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PC 5 Respiration of bacteria

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Factors affecting the growth of
bacteria
The growth of bacteria is affected by
5 factors:
 Temperature
 Oxygen concentration
 pH
 External solute concentration
 Pressure
Factors affecting the growth of
bacteria
Too much or too little of any of the
factors will slow down the growth of
bacteria.
Factors that slow
down a process when
they are in short
supply
are
called
limiting factors.
Temperature
The rate of bacterial growth is affected
by temperature. Most bacteria grow well
between 20°C and 30°C.
Some
can
tolerate
much
higher
temperatures without their enzymes
becoming denatured.
Low temperatures slow
down
the
rate
of
reaction of enzymes
resulting
in
slower
growth.
Anaerobe – does not utilize
oxygen
 obligate anaerobe - lacks the
enzymes to detoxify oxygen so
cannot survive in an oxygen
environment (Clostridium spp.,
Bacteroides spp.)
 aerotolerance anaerobes – do no
utilize oxygen but can survive
and grow in its presence
(Streptococcus pyogenes)
Moisture and Drying
Moisture is very essential
for the growth of the bacteria
because water is essential
ingredient
of
bacterial
protoplasm and hence drying
is lethal to cells.
pH
 Bacterial enzymes are designed to
work at a specific pH.
 If a bacterium is placed in an
unsuitable pH its enzymes will
become denatured.
 Some bacteria can tolerate very
low (acidic) (e.g. Helicobacter
bacteria) pH and some can
tolerate very high (alkaline) pH.
Light
Darkness provides a favorable condition for
growth and viability of bacteria.
Bacteria are sensitive to ultraviolet light and
other radiations as ultraviolet rays from direct
sunlight or a mercury lamp are bactericidal.
Bacteria are also killed by ionizing radiations.
Exposure to light may influence pigment
production.
Photochromogenic
mycobacteria form pigment
only on exposure to light.
Osmotic Effect
Tolerance
to
osmotic
variation: Bacteria are more
tolerant to osmotic variation
because of the mechanical
strength of the cell wall. Except
for the mycoplasma and other
cell wall defective organisms,
the majority of the bacteria are
osmotically tolerant.
External Solute concentration
 Bacteria can gain or lose water by
osmosis
 If the external solute concentration
is
 higher than the bacterial cytoplasm
water will move out of the bacteria
(Dehydration)
 food preservation techniques are
based on this
External Solute concentration
Bacteria can gain or lose water by
osmosis If the external solute
concentration is
 lower
than
the
bacterial
cytoplasm solute concentration
water will enter the bacteria
 Cell wall will prevent bursting
in most cases
Pressure
The growth of most bacteria
is inhibited by high pressures.
Some
bacteria
can
withstand high pressures.
Pressure tolerant bacteria
for use in bioreactors can be
formed by genetic engineering
techniques.
Mechanical and Sonic Stresses
In spite of tough walls of
bacteria, they may be ruptured
by mechanical stress such as
grinding or vigorous shaking
with glass beads. Exposure to
ultrasonic vibration may also
disintegrate bacteria.
Lab procedures when growing
microorganisms
Microorganism (bacteria, fungi
& viruses) can only be seen with
an electron microscope.
Colonies (groups) of bacteria
and fungi may be grown in the
lab on agar plates
Metabolism Results in
Reproduction
Microbial growth – an increase
in a population of microbes rather
than an increase in size of an
individual
Result of microbial growth is
discrete colony – an aggregation of
cells arising from single parent cell
Reproduction results in growth
Bacteria
multiply
in
laboratory
conditions on special nutrient media,
which are (by their consistence):
solid media
liquid media
semisolid media
Bacteria growing on solid media form colonies.
Each colony represents a clone of cells derived
from a single parent cell.
In liquid media, growth of bacteria is diffuse. The
growth of bacteria in liquid medium may be
accompanied by the formation of sediment, film, wall
growth, diffuse growth.
The multiplication of bacteria in liquid media
In the clinical laboratory it is necessary:
• isolate bacteria in pure culture;
• obtain
sufficient
growth
of
bacteria
for
demonstration their properties such as study of
morphological, cultural, biochemical, antigenic and
pathogenic properties, bacteriophage and bacteriocin
susceptibility;
• determine a sensitivity to antibiotics.
