MICR3213 - Microbial Ecology - 2018 PDF
MICR3213 - Microbial Ecology - 2018 PDF
MICR3213 - Microbial Ecology - 2018 PDF
Ecology
MICR3213/BC31M:
Applied and
Environmental
Microbiology
❑Chapters 18 and 19
Microbial Ecology
❑ Studyof inter-relationships between microorganisms
and their environments
ECOSYSTEM
COMMUNITY
GUILD
POPULATION
INDIVIDUAL
Microbial Ecology
❑Why?
❑ Pure culture
paradigm: isolate an
❑ Disease and medical organism and see what it
microbiology does
❑ Pure culture paradigm
Pure Culture Paradigm
❑Extremely important conceptual development in microbiology (and
in microbial ecology, too)
❑Remove organisms from complex communities
❑Isolate key processes
❑Obtain reproducible results
❑This method is still used today
Interference competition!
classic ecological process
Sergei Winogradsky
(1856-1953)
❑ Student of Beijerinck
❑ Microbial
physiology
❑ Comparative
approach
❑ Unifying metabolic
features among
microbes
❑1970s fuel-shortage:
❑ Shortage in N fertilizer
❑ Sparked interest in the biology of nitrogen fixers
Paul D Brown
(1960s - )
❑ Environmental regulation of
bacterial virulence
❑ Genetic determinants of
antimicrobial resistance
autotroph
Objectives in microbial
ecology
❑ Understanding the biodiversity of microorganisms in nature, and
interactions in communities
❑ Measurement of microbial activities in nature, and monitoring of effects
on ecosystems
❑ Activities commonly measured when studying microorganisms within an
ecosystem:
❑ Primary production of organic matter (phototrophic,
chemolithotrophic activity)
❑ CO2 + H2O + energy → new biomass
❑ Decomposition of organic matter
(chemoorganotrophic/heterotrophic activity)
dead biomass → CO2 + H2O + energy
❑ Biogeochemical cycling of elements (C, O, N, P, S, Fe)
Microorganisms in nature
❑Live in habitats suited to higher organisms, also in “extreme”
environments
❑ extremes in temperature, pH, pressure, salinity; anoxic habitats
❑ inanimate (soil, sediment, water, food) & animate habitats (on/in
animals, plants, insects)
❑ necessities for growth include available resources, suitable
physiochemical conditions
Psychrophiles,
thermophiles,
hyperthermophiles:
“extremophiles” that live
in habitats of extreme
temperature, including
cold (e.g., deep sea,
Antarctica, the Arctic), or
hot habitats (e.g.,
compost piles, deep sea
hydrothermal vents)
Seawater evaporating
ponds near San Francisco
Bay, used to harvest
“solar” salt. The red
colour is due to pigments
of the extreme
halophile
Halobacterium, an
Archaeal species that
inhabits the ponds. (Fig. 13.2(b), p. 423, Madigan & Martinko)
Microorganisms in nature
❑ Niche: the functional role of an
organism within an ecosystem;
combined description of the
physical habitat, functional role,
and interactions of the
microorganism occurring at a
given location
❑ Microenvironment: where a
microorganism lives, metabolizes
within its habitat
❑ physicochemical gradients
❑ spatial, temporal variability
❑ physicochemical gradients
Time within mature biofilm result
in a number of potential
microenvironments within a
small area
❑ Recall image of soil particle?
Biofilm formation
Rendueles & Ghigo, 2012, FEMS Microbiol Rev
Bacterial microcolonies Natural biofilm on a leaf surface
developing on a microscope ❑ cell colour indicates depth in biofilm:
slide immersed in a river red (surface) → blue (18 μm deep)
(phase contrast microscopy) ❑ (confocal laser scanning microscopy)
Biofilm developed on a stainless steel pipe
❑ stained with DAPI (fluorescent; interacts with nucleic acids)
❑ note water channels through biofilm
Viability staining – Fig 18.7 Brock Biology of Microorganisms 14th ed, 2015
❑ stained with LIVE/DEAD BacLight bacterial viability stain
❑ Live (green) and dead (red) cells of M. luteus and B. cereus
Biofilm of iron-oxidizing
prokaryotes on rocks
Rio Tinto Spain
❑ Pseudomonas aeruginosa
❑ Biofilm producer
❑ Intracellular communication (quorum sensing) is critical
in the development and maintenance of a biofilm
❑ The major intracellular signaling molecules are acylated
homoserine lactones
❑ Both intraspecies signaling and interspecies signaling
likely occur in biofilms
Surfaces and Biofilms
~3 cm thick
orange:
layers of anoxygenic
phototrophic bacteria
❑Mutualism
❑ Both species benefit
❑Commensalism
❑ One species benefits, and the other is neither harmed nor helped
General
Ecological
Concepts
❑In 2008, Prof. Gary Strobel ,Montana State University and students
explored the Patagonia rainforest they found an endophytic fungus
inside the tissues of the Ulmo tree. The fungus Gliocladium roseum
liberates a number of volatile compounds in the air, the mixture is
similar to diesel fuel and can be produced when grown in the lab
with good yields on cellulose - dubbed mycodiesel
❑Also, Prof. Scott Strobel and a group of Yale students in 2012 found
in the Amazon rainforest a fungus Pestialotiopsis microspora that
degrades polyurethane (plastic). The fungus is able to survive
on polyurethane alone under anaerobic conditions