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Microbiología General: Ing. Maryoris E. Soto Lopez

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Microbiología General

(302113)

Ing. Maryoris E. Soto Lopez


PhD. y MSc. En Ciencia y Tecnología de Alimentos
Docente de planta
Programa de Ingeniería de Alimentos
Universidad de Córdoba
Introducción a la Microbiología
• El mundo microbiano y tu: los microorganismos en nuestras vidas!!!

• Introducción y temas principales de la microbiología.

• La microbiología en el contexto histórico

• Microscopia

• Nombrando y clasificando microorganismos


Competencias obtenidas en esta
unidad…
• Reconocer la microbiología como ciencia y los microorganismos como su objeto de
estudio;

• Listar los principales eventos históricos que contribuyeron para establecer la


microbiología como ciencia;

• Reconocer la importancia de los Postulados de Koch y sus aplicaciones;

• Describir las características generales de los principales grupos de microorganismos;

• Reconocer el impacto de los microorganismos en la vida humana.


Evaluación
Parcial: 40%
Quices: 15%
Cuaderno de Protocolo: 25%
Seminario: 10%
Articulo: 10%

1er Parcial: 7 de Octubre


2do Parcial: 18 de Noviembre
3er Parcial: 16 de Diciembre
Cuaderno de Protocolo
• Titulo de la práctica

• Objetivos

• Flujograma (Revisado el día de


la práctica)

• 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

• Detrimental effects (diseases and


spoilage)

• Beneficial effects

• Ecological relevance (Recycle of


elements – C y N)

• Commercial and industrial


applications (Foods, Chemical Agents
and drugs)

• 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…

We tend to associate these small


organisms only with:

• Uncomfortable infections,

• Common inconveniences such as


spoiled food,

• Major diseases such as AIDS.

However, the majority of


microorganisms actually help maintain
the balance of life in our environment.
Microorganisms…

• 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…

Certain microbes play


important roles in
photosynthesis, a food and
oxygen-generating process
that is critical to life on Earth.
Microorganisms…

Humans and many other


animals depend on the
microbes in their intestines for:
• Digestion and the synthesis
of some vitamins that their
bodies require,

• B vitamins for metabolism

• Vitamin K for blood clotting.


Microorganisms…
Microorganisms also have many
commercial applications.

They are used in the synthesis of


such chemical products as:

• vitamins,
• organic acids,
• enzymes,
• alcohols,
• and many drugs.

For example, microbes are used to


produce acetone and butanol, and
the vitamins B2 (riboflavin) and B12
(cobalamin) are made biochemically.
Microorganisms…

• The process by which microbes


produce acetone and butanol was
discovered in 1914 by Chaim
Weizmann, a Russian-born
chemist working in England.

• With the outbreak of World War I


in August of that year, the
production of acetone became
very important for making cordite
(a smokeless form of gunpowder
used in munitions).

• Weizmann’s discovery played a


significant role in determining the
outcome of the war.
Microorganisms…

• The food industry also uses


microbes in producing, for example,
vinegar, sauerkraut, pickles, soy
sauce, cheese, yogurt, bread, and
alcoholic beverages.

• In addition, enzymes from microbes


can now be manipulated to cause
the microbes to produce substances
they normally don’t synthesize,
including cellulose, digestive aids,
and drain cleaner, plus important
therapeutic substances such as
insulin.

• Microbial enzymes may even have


helped produce your favorite pair of
jeans.
Microorganisms…

• Though only a minority of


microorganisms are pathogenic
(disease-producing), practical
knowledge of microbes is necessary
for medicine and the related health
sciences.

• For example, hospital workers must


be able to protect patients from
common microbes that are
normally harmless but pose a
threat to the sick and injured.
Microorganisms…
• Today we understand that microorganisms are
found almost everywhere. Yet not long ago,
before the invention of the microscope, microbes
were unknown to scientists.

• Thousands of people died in devastating


epidemics, the causes and transmission of which
were not understood.

• Entire families died because vaccinations and


antibiotics were not available to fight infections.
We can get an idea of how our current concepts
of microbiology developed by looking at a few
historic milestones in microbiology that have
changed our lives.

• First, however, we will look at the major groups of


microbes and how they are named and classified.
Naming and Classifying Microorganisms

• 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.

• Scientific nomenclature assigns each organism two names—the genus (plural:


genera) is the first name and is always capitalized; the specific epithet (species
name) follows and is not capitalized.

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

• By custom, after a scientific name has been


mentioned once, it can be abbreviated with the
initial of the genus followed by the specific epithet.

Initial of
the Genus E. Coli Species
name

• Scientific names can, among other things, describe


an organism, honor a researcher, or identify the
habitat of a species.
Naming and Classifying Microorganisms

• For example, consider Staphylococcus aureus, a


bacterium commonly found on human skin. Staphylo-
describes the clustered arrangement of the cells; -
coccus indicates that they are shaped like spheres.

