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HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY
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HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY

Page 2: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

History• 1665 Robert Hooke observed

living plant tissues (20X mag.)

• “Little boxes” or Cells• Used simple magnifying lens• Suggested all living things

are made of cells

Page 3: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Hooke's Microscope

1665

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek was inspired by this publication

Page 4: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek(1677) (“layu-wen-hook”)

–First observation of living cells (200-300X mag.)

–“Animalcules”–Single lens Microscope (Self

made)—simple microscope–Tooth plaque–Rain water–Diarrheal feces

Page 5: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek• Bacteria• Protozoa• Sperm cells• Blood cells• Microscopic

worms

Page 6: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek’smicroscope

3-4” microscope

Required good lighting and patience

Page 7: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 8: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Spontaneous Generation• The idea that life could arise

spontaneously from nonliving matter–Ex: Toads and Mice could arise from soil

–Until the 18th century this believe existed

Page 9: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

History (cont.)• 1668 Francesco

Redi–1st one to disprove spontaneous generation

Page 10: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Francesco Redi’s experiments with meat

uncovered covered

Maggots No maggotsDisproved that maggots arise from decaying meat!!

Page 11: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Proved (??) spontaneous generation in chicken broth

• Heated Nutrient Fluids and poured them into covered flasks

British clergyman John Needham’s experiments (1745)

Hot Mutton gravy

Turbid broth

“...my phial swarm’d with life...”

Page 12: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Italian priest Lazzaro Spallanzani (1765)

• Similar to Needham’s Experiments

• He showed that heating a sealed flask of meat broth prevented growth of organism

• Skeptics claimed—lack of O2 prevented growth!!

Page 13: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

The Golden Age of Microbiology!

•Louis Pasteur (finally disproved spontaneous generation after many years of debate)

•Robert Koch (proof of germ theory)

•Other pioneers in Microbiology

Page 14: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Pasteur—Father of microbiology

•1857- Louis Pasteur saves France’s wine industry•Napoleon III begged Pasteur (a chemist by training) to help solve a problem•Sailors were mutinying b/c their wine was spoiling after only a few weeks at sea•Pasteur armed with his trusty microscope accepted the challenge

Page 15: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Luis Pasteur

Page 16: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

–Spontaneous Generation finally disproved

–Boiled broth in long-s-shaped necked flasks (unsealed)•Remained sterile•Proved that microorganisms are present in air, but air does not create microbes

–Beginning of the golden age of microbiology

Louis Pasteur (1861)

Page 17: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Swan neck flask experiment disproved spontaneous generation(1861)

Page 18: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

History (cont.)• 1861 Pasteur

–Proved Microorganisms are present in nonliving matter

–Microbes can be destroyed by heat

•Aseptic Technique• Fermentation mediated by yeast, not air

–Pasteurization to prevent wine and beer spoilage (by bacteria)

Page 19: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

1857-Louis Pasteur saves France’s wine

1)Good wine contained yeast

2)Sour wine contained bacterium (Bacteria that use alcohol and produce acetic acid spoil wine by turning it to vinegar (acetic acid).

3)He reasoned that if wine is heated to destroy the harmful bacteria it wouldn’t spoil (process known as Pasteurization)

Page 20: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Pasteur’s Tomb in the Crypt of the Pasteur Institute in Paris

Page 21: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Germ Theory of Disease

• Pasteur proposed that wine spoiling in an analogy for disease (bacterial growth made the wine “sick”)

• He hypothesized in 1857 that microorganisms are responsible for infectious diseases

Page 22: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Edward Jenner (country doctor)–Milkmaid didn’t get smallpox b/c they contracted the

milder form of cowpox–Immune system cannot distinguish btw

cowpox/smallpox–Scratched a farmboy w/ a needle bearing fluid from

cowpox–Small pox Vaccine- -Vacca-cow- Vaccination w/ cowpox provided immunity for

smallpox

Page 23: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 24: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Protection from a disease from vaccination

Immunity

Page 25: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Robert Koch (1843-1910)

• German country physician who developed microbiology into a science

• Developed pure culture techniques (used potato slices to grow bacteria) developed agar later on

• Proof of the germ theory• Work with anthrax• Koch’s postulates

Page 26: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Bacillus anthracis

Page 27: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Pure Culture Key to Studying Microbes

Definition: Pure culture is a population of organism, all of which are the progeny of a single organism

-In nature, microbes almost never occur as pure cultures

Page 28: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

AGAR•Is a complex polysaccharide derived from seaweed•Was suggested by Fannie Hesse wife of Koch’s co-worker Walther Hesse•“why do your jellies and pudding stay solid in warm weather”?

•AGAR-AGAR had been used as a gelling agent in Asia for centuries•Fannie learned to use AGAR-AGAR from a Dutch neighbor in New York who spent time in Asia

Page 29: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Koch’s postulates1)Specific microorganism is present in all

cases of the disease2)Organism can be obtained in pure

culture outside of the host3)Organism when re-inoculated into host

causes the same symptoms4)Organism can be isolated in pure culture

from experimentally infected host

Page 30: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Koch’s findingsKoch and his coworkers discovered that bacteria caused•TUBERCULOSIS•CHOLERA•DIPTHERIA•TYPHOID FEVER•GONORRHEA•PNEUMONIA

Page 31: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Hungarian doctor Ignaz Semmelweis (1818-1865)

• Taught medicine in Vienna• No one connected germs w/ disease yet• Puerperal fever “childbirth fever”

caused 25-30% mortality• Nearby obstetric hospital had only a

2% death rate

Page 32: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 33: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Ignaz Semmelweis (cont.)• He made some observations• Medical Students working on

cadavers moved from the dissecting room to the maternity ward

• Midwives –Stayed only in maternity ward

Page 34: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Ignaz Semmelweis (cont.)

