This document discusses bacterial growth and the requirements for bacterial growth. It covers the following key points:
1. Bacterial growth occurs through binary fission where a single bacterium divides into two daughter cells. The number of bacterial cells increases exponentially in the exponential growth phase until resources are depleted.
2. Bacteria require carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, water, and trace elements as nutrients for growth. Carbon is obtained from organic sources or carbon dioxide. Nitrogen sources include amino acids, ammonia, and nitrates.
3. In addition to macro nutrients, bacteria may also require small amounts of organic growth factors like vitamins, amino acids, and nucleic acid precursors to support their metabolism and growth
This presentation is made for S.Y.Bsc. Students.
The presentation includes Drinking water microbiology. The presentation includes information about coliform, indicator organisms as well as purification methods of drinking water.
This presentation is made for S.Y.Bsc. Students.
The presentation includes Drinking water microbiology. The presentation includes information about coliform, indicator organisms as well as purification methods of drinking water.
Studying described bacterial toxins , types , mode of action, contaminant foods that sources of bacteria causes diseases , types of infections , methods of toxins detection and elimination of bacterial toxin from body .
Use of biotechnology in the treatment of municipal wastes and hazardousindust...Sijo A
Industrial waste water is a type of waste water produced by industrial activity, such as that of factories, mills and mines.
It is characterised by its large volume, high temperature, high concentration of biodegradable organic matter and suspended solids, high alkanity or acidity and by variations of flow.
The treatment of wastes by micro-organisms is called biological waste treatment.
Direct methods of measurement of microbial growth includes various methods of enumeration of both viable and non viable cell also includes growth curve. Helpful for UG and PG programs of microbiology
Studying described bacterial toxins , types , mode of action, contaminant foods that sources of bacteria causes diseases , types of infections , methods of toxins detection and elimination of bacterial toxin from body .
Use of biotechnology in the treatment of municipal wastes and hazardousindust...Sijo A
Industrial waste water is a type of waste water produced by industrial activity, such as that of factories, mills and mines.
It is characterised by its large volume, high temperature, high concentration of biodegradable organic matter and suspended solids, high alkanity or acidity and by variations of flow.
The treatment of wastes by micro-organisms is called biological waste treatment.
Direct methods of measurement of microbial growth includes various methods of enumeration of both viable and non viable cell also includes growth curve. Helpful for UG and PG programs of microbiology
Microbial Kinetics in Batch Culture
Culture system containing a limited amount of nutrient, which is inoculated with the microorganism. Cells grow until some component is exhausted or until the environment changes so as to inhibit growth. Biomass concentration defined in terms of cell dry weight measurements (g/l) or total cell number (cells/ml).
Lineweaver-Burke Equation.....We remember the Monod Equation
Invert…
The equation now has the form of a straight line with intercept.
Y = MX + C
By plotting as a function of
You get a straight line, where the slope is , and the y–axis intercept is .
Product Yield Coefficient
Maintenance:
Cells use energy and raw materials for two functions, production of new cells and the maintenance of existing cells. In general, consumption of materials for maintenance is small w.r.t. the amount of materials used in the synthesis of new biomass.
Generally it is assumed that the use of materials for maintenance is proportional to the amount of cells present.
Bacteria are microscopic, single-celled organisms that thrive in diverse environments. These organisms can live in soil, the ocean and inside the human gut. Humans' relationship with bacteria is complex. Sometimes bacteria lend us a helping hand, such as by curdling milk into yogurt or helping with our digestion
MICROBIAL GROWTH, REPRODUCTION AND CONTROLPeterKenneth3
Microbial growth is defined as an increase in the number of cells. A microbial cell has a lifespan and a species is maintained only as a result of continued growth of its population. Growth is the ultimate process in the life of a cell – one cell becoming two and subsequently leading to an increase in the number in a population of microorganisms.
In microbiology, growth is synonymous to reproduction. This unit examines the term growth, binary fission, the mode of cell division in prokaryotic cells, stages in the growth curve and the mathematics of growth.