Methods of laboratory diagnosis
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Bacterioscopical (Microscopic examination)
Bacteriological (Culture method)
Detection sensitivity of bacteria to antibiotics
Serological
Biological
DNA-technology test (PCR)
Bacteriological (Culture method)
A nutrient material prepared for
the growth of microorganisms
in a laboratory is called a
culture medium.
When microbes are introduced
into a culture medium to
initiate growth, they are called
an inoculum.
The microbes that grow and
multiply in or on a culture medium
are referred to as a culture.
Cultivation is the process of
growing microorganisms in culture
by taking bacteria from the
infection
site
(i.e.
in
vivo
environment) by some means of
specimen collection and growing
them in the artificial environment
of the laboratory (i.e. the in vitro
environment).
By appropriate procedures they
have to be grown separately (isolated)
on culture media and obtained as pure
cultures for study.
Once grown in culture, most
bacterial populations are easily
observed without microscopy and are
present in sufficient quantities to allow
laboratory testing to be performed.
MAIN PURPOSES OF BACTERIAL CULTIVATION
Bacterial
cultivation
has
three
main
purposes:
 To grow and isolate all bacteria present in
an infection.
 Infection and contaminants or colonizers:
To determine which of the bacteria that
grow are most likely causing infection and
which
are
likely
contaminants
or
colonizers.
 Identification and characterization: To
obtain sufficient growth of clinically
relevant bacteria to allow identification
and characterization.
COMMON INGREDIENTS OF
CULTURE MEDIA






Water
Agar
Pepton
Yeast extract
Malt extract
Blood and Serum
Classification of Media
Nutrient media can be subdivided:
1. Basal media (Simple media) - meat-peptone broth
(MPB), meat-peptone agar (MPA)
2. Synthetic media
3. Complex media
4. Special media:
a) Enriched media
b) Enrichment media;
c) Selective media;
d) Indicator and differential media;
e) Sugar media;
f) Transport media.
BASAL MEDIA are those that may be used
for growth (culture) of bacteria that do not
need enrichment of the media.
Examples: Nutrient broth, nutrient agar
and peptone water. Staphylococcus and
Enterobacteriaceae grow in these media.
Nutrient broth
Nutrient agar
Complex media
These have added ingredients for special
purposes
or
bringing
out
certain
characteristics
or
providing
special
nutrients requiered for the growth of the
bacterium under study. A complex medium
contains a variety of ingredients such as
meat juices and digested proteins. The exact
chemical composition of these ingredients
can be highly variable although a specific
amount of each ingredient is in the medium.
Synthetic or chemically defined culture media
They are prepared exclusively from pure
chemical substances and their exact composition
is known. Chemically defined media are used for
various experimental purposes. These are used
for various special studies such as metabolic
requirements
of
the
experimental
microorganisms.
Simple peptone water medium, 1% peptone
with 0.5% NaCl in water, may be considered a
semidefined medium since its composition is
approximately known.
ENRICHED MEDIA. The media are enriched usually by
adding blood, serum or egg.
Examples: Enriched media are blood agar and
Lowenstein-Jensen media. Streptococci grow in blood
agar media.
blood agar
Enrichment culture media
When a substance is added to a liquid medium
which inhibits the growth of unwanted bacteria
and favors the growth of wanted bacteria is
known as enrichment medium. This medium for
an enrichment culture is usually liquid and
provides nutrients and environmental conditions
that favor the growth of a particular microbe but
not others. The result is an absolute increase in
the numbers of the wanted bacterium relative to
the other bacteria.
SELECTIVE MEDIA
These media favour the growth of a
particular bacterium by inhibiting the
growth of undesired bacteria and allowing
growth of desirable bacteria.
Examples:
MacConkey
agar,
Lowenstein-Jensen media, tellurite media
(Tellurite inhibits the growth of most of the
throat organisms except diphtheria bacilli).
Antibiotic may be added to a medium
for inhibition.
TRANSPORT MEDIA
These media are used when speciemen cannot be cultured soon after
collection.
Examples: Cary-Blair medium, Amies
medium, Stuart medium.
Amies transport medium
STORAGE MEDIA
Media used for storing
the bacteria for a long
period of time.
Examples: Egg saline
medium, chalk cooked
meat broth.
ANAEROBIC CULTURE MEDIA
These media are used to grow
anaerobic organisms, and contain
reducing substances.
These include:
Thioglycollate broth.
Cooked meat broth.
Cooked meat broth
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