• Ordered students to wash hands and medical instruments in chlorinated lime

• Mortality dropped to 1.3%• By 1848, 0% mortality

Page 35: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Paul Ehrlich-hospital dermatologist

• Chemotherapy-Treatment using chemical substances

• 1910 Paul Ehrlich -”Magic bullet”

–Salvarsan (arsenic derivative)•Preparation 606

–Syphilis

Page 36: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Alexander Fleming –scottish researcher--1928

• Discovered Penicillin (fungus) by accident• Was convinced that nasal mucus had

antibacterial effects• Left his Staphylococcus culture on an agar

plate for 2 weeks-went on vacation-came back &found mold on his plate which prevented bacterial growth (a mycology lab underneath him had this rare spore drift)

Page 37: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 38: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 39: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Founders of Microbiology (Review)

•First observed microbes—Leeuwenhoek

•Proved living cells can arise only from other living cells---Pasteur

•Confirmed the Germ Theory of Disease --Koch

Page 40: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Scope of microbiology

Page 41: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Microbiology

• Bacteria• Fungi• Viruses• Immunology

Page 42: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Bacteria• Medical importance

–Gastroenteritis–Syphilis–Tetanus–Lyme disease–Plague

Page 43: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Bacteria (cont.)• Industrial importance

–Food supplements•Amino acids & Vitamins

–Organic solvents•Acetone

Page 44: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Bacteria (cont.)

• Pharmaceutical importance–Antibiotics

•polymyxin–Hormones

•Insulin

Page 45: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Biotechnology and Recombinant DNA

• Biotechnology:–The use of microorganisms, cells, or

cell components to make a product

–Foods, antibiotics, vitamins, enzymes• Recombinant DNA Technology:

–Insertion or modification of genes to produce desired proteins

Page 46: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Figure 9.1.1

Page 47: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Bacteria (cont.)• Environmental importance

–Biodegradation

•Oil spills

•Wastewater treatment

Page 48: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Figure 9.1.2

Page 49: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Gram positiveS. aureus

Page 50: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Gram negativeE. coli

Page 51: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 52: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Fungi

• Medical importance–Valley fever

–Candidiasis

–Athlete's foot

Page 53: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Fungi (cont.)• Industrial importance

–Fermentation•Wine•Beer•Bread

Page 54: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Fungi (cont.)

• Pharmaceutical importance–Antibiotics

•Penicillin

Page 55: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Fungi (cont.)

• Environmental importance–Wastewater treatment

–Degradation of complex organic matter

•Lignin in wood

Page 56: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 57: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.
Page 58: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Viruses

• Medical importance–HIV–Influenza–Rabies –Common cold

Page 59: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Viruses

• Genetic engineering–“Gene shuttles”

–Treatment of some genetic disorders

Page 60: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Microinjection• Gene gun

DNA can be inserted into a cell by:

Figure 9.6 & 7

Page 61: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

Viruses (cont.)

• Environmental importance–Unknown

Page 62: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

ADENOVIRUS

Page 63: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

HERPESVIRUS

Page 64: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• West Nile encephalitis

–West Nile Virus

–First diagnosed in the West Nile region of Uganda in 1937.

–Appeared in New York City in 1999.

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 65: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy

– Prion (infectious proteinaceous material)

– Also causes Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

(CJD)

– New-variant CJD in humans related to

cattle fed sheep offal for protein.

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 66: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Escherichia coli O57:H7

–Toxin-producing strain of E. coli

–Fist seen in 1982

–Leading cause of diarrhea worldwide.

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 67: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Invasive group A Streptococcus

–Rapidly growing bacteria cause extensive tissue damage.

–Increased incidence since 1995

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 68: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Ebola hemorrhagic fever

–Ebola virus

–Causes fever, hemorrhaging, and blood clotting

–First identified near Ebola River, Congo

–Outbreak every few years

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 69: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome

– Hantavirus

– Fist identified in 1951 in Korea as cause of hemorrhagic fever and named for Hantaan River

– A new disease involving respiratory symptoms was seen in the U.S. in 1995

– The U.S. virus, called Hantavirus Sin Nombre virus, probably came to the U.S. with rats around 1900

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 70: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)

– Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)

– First identified in 1981.

– Worldwide epidemic infecting 40 million people; 14,000 new infections everyday.

– Sexually transmitted disease affecting males and females.

– In the U.S., HIV/AIDS in people 13-24 years of age: 44% are female and 63% are African American.

Emerging Infectious Diseases

Page 71: HISTORY AND SCOPE OF MICROBIOLOGY. History 1665 Robert Hooke observed living plant tissues (20X mag.) “Little boxes” or Cells Used simple magnifying lens.

• Anthrax

– Bacillus anthracis

– In 1877, Koch proved B. anthracis causes anthrax.

– Veterinarians and agricultural workers are at risk of cutaneous anthrax.

– In 2001, dissemination of B. anthracis via mail infected 22 people.

Emerging Infectious Diseases