Definition of Growth
Growth is defined as an increase in the number of cells in a population of microorganisms. It is an increase in cellular constituents leading to arise in cell number when microorganisms reproduce by processes like binary fission or budding.
The Prokaryotic Cell Cycle
A prokaryotic cell cycle is the complete sequence of events from the formation of a new cell through the next division. Most prokaryotes reproduce by binary fission, budding or fragmentation.
Binary Fission
Binary fission is a form of asexual reproduction process. In which a single cell divides into two cells after developing a transverse septum(cross wall).Binary fission is a simple type of cell division and the processes involved are: the cell elongates, replicates its
chromosomes and separates the newly formed DNA molecules so that there is a chromosome in each half of the cell. A septum is formed at mid cell; divide the parent cell into two progeny cells and each having its own chromosome and a copy or complement of other cellular constituents.
When fresh liquid medium is inoculated with a given number of bacteria and incubated for sufficient period of time, it gives a characteristic growth pattern of bacteria.
If the bacterial population is measured periodically and log of number of viable bacteria is plotted in a graph against time, it gives a characteristic growth curve which is known as growth curve or growth cycle.
Microbial Growth and Nutrition, and Clones, Enzymes and Informative Hybridiza...Akram Hossain
This was an assignment of preparing “A lecture note on Microbial Growth and Nutrition, and Clones, Enzymes and Informative Hybridizations” for the course "General Microbiology"
Hope you will find it useful.
Rai University provides high quality education for MSc, Law, Mechanical Engineering, BBA, MSc, Computer Science, Microbiology, Hospital Management, Health Management and IT Engineering.
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
What is greenhouse gasses and how many gasses are there to affect the Earth.moosaasad1975
What are greenhouse gasses how they affect the earth and its environment what is the future of the environment and earth how the weather and the climate effects.
Richard's aventures in two entangled wonderlandsRichard Gill
Since the loophole-free Bell experiments of 2020 and the Nobel prizes in physics of 2022, critics of Bell's work have retreated to the fortress of super-determinism. Now, super-determinism is a derogatory word - it just means "determinism". Palmer, Hance and Hossenfelder argue that quantum mechanics and determinism are not incompatible, using a sophisticated mathematical construction based on a subtle thinning of allowed states and measurements in quantum mechanics, such that what is left appears to make Bell's argument fail, without altering the empirical predictions of quantum mechanics. I think however that it is a smoke screen, and the slogan "lost in math" comes to my mind. I will discuss some other recent disproofs of Bell's theorem using the language of causality based on causal graphs. Causal thinking is also central to law and justice. I will mention surprising connections to my work on serial killer nurse cases, in particular the Dutch case of Lucia de Berk and the current UK case of Lucy Letby.
Professional air quality monitoring systems provide immediate, on-site data for analysis, compliance, and decision-making.
Monitor common gases, weather parameters, particulates.
Deep Behavioral Phenotyping in Systems Neuroscience for Functional Atlasing a...Ana Luísa Pinho
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides means to characterize brain activations in response to behavior. However, cognitive neuroscience has been limited to group-level effects referring to the performance of specific tasks. To obtain the functional profile of elementary cognitive mechanisms, the combination of brain responses to many tasks is required. Yet, to date, both structural atlases and parcellation-based activations do not fully account for cognitive function and still present several limitations. Further, they do not adapt overall to individual characteristics. In this talk, I will give an account of deep-behavioral phenotyping strategies, namely data-driven methods in large task-fMRI datasets, to optimize functional brain-data collection and improve inference of effects-of-interest related to mental processes. Key to this approach is the employment of fast multi-functional paradigms rich on features that can be well parametrized and, consequently, facilitate the creation of psycho-physiological constructs to be modelled with imaging data. Particular emphasis will be given to music stimuli when studying high-order cognitive mechanisms, due to their ecological nature and quality to enable complex behavior compounded by discrete entities. I will also discuss how deep-behavioral phenotyping and individualized models applied to neuroimaging data can better account for the subject-specific organization of domain-general cognitive systems in the human brain. Finally, the accumulation of functional brain signatures brings the possibility to clarify relationships among tasks and create a univocal link between brain systems and mental functions through: (1) the development of ontologies proposing an organization of cognitive processes; and (2) brain-network taxonomies describing functional specialization. To this end, tools to improve commensurability in cognitive science are necessary, such as public repositories, ontology-based platforms and automated meta-analysis tools. I will thus discuss some brain-atlasing resources currently under development, and their applicability in cognitive as well as clinical neuroscience.