• The specific epithet, aureus, is Latin for golden, the


color of many colonies of this bacterium.

• The genus of the bacterium Escherichia coli (eshʹer-IK-


ē-ah KŌ-lī, or KŌ-lē) is named for a scientist, Theodor
Escherich, whereas its specific epithet, coli, reminds us
that E. coli live in the colon, or large intestine.
Types of microorganisms
• Bacteria (singular: bacterium) are
relatively simple, single-celled
(unicellular) organisms.

• Because their genetic material is not


enclosed in a special nuclear
membrane, bacterial cells are called
prokaryotes, from Greek words
meaning prenucleus.

• Prokaryotes include both bacteria and


archaea.
Bacteria
• Bacterial cells generally appear in one of several shapes.

• 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.

• Bacteria generally reproduce by dividing into two


equal cells; this process is called binary fission.

• For nutrition, most bacteria use organic chemicals,


which in nature can be derived from either dead or
living organisms.

• Some bacteria can manufacture their own food by


photosynthesis, and some can derive nutrition
from inorganic substances.

• Many bacteria can “swim” by using moving


appendages called flagella.
Archaea
• Like bacteria, archaea consist of prokaryotic cells, but
if they have cell walls, the walls lack peptidoglycan.

• Archaea, often found in extreme environments, are


divided into three main groups. The methanogens
produce methane as a waste product from
respiration.

• The extreme halophiles (halo = salt; philic = loving)


live in extremely salty environments such as the Great
Salt Lake and the Dead Sea.

• The extreme thermophiles (therm = heat) live in hot


sulfurous water, such as hot springs at Yellowstone
National Park.

• Archaea are not known to cause disease in humans.


Fungi
• Fungi (singular: fungus) are eukaryotes (ū-KAR-ē-ōts), organisms whose
cells have a distinct nucleus containing the cell’s genetic material (DNA),
surrounded by a special envelope called the nuclear membrane.

• Organisms in the Kingdom Fungi may be unicellular or multicellular.


Large multicellular fungi, such as mushrooms, may look somewhat like
plants, but unlike most plants, fungi cannot carry out photosynthesis.

• True fungi have cell walls composed primarily of a substance called


chitin. The unicellular forms of fungi, yeasts, are oval microorganisms
that are larger than bacteria.

• 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.

• Fungi can reproduce sexually or asexually. They obtain nourishment by


absorbing solutions of organic material from their environment—
whether soil, seawater, freshwater, or an animal or plant host.
Organisms called slime molds have characteristics of both fungi and
amebae
Protozoa
• Protozoa (singular: protozoan) are unicellular eukaryotic microbes.
Protozoa move by pseudopods, flagella, or cilia.

• Amebae move by using extensions of their cytoplasm called


pseudopods (false feet).

• Other protozoa have long flagella or numerous shorter appendages


for locomotion called cilia.

• Protozoa have a variety of shapes and live either as free entities or


as parasites (organisms that derive nutrients from living hosts) that
absorb or ingest organic compounds from their environment.

• Some protozoa, such as Euglena (ū-GLĒ-nah), are photosynthetic.

• They use light as a source of energy and carbon dioxide as their


chief source of carbon to produce sugars.

• Protozoa can reproduce sexually or asexually.


Algae
• Algae (singular: alga) are photosynthetic eukaryotes with a wide
variety of shapes and both sexual and asexual reproductive forms.

• The algae of interest to microbiologists are usually unicellular. The


cell walls of many algae are composed of a carbohydrate called
cellulose.

• Algae are abundant in freshwater and saltwater, in soil, and in


association with plants.

• As photosynthesizers, algae need light, water, and carbon dioxide


for food production and growth, but they do not generally require
organic compounds from the environment.

• As a result of photosynthesis, algae produce oxygen and


carbohydrates that are then utilized by other organisms, including
animals.

• Thus, they play an important role in the balance of nature.


Virus
• Viruses are very different from the other microbial groups
mentioned here. They are so small that most can be seen only
with an electron microscope, and they are acellular (not
cellular).

• Structurally very simple, a virus particle contains a core made of


only one type of nucleic acid, either DNA or RNA. This core is
surrounded by a protein coat, which is sometimes encased by a
lipid membrane called an envelope.

• All living cells have RNA and DNA, can carry out chemical
reactions, and can reproduce as self-sufficient units.

• Viruses can reproduce only by using the cellular machinery of


other organisms. Thus, on the one hand, viruses are considered
to be living only when they multiply within host cells they infect.
In this sense, viruses are parasites of other forms of life.

• On the other hand, viruses are not considered to be living


because they are inert outside living hosts.
Classification of microorganisms
• Before the existence of microbes was known, all organisms were grouped into either the
animal kingdom or the plant kingdom.

• 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:

1. Bacteria (cell walls contain a protein–carbohydrate complex called peptidoglycan)

2. Archaea (cell walls, if present, lack peptidoglycan)

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…

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