Microbiología General: Ing. Maryoris E. Soto Lopez
Microbiología General: Ing. Maryoris E. Soto Lopez
Microbiología General: Ing. Maryoris E. Soto Lopez
(302113)
• Microscopia
• Objetivos
• Resultados y documentación
• Análisis de Resultados
• Bibliografía
Seminarios…
1. Elementos comunes y diferenciales entre procariotas y Eucariotas –
2. Técnicas avanzadas de Microscopía –
3. Estructuras accesorias de bacterias y su relación con la resistencia Microbiana –
4. Tipos de resistencia microbiana –
5. Clasificación de los antimicrobianos –
6. Proteínas relacionadas a los procesos de división celular –
7. Influencia de la composición del medio de cultivo en la taza de crecimiento microbiana –
8. Tecnología del ADN recombinante –
9. RNA´s y aplicaciones en Biotecnología –
10. Procesos de esporulación –
11. Activación de la respuesta adaptativa de bacterias y procesos de formación de biofilmes –
12. Probióticos: Mecanismos de acción –
13. Virus y su relación con el cáncer –
14. Enfermedades autoinmunes y reemergentes –
15. Rol del Ingeniero de Alimentos en Epidemiología –
16. Desarrollo de vacunas –
The Microbial World and Us…
• Relationship between microorganisms
and our lives
• Beneficial effects
• Waste treatment.
Microorganisms
• Microbes, also called microorganisms, are minute living things that individually are usually
too small to be seen with the unaided eye.
• The group includes bacteria, fungi (yeasts and molds), protozoa, and microscopic algae.
• It also includes viruses, those noncellular entities sometimes regarded as straddling the
border between life and nonlife
Microorganisms…
• Uncomfortable infections,
• Marine and freshwater microorganisms form the basis of the food chain in oceans,
lakes, and rivers.
• Soil microbes help break down wastes and incorporate nitrogen gas from the air into
organic compounds, thereby recycling chemical elements among soil, water, living
organisms, and air.
Microorganisms…
• vitamins,
• organic acids,
• enzymes,
• alcohols,
• and many drugs.
• The system of nomenclature (naming) for organisms in use today was established
in 1735 by Carolus Linnaeus.
• Scientific names are latinized because Latin was the language traditionally used
by scholars.
Escherichia coli
Species
Genus name
• The organism is referred to by both the genus and the specific epithet, and both
names are underlined or italicized.
Naming and Classifying Microorganisms
Initial of
the Genus E. Coli Species
name
• Bacillus (rodlike), coccus (spherical or ovoid), and spiral (corkscrew or curved) are
among the most common shapes, but some bacteria are starshaped or square.
• Individual bacteria
may form pairs,
chains, clusters, or
other groupings; such
formations are usually
characteristic of a
particular genus or
species of bacteria.
Bacteria
• Bacteria are enclosed in cell walls that are largely
composed of a carbohydrate and protein complex
called peptidoglycan.
• The most typical fungi are molds. Molds form visible masses called
mycelia, which are composed of long filaments (hyphae) that branch
and intertwine. The cottony growths sometimes found on bread and
fruit are mold mycelia.
• All living cells have RNA and DNA, can carry out chemical
reactions, and can reproduce as self-sufficient units.
• When microscopic organisms with characteristics of animals and plants were discovered
late in the seventeenth century, a new system of classification was needed.
• Still, biologists couldn’t agree on the criteria for classifying these new organisms until the
late 1970s. In 1978, Carl Woese devised a system of classification based on the cellular
organization of organisms.
Classification of microorganisms
It groups all organisms in three domains as follows:
3. Eukarya, which includes the following: ● Protists (slime molds, protozoa, and algae) ● Fungi (unicellular
yeasts, multicellular molds, and mushrooms) ● Plants (mosses, ferns, conifers, and flowering plants) ●
Animals (sponges, worms, insects, and vertebrates)
A Brief History of Microbiology…
CLASSWORK…