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As the population is increasing and will reach about 9 billion upto 2050. Also due to climate change, it is difficult to meet the food requirement of such a large population. Facing the challenges presented by resource shortages, climate
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be linked to genomics information for crop improvement at all growth stages have become as important as genotyping. Thus,
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and analysis methods, numerous infrastructure platforms have been developed for phenotyping.
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Inspired by David Donoho's vision, this talk aims to revisit the three crucial pillars of frictionless reproducibility (data sharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges) with the perspective of deep software variability.
Our observation is that multiple layers — hardware, operating systems, third-party libraries, software versions, input data, compile-time options, and parameters — are subject to variability that exacerbates frictions but is also essential for achieving robust, generalizable results and fostering innovation. I will first review the literature, providing evidence of how the complex variability interactions across these layers affect qualitative and quantitative software properties, thereby complicating the reproduction and replication of scientific studies in various fields.
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Exposé invité Journées Nationales du GDR GPL 2024
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
2. • Bacterial growth is the asexual reproduction, or cell
division, of a bacterium into two daughter cells, in a
process called binary fission. Providing no mutational
event occurs the resulting daughter cells are
genetically identical to the original cell. Hence, "local
doubling" of the bacterial population occurs.
3. Cell Growth and Binary Fission
• In microbiology, growth is defined as an increase in the number of
cells. Microbial cells have a finite life span, and a species is
maintained only as a result of continued growth of its population.
• There are many reasons why understanding how microbial cells
grow is important. For example, many practical situations call for
the control of microbial growth, in particular, bacterial growth.
• Knowledge of how microbial populations can rapidly expand is
useful for designing methods to control microbial growth,
whether the methods are used to treat a life-threatening
infectious disease or simply to disinfect a surface. Knowledge of
the events surrounding bacterial growth also allows us to see how
these processes are related to cell division in higher organisms.
4. • In a growing rod-shaped cell,
elongation continues until the cell
divides into two new cells. This
process is called binary fission
(“binary” to express the fact that
two cells have arisen from one).
• In a growing culture of a rod-shaped
bacterium such as Escherichia coli,
cells elongate to approximately
twice their original length and then
form a partition that constricts the
cell into two daughter cells.
Cell Growth and Binary Fission
1
5. • This partition is called a septum and results from the inward
growth of the cytoplasmic membrane and cell wall from
opposing directions; septum formation continues until the
two daughter cells are pinched off.
• There are variations in this general pattern. In some bacteria,
such as Bacillus subtilis, a septum forms without cell wall
constriction, while in the budding bacterium Caulobacter,
constriction occurs but no septum is formed.
• But in all cases, when one cell eventually separates to form
two cells, we say that one generation has occurred, and the
time required for this process is called the generation time.
7. Lag Phase
• When a microbial culture is inoculated into a fresh
medium, growth usually begins only after a period of time
called the lag phase.
• This interval may be brief or extended, depending on the
history of the inoculum and the growth conditions.
• If an exponentially growing culture is transferred into the
same medium under the same conditions of growth
(temperature, aeration, and the like), there is no lag and
exponential growth begins immediately. However, if the
inoculum is taken from an old (stationary phase) culture
and transferred into the same medium, there is usually a
lag even if all the cells in the inoculum are alive. This is
because the cells are depleted of various essential
constituents and time is required for their biosynthesis.
8. • A lag also ensues when the inoculum consists of cells that
have been damaged (but not killed) by significant
temperature shifts, radiation, or toxic chemicals because of
the time required for the cells to repair the damage.
