the virus.
• However, viruses are also beneficially used in the
production of vaccines, as gene carriers in the production
of genetically modified organisms, and other molecular
studies of a cell.
Further relevant Reading
• 1. Frobisher, M., Hinsdill, R.D., Crabtree, K.T., and Goodheart,
C.R.1974. Fundamentals of Microbiology. Sounders College
Publishing, West Washington Square, Philadelphia, PA 19105.
• 2. Nester, E.W., Anderson, D.G., Roberts (Jr), C.E., Pearsall,
N.N., and Nester, M.T. 2001. Microbiology: A Human Perspective.
McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
• 3. Radetsky, Peter. 1994. The Invisible Invaders: Viruses and
the Scientists Who Pursue Them. Backbay Books.
• 4. http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/virus (Accessed on
01/04/2007).
• 5. http://www.virology.net/Big_Virology/BVHomePage.html -
Book of Viruses. Accessed on 01/04/2007.
•
Module 4.
• PROTOZOA
Classification
General overview . I
protozoa which belong to the Kingdom Protista constitute a group of
eukaryotic cells.
They have a membrane-bound nucleus as well as the other membrane-bound
organelles that are characteristic of higher animals.
The protozoa are microscopic, unicellular organisms that lack photosynthetic
capability, usually are motile at least at some stage in their life cycle, and
reproduce most often by asexual fission. Protozoa have specialized
structures for movement such as cilia, flagella, or pseudopodia.
Since they live in aquatic environments, water, oxygen, and other small
molecules readily diffuse into the cell through the cell membrane. In
addition protozoa take in food either by pinocytosis (ingestion of fluid into
a cell forming an internal vesicle) or phagocytosis (engulfing solid food
particles and forming a food vacuole) as a means of obtaining water and
food.
Classification of protozoa shows that they are not a unified group, but appear
along the evolutionary continuum; and the reason that they are lumped
together in the group known as protozoa is because they are all single-
celled eukaryotic organisms that lack chlorophyll. Protozoa are divided
into three phyla and these are; Sarcomastigophora, Ciliophora and
Apicomplexa
General Overview. II
. Protozoa are divided into three phyla and these are; Sarcomastigophora, Ciliophora
and Apicomplexa. The phylum Sarcomastigophora is divided into two Sub-phyla,
which are Sarcodina or amoeboid protozoa such as Entamoeba histolytica, and
Mastigophora or Kinetoplasta the flagellated protozoa such as Trypanosoma
brucei. Ciliophora are the ciliated protozoa such as Balantidium coli and
Apicomplexa are protozoa that form spores such as plasmodium falciparum.
All these parasites are intracellular because they penetrate the host cell except
Ciliophora which live in the lumen of the large intestine. A majority of protozoa are
free-living and found in marine, freshwater, or terrestrial environments.
On land, protozoa are abundant in muddy soils at the bottom of ponds and ditches as
well as in or on plants and animals. Specialize
d protozoan habitats include the guts of termites, roaches, ruminants and humans.
There are many diseases that protozoa cause other than those considered
important by the World Health Organisation (WHO) such as malaria, sleeping
sickness, Chagas disease and leishmaniasis. These Protozoa are an important part
of the food chain (e.g. they eat bacteria and algae and, in turn, serve as food for
larger species). Protozoa help to maintain an ecological balance in the soil by
feeding on vast numbers of bacteria and algae (a single paramecium can ingest as
many as 5 million bacteria in a day).
General Overview. III
• Other protozoa are important in sewage disposal because most of the
nutrients they consume are metabolized to carbon dioxide and water,
which results in a large decrease in total sewage solids. Some species
however are parasitic, living on or in other host organisms.