MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY
and fungi
- study of microorganisms too small to be seen by Louis Pasteur Credited for his
unaided eyes development of the
- Microbes: bacteria, cyanobacteria. Rickettssiae, principles of vaccination ,
microbial fermentation and
chlamydia, fungi, microscope algae, protozoa,
pasteurization
viruses
Joseph Lister British surgeon and pioneer
of antiseptic surgery
a) Clinical Microbiology
- Study of microbial pathogens that are Introduced the use of
considered health threats to people carbolic acid as a
- Studies the different etiologic agents chemical sterilizing agent
for surgical instruments
Hans Christian Gram Gram staining technique
b) Diagnostic Microbiology
which is used to distinguish
- Involved in examining and identifying organism 2 major groups of bacteria
through laboratory test Alexander Fleming Discovered the powerful
antibiotic, benzylpenicillin (
c) Food Microbiology Penicillim G) from a mold,
- Studies the practical application and use of Penicillium notatum
beneficial microorganisms in food processing Robert Koch Discovered Bacillus
anthracis, Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and Vibrio
Branches of Microbiology
cholera
a) Protozoology
Popularized Koch’s
― study of protozoans , the simplest and postulates
most primitive forms of animal life
b) Mycology
― study of fungi
c) Bacteriology BACTERIOLOGY
― study of bacteria
d) Rickettsiology - A subdivision of microbiology that deals with the
― study of rickettsiae, which are study of bacteria
considered traditional organisms - unicellular organisms that lack a nuclear
between bacteria and viruses membrane and true nucleus
e) Virology -
― study of virus
EUKARYOTIC VS PROKARYOTIC
Pioneers in the History of Microbiology PROKARYOTE EUKARYOTE
MICROBIOLOGY | VILLACERAN, E.
Taxonomy of Bacteria b. Iodine
c. Alcohol
d. Safranin (Appears RED here: Negative)
MICROBIOLOGY | VILLACERAN, E.
8. ENDOSPORE Bacteria Cell:
― Resting cell, highly resistant
composed mainly of CALCIUM EXOTOXIN ENDOTOXIN
DIPICOLINATE
Source Gram (+) Gram (-)
― Presence of endospore means the
and gram
bacteria is HIGHLY RESISTANT (will not
(-)
die in autoclaving) e.g. is Clostridium
Release Living bacteria Upon lysis
tetani
9. CAPSULE Composition Proteins Lipid A
― increase virulence by preventing
Heat stability Labile Stable
phagocytosis
― medically important encapsulated Toxicity High Low
bacteria:
Lethal dose Small Large
i. Haemophilus influenza
ii. Neisseria meningitides
iii. Streptococcus pneumoniae
iv. Bacillus anthracis
10. PILI
― Ordinary pili
― Sex pili
― Point of sexual attachment for
replication
11. FLAGELLA
― Obligate aerobe
cannot live without oxygen
― Obligate anaerobe
can live without oxygen
― Facultative anaerobe
12. SPORES
can live with or without oxygen
― Allows bacteria to resist the sterilization
― Aerotolerant aerobe
process, making them viable over time
can live without oxygen but can
― Composed of calcium dipicolinate
tolerate presence of oxygen
According to position ― Microaerophile
3
Oxygen is at 5-10%
i. Terminal ― Capnophile
ii. Subterminal Oxygen is at 15% and Carbon
iii. Central dioxide is as 5-10%
MICROBIOLOGY | VILLACERAN, E.
Temperature
― Psychrophilic
Also known as cryophilic
Temperature at 10 °c
― Mesophilic
Temperature between 30-37°c
― Thermophilic
Temperature between 50-55°c
pH
Function and use
― Acidophile (pH 3)
i. Simple:
― Alkaliphile (pH 8-10)
ii. Enriched
iii. Enrichment
iv. Selective
CULTURE MEDIA v. Differential
vi. Selective differential
According to physical state/consistency:
― Liquid
― Semisolid GRAM POSITIVE COCCI
― Solid
a) STAPHYLOCOCCUS
Composition o Gram (+) cocci arranged in tetrads or
clusters
― Synthetic/ chemically defined o Facultative anaerobes
― Complex/ non synthetic o Catalase positive
― Tissue o Oxidase Negative
o Non-motile
Dispensing
o Grows in 7.5-10% NaCl
― Plated
a. Weighing (Agar)
b. Dissolving (Water)
c. Sterilization (Autoclave)
d. Dispensing (Plate)
Staphylococcus aureus
MICROBIOLOGY | VILLACERAN, E.
Virulence factor: giving boils
b) STREPTOCOCCUS
i. Enterotoxin
ii. Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin 1 o Gram (+) cocci arranged in pairs or
iii. Exfoliative Toxin chains
iv. Cytolytic toxins o Aerotolerant anaerobes
v. Enzyme o Catalase negative
vi. Protein A o Some are capnophilic
o Non-motile
Colonial Characteristics
Virulence Factor:
― Capsular polysaccharide
Clinical Significance:
― Pneumonia
― Sinusitis
― Otitis Media
CATALASE TEST ― Bacteremia
― Meninigitis
― Ability of organism to breakdown H202
into O2 & H20 Laboratory Diagnosis
a) Corynebacterium diphtheriae
Blue to Purple = Positive o Pleomorphic Gram (+) Bacilli
No Color Change = Negative o Non motile
o Virulence factor:
o Diphtheria toxin
o Clinical significance:
COAGULASE TEST o Respiratory diphtheria
o Cutaneous diphtheria
― Determines the ability of bacteria to convert
fibrinogen into fibrin.
Colonial Characteristics
― Clot formation
― Cystine- tellurite blood agar and
Types: Tinsdale’s agar
― Black colonies with brown halo
i. Bound coagulase
Slide Method 5
Clumping means positive
b) Listeria monocytogenes
ii. Free coagulase
o Motile
Tube Method
Formation of Clot is positive
MICROBIOLOGY | VILLACERAN, E.
Virulence factor: ― MacConkey Positive
― Glucose Fermenters
― Hemolysin ― Reduces Nitrate to Nitrite
― Protein p60 ― All motile at body temperature (37°)
Clinical significance:
a) Escherichia coli
― Stillbirth and spontaneous abortion
Clinical significance:
― Bacteremia
― UTI, Septicimia, CNS and
c) Mycobacterium tuberculosis diarrheal diseases
o Slender, slightly curved rod shaped
microorganism measuring 0.2 – 0.6 µ in Disease syndromes
diameter and 1-4 µ in length
i. Enterotoxigenic E.coli (ETEC)
Clinical significance: a. Montezuma’s Disease
b. Turista’s Disease
― Pulmonary Tuberculosis c. Traveller’s Disease
ii. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
Colonial Characteristics
a. Inflammatory Diarrhea (slimy
and with RBC)
― LJ MEDIUM
iii. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
― tan to buff in color, rough, dry, warty,
granular “CAULIFLOWER a. Infantile Diarrhea (Mucous
APPEARANCE” without RBC but with WBC)
iv. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
― 2 months to grow
v. Enteroadherent E. coli (EAEC)
Colonial Characteristics
Must know:
Antibiotics
Types of antibiotics
a) Bacteriostatic
― agents that only inhibit microorganism
growth in vitro and that can kill
standardized inoculate of bacteria at
high concentration
― only inhibits the growth
b) Bactericidal 7
― lethal to standardized inoculate at
clinically achievable concentration
― more reliable
MICROBIOLOGY | VILLACERAN, E.