• A lag is also observed when a microbial population is
transferred from a rich culture medium to a poorer one; for
example, from a complex medium to a defined medium. To
grow in any culture medium the cells must have a complete
complement of enzymes for synthesis of the essential
metabolites not present in that medium. Hence, upon
transfer to a medium where essential metabolites must be
biosynthesized, time is needed for production of the new
enzymes that will carry out these reactions.
9. Exponential Phase
• during the exponential phase of growth each cell divides to form two
cells, each of which also divides to form two more cells, and so on, for
a brief or extended period, depending on the available resources and
other factors.
• Cells in exponential growth are typically in their healthiest state and
hence are most desirable for studies of their enzymes or other cell
components.
• Rates of exponential growth vary greatly. The rate of exponential
growth is influenced by environmental conditions (temperature,
composition of the culture medium), as well as by genetic
• characteristics of the organism itself. In general, prokaryotes grow
faster than eukaryotic microorganisms, and small eukaryotes grow
faster than large ones. This should remind us of the previously
discussed concept of surface-to-volume ratio. Recall that small cells
have an increased capacity for nutrient and waste exchange
compared with larger cells, and this metabolic advantage can greatly
affect their growth and other properties
10. Stationary Phase
• In a batch culture (tube, flask bottle, Petri dish), exponential
growth is limited. Consider the fact that a single cell of a
bacterium with a 20-min generation time would produce, if
allowed to grow exponentially in a batch culture for 48 h, a
population of cells that weighed 4000 times the weight of Earth!
This is particularly impressive when it is considered that a single
bacterial cell weighs only about one-trillionth (10-12) of a gram.
• Obviously, this scenario is impossible. Something must happen to
limit the growth of the population. Typically, either one or both of
two situations limit growth: (1) an essential nutrient of the
culture medium is used up, or (2) a waste product of the organism
accumulates in the medium and inhibits growth. Either way,
exponential growth ceases and the population reaches the
stationary phase.
11. • In the stationary phase, there is no net increase or decrease in
cell number and thus the growth rate of the population is
zero. Although the population may not grow during the
stationary phase, many cell functions can continue, including
energy metabolism and biosynthetic processes.
• Some cells may even divide during the stationary phase but
no net increase in cell number occurs. This is because some
cells in the population grow, whereas others die, the two
processes balancing each other out. This is a phenomenon
called cryptic growth.
12. Death Phase
• If incubation continues after a population reaches the stationary phase,
the cells may remain alive and continue to metabolize, but they will
eventually die. When this occurs, the population enters the death
phase of the growth cycle. In some cases death is accompanied by
actual cell lysis. Figure 5.10 indicates that the death phase of the
growth cycle is also an exponential function. Typically, however, the
rate of cell death is much slower than the rate of exponential growth.
• The phases of bacterial growth are reflections of the events in a
population of cells, not in individual cells. Thus the terms lag phase,
exponential phase, stationary phase, and death phase have no
meaning with respect to individual cells but only to cell populations.
Growth of an individual cell is a necessary prerequisite for population
growth. But it is population growth that is most relevant to the ecology
of microorganisms, because measurable microbial activities require
microbial populations, not just an individual microbial cell.
13. Measurement of Microbial growth
• Population growth is measured by tracking changes in the
number of cells or changes in the level of some cellular
component. The latter could be protein, nucleic acids, or the dry
weight of the cells themselves. We consider here two common
measures of cell growth: cell counts and turbidity, the latter of
which is a measure of cell mass.
14. Microscopic Counts
• A total count of microbial numbers can be achieved using a
microscope to observe and enumerate the cells present in a culture or
natural sample. The method is simple, but the results can be
unreliable.
• The most common total count method is the microscopic cell count.
Microscopic counts can be done on either samples dried on slides or
on samples in liquid. Dried samples can be stained to increase contrast
between cells and their background. With liquid samples, specially
designed counting chambers are used. In such a counting chamber, a
grid with squares of known area is marked on the surface of a glass
slide.
