Utilisateur
Cells are mostly macromolecules + elements, so growth depends on getting the right elements + nutrients.
Nutrients required in large amounts that play major roles in cell structure + metabolism (ex: C, H, O)
Needed in small amounts; mainly for enzyme function + maintaining protein structure (ex: Mn, Zn, Ni).
Organic compounds some microbes can’t synthesize, so they must be supplied for growth.
Often scarce/insoluble → microbes use siderophores to capture it.
Minimum (slow growth; membranes/enzymes sluggish), optimum (enzymes best), maximum (can’t grow)
Chemical reactions/metabolism speed up as temp increases.
Proteins denature, membranes destabilize → loss of function/lysis risk.
Shape/relationship matters more than memorizing exact temperatures.
Cold-lover / human-ish optimum / heat-lover / extreme-heat lover.
Psychrophiles (example slide: snow algae).
Hydrothermal vents/geysers (very hot environments).
Ca²⁺ can stabilize proteins/enzymes so they stay active at high temps.
Osmolarity = total solute concentration; tonicity = concentration of permeable solutes (effective osmotic pressure).
Direction of water movement depends on solute differences across the membrane.
Can grow well in high-solute conditions (example: yeast).
Halophile requires salt; halotolerant survives salt but doesn’t require it.
They adjust internal osmolarity using compatible solutes that aren’t membrane-permeable.
Raise internal solute to match outside without disrupting proteins.
Different microbes have different pH ranges where enzymes/membranes work best.
Acidophiles (low pH), neutrophiles (~neutral), alkaliphiles (high pH).
Handling toxic oxygen species (ROS).
Superoxide (O₂⁻), hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂), hydroxyl radical (•OH).
Superoxide dismutase, catalase, peroxidase.
Where different microbes grow along an O₂ gradient (top = oxic, bottom = anoxic), reflecting oxygen tolerance.
O₂ availability relates to ETC usage and the terminal electron acceptor.
Bubbling from O₂ release when H₂O₂ is broken down (concept shown).
Deep-sea environments have high pressure that affects membranes/proteins.
barotolerant: affected but can tolerate; barophilic: requires pressure due to adaptations (esp. membranes)
Light scattering (turbidity)—OD is not true absorbance in this context.
O D vs cell density isn’t perfectly linear (especially at higher densities).
Dead cells can still scatter light → OD counts “stuff,” not viability.
When cells are too dilute for OD or you want specific organisms (common for aquatic samples).
Filter traps bacteria (pores too small for bacteria), then incubate membrane on nutrient source → colonies form.
advantage: counts viable culturable cells; limitation: only counts what grows on your media and takes longer.
Indicator bacteria originating in intestines of warm-blooded animals.
defined: exact chemicals known (ex: sucrose + specific salts).
Complex: exact composition unknown (ex: tryptone, yeast extract).
Selective favors some organisms/inhibits others (antibiotics, high salt). Differential makes visible differences among growers (pH indicator, blood).
T o reach a dilution where colonies are countable, then back-calculate original concentration.
Each step is often 10-fold; final CFU/mL = colonies ÷ (volume plated × dilution).
Death typically occurs exponentially across a population.
Time required to kill 90% of organisms (1-log reduction).
Viable but nonculturable cells can survive treatment and later recover → can cause infection again.
Bacteriostatic stops growth (reversible). Bactericidal kills without lysis (total count may stay). Bacteriolytic kills + lyses cells.
Bacteriostatic can resume; bactericidal/bacteriolytic do not.
Sterilization removes/destroys all viable organisms. Disinfection removes/kills pathogens but typically not endospores.
Sanitization lowers microbes to “safe” levels. Antisepsis prevents infection on living tissue using chemical agents.
Antibiotics used to kill/inhibit microbes inside the body.
Sterilization method; destroys viruses, fungi, bacteria including endospores.
Doesn’t sterilize; kills pathogens and reduces microbial load to slow spoilage (milk/beer/etc).
Higher temperature → shorter D-value (kills faster).
DNA absorbs strongly → forms thymine dimers blocking replication/transcription.
Poor penetration (blocked by glass, films, water, dirt) → mostly surface sterilization.
Penetrates deeply; causes DNA double-strand breaks, ROS, membrane damage; can kill endospores.
About 0.2 µm filters (for removing microbes from liquids).
Air/gaseous samples—to create sterile airflow/workspace (not for sterilizing “a liquid sample”).
Denature proteins + disrupt membranes; kill bacteria incl. M. tuberculosis, fungi, enveloped viruses; not spores; effective with organic material but can irritate skin/odor.
Bactericidal/fungicidal, kills enveloped viruses; not sporicidal; works by protein denaturation + lipid dissolution; concentration matters (too high can dehydrate and reduce effectiveness; ~50–70% is good
halogens: oxidize/iodinate; antiseptics; may kill spores at high conc but irritation/staining.
Aldehydes: crosslink proteins; can kill spores (strong disinfectants).
Quats: detergent-like; kill most bacteria but not M. tuberculosis or endospores; inactivated by hard water/soap.
H₂O₂: oxidizes proteins/lipids/sugars; kills many bacteria/viruses/fungi; works on skin + surfaces.
Macronutrients are required in larger quantities than micronutrients.
No—at that temperature their proteins denature
More unsaturated fatty acids → keeps membrane more fluid.
Hypertonic outside → water moves out of the cell (net).
The option saying water moves out because the solution is hypertonic (their note: “super salty outside so water comes out”).
Increase internal osmolarity using compatible solutes.
Quantify intact cells in a pure culture
OD can’t distinguish live vs dead vs debris, and dilute/dirty samples are a problem.
Counting viable cells in a liquid sample (requires growth on the filter/media).
Bactericidal kills but doesn’t lyse, so OD may look nearly unchanged—OD can’t separate bacteriostatic vs bactericidal well.
Thymine dimers
double-strand breaks + ROS + membrane disruption
Use a chemical that is sporicidal (kills endospores)
