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Title: Environmental Microbiology 1: Introduction to Environmental Microbiology
Description: The first set of lecture notes details the history of environmental biology, the interrelations with other fields within microbiology, and the types of microbes that will be discussed further in the future. This course is a third year college course and the notes are derived from class lectures.
Description: The first set of lecture notes details the history of environmental biology, the interrelations with other fields within microbiology, and the types of microbes that will be discussed further in the future. This course is a third year college course and the notes are derived from class lectures.
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Unit 1: Introduction to Environmental
Microbiology
Introduction
● History of Environmental Microbiology
● Interrelations with other fields of Microbiology
● Modern Environmental Microbiology
● Types of Microbes (Viruses, Bacteria, Fungi, Algae, Protozoa)
What is Environmental Microbiology?
It has two components:
1
...
Microbiology
Definition: study of applied aspects of microorganisms on environment and human
activities, health, and welfare
The impact on human activities may be:
a
...
microbial diseases
b
...
through action of animals, plants, and ecosystems
Microbial Actions May be:
a
...
Detrimental
● Transmission of bacterial & viral pathogens of human
History of Environmental Microbiology
In 1970, environmental microbiology emerged as a new science
Microbial ecology: interaction of microbes with the environment
→Includes air, water, and soil
Various Events Which Occurred in 1970
Emergence of water-borne and food-born pathogens (threat to human and animal
diseases)
Contamination of surface and groundwater (organic and inorganic chemicals)
Discovery of various protozoa
Contamination of imported food
Chemical pollutants:
a
...
Economic impact - high cost of clean up
Bioremediation
Relationship with Other Fields of Microbiology
Aquatic microbiology
Soil microbiology
Biotechnology
Diagnostic microbiology
Occupational Health/Infection Control
Waste bioremediation
Aeromicrobiology
Water Quality
Industrial microbiology
Food microbiology
Modern Environmental Microbiology
1
...
Biogeochemistry
● Carbon cycle
● Nitrogen
● Sulfur Cycle
● Control of loss of fixed nitrogen
3
...
Aeromicrobiology
● Collection and detection of pathogens in the air environment
● Movement of microbes in the air
5
...
Food quality
● Organic & inorganic contamination
● Detection and identification of pathogens
● Elimination or control of pathogens
7
...
Wastewater treatment
● Sewage water treatment
● Biodegradation
9
...
Biotechnology
● Detection of pathogens
Microbiology Diversity in the Environment
Two types of microbes:
a
...
Cellular: two types
i
...
Eukaryotes
● Fungi
● Algae
● Protozoa
Introduction to Viruses
In a biological sense, a virus is:
● Any acellular entity (not organism) having both nucleic acid (either DNA, or RNA,
never both) surrounded by capsid protein and has capability to cause infection in
living cells or organisms
Viruses are NOT living things
Viruses lack the ability to reproduce independently
● Require hosts to multiply
● Replicates only in living cells
Viruses
...
For example, viruses
...
-
do not grow
-
do not respond to stimuli
-
have no metabolic activity
-
are unable to replicate without a host cell
All viruses are potentially infectious
Hosts of Viruses
All living organisms are infected by viruses:
-
Animal viruses
-
Human viruses
-
Plant viruses
-
Bacterial viruses (Bacteriophages)
-
Insect viruses (Entomoviruses)
Algal viruses (Phycoviruses)
Fungal viruses (Mycoviruses)
Viroids
-
Naked ssRNA molecules, no capsid protein
-
They are not viruses
-
1/10 of the size of the smallest virus
-
300-400 nucleotides long
Known to cause serious disease in plants
● Potato spindle tuber disease
● Citrus exocortis
● Carnation stunt disease
Prions
-
Protein in nature
-
Associated with nervous tissue
-
Cause diseases in animals and human beings, not in plants
Examples
● Kuru disease
● Scrapie disease of sheep
● Mad cow disease
Bacteria
Unicellular, prokaryotic cell, reproduce by binary fission
This group includes
Archaebacteria
-
Differ from true bacteria in that:
-
their rRna is 16s
-
Cell wall does not have peptidoglycan
-
The cell membrane is a single layer of glycero-hydrocarbon-glycerol
chains instead of bi-layer of phospholipids
-
Their ribosomes are insensitive to antibiotics
-
Live in extreme environments
True Bacteria
-
Read above
Cyanobacteria
-
They are also known as blue-green algae, but are prokaryotes
-
They are autotrophic
-
They have chlorophyll-a pigments and can perform photosynthesis
-
They also fix atmospheric nitrogen
Examples:
● Nostoc
● Anabaena
● Oscillatoria
Rickettsia, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia
-
All are prokaryotes
-
The Rickettsiae and Chlamydiae are intracellular parasites of eukaryotes
-
Rickettsiae are tiny rods transmitted by arthropods and multiply only in living
tissue
-
The Chlamydiae are among the smallest bacteria
-
Mycoplasma are associated with lung disorders
Myxobacteria
-
They are also called fruiting bacteria as they form fruit bodies
-
Have multicellular specialized like slime molds
-
Most complex in behavior
Actinomycetes
-
They are gram positive prokaryotes
-
They are filamentous bacteria
-
Mostly soil living
-
Most of these produce antibiotics
-
Ex
Title: Environmental Microbiology 1: Introduction to Environmental Microbiology
Description: The first set of lecture notes details the history of environmental biology, the interrelations with other fields within microbiology, and the types of microbes that will be discussed further in the future. This course is a third year college course and the notes are derived from class lectures.
Description: The first set of lecture notes details the history of environmental biology, the interrelations with other fields within microbiology, and the types of microbes that will be discussed further in the future. This course is a third year college course and the notes are derived from class lectures.