• When the coverslip is placed on the chamber, each square on the grid
has a precisely measured volume. The number of cells per unit area of
grid can be counted under the microscope, giving a measure of the
number of cells per small chamber volume. The number of cells per
milliliter of suspension is calculated by employing a conversion factor
based on the volume of the chamber sample.
16. • A second method of enumerating cells in liquid samples is
with a flow cytometer. This is a machine that employs a laser
beam and complex electronics to count individual cells. Flow
cytometry is rarely used for the routine counting of microbial
cells, but has applications in the medical field for counting and
differentiating blood cells and other cell types from clinical
samples. It has also been used in microbial ecology to
separate different types of cells for isolation purposes.
Microscopic Counts
17. • Microscopic counting is a quick and easy way of estimating microbial cell
number. However, it has several limitations.
• Limitations:
1. Without special staining techniques, dead cells cannot be distinguished
from live cells.
2. Small cells are difficult to see under the microscope, and some cells are
inevitably missed.
3. Precision is difficult to achieve.
4. A phase-contrast microscope is required if the sample is not stained.
5. Cell suspensions of low density (less than about 106 cells/milliliter) have
few if any bacteria in the microscope field unless a sample is first
concentrated and re-suspended in a small volume.
6. Motile cells must be immobilized before counting.
7. Debris in the sample may be mistaken for microbial cells.
Microscopic Counts
18. Viable Counts
• A viable cell is one that is able to divide and form offspring,
and in most cell-counting situations, these are the cells we are
most interested in.
• For these purposes, we can use a viable counting method.
• To do this, we typically determine the number of cells in a
sample capable of forming colonies on a suitable agar
medium.
• For this reason, the viable count is also called a plate count.
• The assumption made in the viable counting procedure is that
each viable cell can grow and divide to yield one colony.
• Thus, colony numbers are a reflection of cell numbers.
• There are at least two ways of performing a plate count: the
spread-plate method and the pour-plate method.
19. spread-plate method
• In the spread-plate method, a volume (usually 0.1 ml or less) of
an appropriately diluted culture is spread over the surface of an
agar plate using a sterile glass spreader.
• The plate is then incubated until colonies appear, and the
number of colonies is counted.
• The surface of the plate must not be too moist because the
added liquid must soak in so the cells remain stationary.
• Volumes greater than about 0.1 ml are avoided in this method
because the excess liquid does not soak in and may cause the
colonies to coalesce as they form, making them difficult to count.
20. pour-plate method
• In the pour-plate method, a known volume (usually 0.1–1.0 ml) of culture
is pipetted into a sterile Petri plate.
• Melted agar medium, tempered to just about gelling temperature, is then
added and mixed well by gently swirling the plate on the bench top.
• Because the sample is mixed with the molten agar medium, a larger
volume can be used than with the spread plate.
• However, with this method the organism to be counted must be able to
withstand brief exposure to the temperature of molten agar (45–50 oC).
• Here, colonies form throughout the medium and not just on the agar
surface as in the spread-plate method.
• The plate must therefore be examined closely to make sure all colonies are
counted.
• If the pour-plate method is used to enumerate cells from a natural sample,
another problem may arise; any debris in the sample must be
distinguishable from actual bacterial colonies or the count will be
erroneous.
21. Turbidimetric Methods
• During exponential growth, all cellular components increase in
proportion to the increase in cell numbers.
• Thus, instead of measuring changes in cell number over time, one
could instead measure the increase in protein, DNA, or dry weight of a
culture as a barometer of growth.
• However, since cells are actual objects instead of dissolved substances,
cells scatter light, and a rapid and quite useful method of estimating
cell numbers based on this property is turbidity.
• A suspension of cells looks cloudy (turbid) to the eye because cells
scatter light passing through the suspension.
• The more cells that are present, the more light is scattered, and hence
the more turbid the suspension.
• What is actually assessed in a turbidimetric measurement is total cell
mass.
