Lecture 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Give some examples of where bacteria can be found

A
Air
Water
Soil
Deep subsurface rocks
Acidic, alkaline, very hot & cold and salty environments
Internal & external surfaces of the body
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2
Q

What are the basic steps in bacterial identification?

A

Using light microscopy:

  1. Size and shape
  2. Cell arrangement
  3. Motility (flagella)
  4. Spores- one per cell
  5. Capsules
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3
Q

Describe the different size and shapes of bacteria and which genus each one relates to.

A
  1. Coccus e.g. Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae. Size: 0.5-1.0microns in diameter
  2. Rod (also vibrios) e.g. Escherichia coli, Bacillus cereus, Vibrio cholerae. Size: < 8.0 x 0.5 microns
  3. Spiral- rigid helix e.g. Spirillum spp. Found in water cooling towers, stagnant water
  4. Spirochetes- flexible, helical & very long e.g. Treponema pallidum (syphilis); Borrellia burgdorferi (Lyme’s disease)
  5. Square-flat, rectangular, straight edges e.g. genus Arcula (box) Haloquadratum walsbyi. Isolated from brine colected from the shore of the Red Sea. Only grows in 20% (3.3M) salt solution. Gram -ve.
  6. Star shaped- genus Stella. Isolated from garden compost, House manure in Moscow region. Gram -ve non-motile
  7. Absolutely huge- Epulopiscium fishelsoni (0.6mm long x 75um wide) Lives in gut of surgeon fish. Gram +ve symbiant. Thiomargarita namibiensis bacteria (0.75mm long)
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4
Q

What is the Gram stain, and what is the difference between Gram +ve and Gram -ve?

A
  • Developed in 1884 by Christian Gram
  • Differentiates bacteria on the basis of cell wall structure into Gram +ve and Gram -ve.
  • Gram +ve is purple, and has a thick layer of peptidoglycan (20nm).
  • Pencillin can work on Gram +ve but not Gram -ve
  • the cell wall of Gram +ve is split into 13/14 layers of peptidoglycan & teichoic acid, and a cytoplasmic membrane.
  • Gram -ve is pink/red and has a thin layer of peptidoglycan (3nm). The cell membrane of the Gram -ve bacteria is composed of an outer membrane, peptidoglycan (5-8nm) and a cytoplasmic membrane.
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5
Q

How do you prepare a Gram stain?

A
  1. Prepare the cells on slide
  2. Stain with crystal violet
  3. Stain with iodine (CVI complex forms)
  4. Acetone (dissolves outer membrane)
  5. Counter stain with safranin
  6. Gram -ves colourless–> pink/red
  7. Gram +ves purple –> purple
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6
Q

Why does the Gram stain differentiate between Gram +ve and Gram -ve cells?

A

crystal violet> iodine > safranin

  • Dependent on cell wall chemistry
  • The CVI complex is trapped in Gram +ve bacteria. Acetone causes dehydration of peptidocylcan sealing the CVI complex into the cell.
  • In Gram -ve bacteria acetone dissolves the outer membrane, and eventually permeates the inner membrane, releasing the CVI complex
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7
Q

What are the biological functions of peptidogylcan?

A
  1. Rigid structure of wall- gives cell shape
  2. Protects from osmotic lysis
  3. Withstands a high internal osmotic pressure:
    Gram +ve -high internal pressure (thick walls)
    Gram -ve -low internal pressure (thinner walls)
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8
Q

What is different about pleomorphic cells?

A
  • of Mycoplasma pneumoniae
  • have no peptidogycan and are surrounded by a membrane.
  • lost ability to make mRNA
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9
Q

What percentage of the Gram +ve cell wall is peptidoglycan?

A

90%

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