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Title: Microbial Growth
Description: This summary tells us about the growth and decline phases of bacteria as well as how they grow best in different media, and how to culture them depending on their requirements
Description: This summary tells us about the growth and decline phases of bacteria as well as how they grow best in different media, and how to culture them depending on their requirements
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Module: BIOM - 1009
Lecturer: Dr Martin
Date: 15/11/16
Microbial Growth
o
Microbes can be present in a number of samples depending on what they prefer in terms of their
environment, some environments include:
Patients
Food
Water
Agriculture
o
Knowing the key to certain microbial organisms’ growth can help us identify what will kill or prevent the
growth of them
This can be physical or chemical
o
To grow a sample, you must first sterilize the area and remove all pre-existing bacteria, this can be done in
the following ways:
Heat
This is the most widely used form
It may kill endospores
Examples include: boiling or incineration
Irradiation
This will destroy the bacteria’s nucleic acids
Examples include: microwaves and gamma waves
Filtration
This is important for areas that can’t be physically or chemically tampered with, such as
antibiotics, as it will physically filter the bacteria out
Chemicals
These are toxic chemicals that kill bacteria
Such as: formaldehyde
o
There are 4 phases of bacterial growth (see right):
Lag
This is when the bacteria are first introduced to their new media/environment
They are examining their surroundings
They are still metabolically active
This can last an hour, to several days
Log
This is when rapid cell growth occurs
The population will double every
generation
The microbes are most sensitive to
adverse conditions during this phase
Such as antibiotics and
antimicrobial agents
Stationary
This stage occurs when the death rate =
the reproductive rate
They begin to encounter stresses such as:
Lack of nutrients, water, space, oxygen etc
...
coli
o They grow at 37°C
o They contaminate food and immunocompromised individuals
o They cause fever, muscle aches etc
...
5 and 7
...
0
Many foods are preserved in acids
Such as pickles
Osmotic Pressure
Microbes obtain almost all their nutrients from the surrounding water solution
Therefore, the water availability is very important
Environments are available with different osmotic pressures (tonicity):
Isotonic
o These environments have an equal amount of solute as the bacteria have
inside their cells
Hypertonic
o This is when the solute concentration outside the bacteria is higher than
inside, so all the water diffuses out
Hypotonic
o This is when the solute concentration is less than inside the bacteria and so
all the water diffuses inside the bacteria
Chemicals
Microbes require both macro and micro elements in their surrounding solution:
Macro
o Nitrogen for amino acids
o Phosphorus for nucleic acids and phospholipids
Micro
o Trace elements of Ca, Cu, Fe, Mg, Zn etc
...
available in the sample will give an
indication to the number of cells
Bacterial inoculum size
This is important for antibiotic testing
o
Bacteria counting comes with many errors however:
Suitability of the culture
Length of incubation
Pipetting errors
Human errors and cell clumping
Title: Microbial Growth
Description: This summary tells us about the growth and decline phases of bacteria as well as how they grow best in different media, and how to culture them depending on their requirements
Description: This summary tells us about the growth and decline phases of bacteria as well as how they grow best in different media, and how to culture them depending on their requirements