• However, because cell mass is proportional to cell number, turbidity
can be used as a measure of cell numbers and can also be used to
follow an increase in cell numbers of a growing culture.
23. Introduction
• Bacterial growth involves
– An increase in the size of the organisms
– An inctrease in the number of organisms
an increase in the total mass (biomass)
– Requirements for growth
– Nutrients
– Enviromental conditions
– Sourse of energy
24. The Common Nutrient Requirements
• Macroelements (macronutrients)
– H, O, C, N, S, P
– required in relatively large amounts
• Micronutrients (trace elements)
– K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Cu, Mn, Zn, Co, Mo and Ni
– required in trace amounts
– often supplied in water or in media components
25. Carbon
• Classification of microorganisms on the
basis of carbon source
1. Photoautotrophs
2. Photoorganotrophs
3. Chemoautotrophs (Lithotrophs)
4. Heterotrophs
26. Classification of microorganisms on the basis of carbon source
1. Photoautotrophs
– Use CO2 as the principal carbon source
– Eg. Photosynthatic bacteria (cyanobacteria) ,
Algae
Cyanobacteria can be helpful in agriculture
as they have the capability to fix
atmospheric nitrogen to soil.
27. 2. Photoorganotrophs
» Use light as energy sourse but need some energy
compound – acetate as a sourse of carbon
» Eg. Certain photosynthatic eubacteria
[Eubacteria- A large group of bacteria with simple cells and
rigid cell walls]
CLASSIFICATION OF MICROORGANISMS ON THE BASIS OF CARBON SOURCE
28. 3. Chemoautotrophs (Lithotrophs)
• Use CO2 as the sourse of carbon
• Obtain energy by the oxidation of reduced
organic substances (ammonia reduced form of
sulphur and ferrous iron)
• Certain eubacteria (can be cultured in strictly
mineral media)
4. Heterotrophs
• use organic molecules as their source of carbon
• versatile in their ability to use diverse sources of
carbon. Burkholderia cepacia can use over 100
different carbon compounds.
CLASSIFICATION OF MICROORGANISMS ON THE BASIS OF CARBON SOURCE
29. Nitrogen
• Major component of protein and nucleic acid
• Needed for synthesis of important molecules
(e.g., amino acids, nucleic acids)
• Most organisms obtain N in the oxidized form
of nitrate
• Use N through assimilation of reduce nitrate
(NO3
-) and Nitrite (NO2
-) → form ammonium
ion (NH4
+) as end product
30. Sources of nitrogen
• Organic molecules (amino acids)
• Ammonia (NH3)
• Nitrate via assimilatory nitrate reduction
• Nitrogen gas via nitrogen fixation
31. Sulphur
• Sulphate is the principal source of sulphur
• Sulfur forms part of the structure of
coenzymes, and found in cysteinyl and
methionyl side chains of proteins.
• Reduced forms of sulphur present in organic
compounds (S containing amino acids) are
also utilized
• Microorganisms use sulphate (SO4
2-) as
sulfure source → end product is hydrogen
sulfide (H2S).
32. Other elements
• Inorganic compounds present in the
environment and those released in
decomposition of organic substrates are
principal sources of other major nutrient
elements and micronutrients.
• Phosphorus that are bound in organic
compounds is releases as phosphoric acid
during decomposition.
33. Growth Factors
• Apart from macro- and micro-nutrients, some
microorganisms require additional organic
compounds in very small quantities) which are
essential for their metabolism,
These accessory compounds are growth Factor.
• Includes
– Vitamins
– Amino acids
– Purines & pyrimidines (for synthesis of nucleic acid)
– Sterols etc.
34. • Bases of nucleic acids
• Adenine and guanine are purines
• Cytosine, thymine, and uracil are pyrimidines
• Also found in energy triphosphates (ATP and GTP)
36. Practical importance of growth factors
• development of quantitative growth-response
assays for measuring concentrations of growth
factors in a preparation
• industrial production of growth factors by
microorganisms
37. Uptake of Nutrients by the Cell
• Some nutrients enter by passive diffusion
• Most nutrients enter by:
– facilitated diffusion
– active transport
– group translocation
39. Introduction
• Microbial growth is greatly affected by chemical and
physical nature of their surroundings instead of
variations in nutrient levels and particularly the nutrient
limitation.
• For successful cultivation of microorganisms it is not only
essential to supply proper and balanced nutrients but
also it is necessary to maintain proper environmental
conditions.
• As bacteria shows divers food habits, it also exhibits
diverse response to the environmental conditions.
• Growth and death rates of microorganisms are greatly
influenced by number of environmental factors such as
water acidity, temperature, oxygen requirement and pH.
40. Water Acidity
• Water is one of the most essential
requirements for life.
• Thus, its availability becomes most important
factor for the growth of microorganisms.
• The availability of water depends on two
factors - the water content of the surrounding
environment and the concentration of solutes
(salts, sugars etc.) dissolved in the water.
41. • In most cases, the cell cytoplasm possesses
higher solute concentration in comparison to its
environment.
• Thus, water always diffuses from a region of its
higher concentration to a region of the lower
concentration. This process is called osmosis.
• When a microbial cell is placed in hypertonic
solution (or, solution of low water activity), it
loses water and shrinkage of membrane takes
place.
• This phenomenon is called plasmolysis.
42. • Microorganisms show variability in their ability to
adapt the habitats of low water activity.
• Microorganisms like S. aureus can survive over a
wide range of water activity and are called as
osmotolerant (as water activity is inversely
related to osmotic pressure).
• Most microorganisms grow well only near pure
water activity (i.e. around 0.98-1).
• halophiles require high concentration of salts
43. Temperature
• As temperature influences enzymic reactions
it has an important role in promoting or
preventing microbial growth.
• Four groups depending on their optimum
growth temperature and the temperature
range at which they will grow.
44. • Thermophiles have optimum growth at 55 °C
and a growth range of 30 - 75 °C
• Mesophiles have optimum growth at 35 °C
and a growth range of 10 - 45 °C
• Psychrotrophs have optimum growth at 20 -
30 °C and a growth range of 0 - 40 °C
• Psychrophiles have optimum growth at 15 °C
and a growth range of -5 - 20 °C
45. Oxygen
• The atmosphere of earth contains about 20% (v/v) of oxygen.
Microorganisms capable of growing in the presence of atmospheric
oxygen are called aerobes whereas those that grow in the absence of
atmospheric oxygen are called as anaerobes.
• The micro-organisms that are completely dependent on atmospheric
oxygen for growth are called obligate aerobes whereas those that do
not require oxygen for growth but grow well in its presence are called
as facultative anaerobes.
• Aerotolerants (e.g. Enterococcus faecalis) ignore O2 and can grow in
its presence or absence.
• In contrast, obligate anaerobes (e.g., Bacteroids, Clostridium
pastewianum, Furobacterium) do not tolerate the presence of oxygen
at all and ultimately die.
• Few microorganisms (e.g., Campylobacter) require oxygen at very low
level (2-10%) of concentration and are called as microaerophiles. And
they are damaged by the normal atmospheric level of oxygen (20%).
46. pH
• The intracellular pH of any organism must be
maintained above the pH limit that is critical for
that organism.
• The control of intracellular pH is required in order
to prevent the denaturation of intracellular
proteins.
• Each organism has a specific requirement and pH
tolerance range.
• Most micro-organisms grow best at neutral pH
(7.0).
• Yeasts and moulds are typically tolerant of more
acidic conditions than bacteria.
47. Reference
Books:
1. Microbiology by pelczar
2. Introduction to Microbiology, By A. S. Rao
3. A Text Book of Microbiology, By P. Chakraborty
4. Biology of microorganisms By M. T. Madigan, J. M. Martinko,
D. A. Stahl and D. P. Clark
Images:
1 to 3 Biology of microorganisms By M. T. Madigan, J. M.
Martinko, D. A. Stahl and D. P. Clark