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Medical microbiology 252 (GMB 252) summary of ALL lecture notes

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These extensive notes are based on the GMB 252 lecture notes and Sherris Medical Microbiology textbook. The notes cover all the work in the module and have also been double checked using the learning outcomes in the study guide to ensure all the information was there. They also include all the necessary diagrams. I got a distinction using only these notes for the semester tests and exam.

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Number of pages
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INTRODUCTION TO • Described bacteria and protozoa in dirty water


MICROBIOLOGY • Hungarian gynaecologist
• Recommended hand washing before clinical examinations
which was met with disdain
• Died in psychiatric hospital in 1865
• It is the study of very small (microscopic) things
• Father of infection control and prevention
• Interest in what causes spoilage and disease started many
years ago, it was thought to be spontaneous or caused by
‘bad air’ or ‘germs’
• Several prominent scientists played an important role over • French chemist who studied yeasts used to make wine
the years from grape juice
• ‘Bad’ wine is the result of incorrect yeasts (actually
bacteria)
• Basic principles of immunology
• Laid foundation of biochemical and industrial microbiology
• Published on contagion (first exposition of germ theory)
• First to discover penicillin (publication is lost)
• Wrote a poem giving syphilis its name
• Pasteur developed a vaccine against anthrax and rabies


• Italian doctor
• German doctor
• In 1665 he discovered worms in rotten meat are fly larvae
• First person to develop staining technique for
microorganisms
• First to photograph bacteria under the microscope
• Dutch tradesman and scientist from Delft, Netherlands
• German school under leadership of Koch (emphasis on
• Handcrafted microscopes, magnify between 50-300 X and
isolation, culture, and characterisation of microorganisms)
observe and describe single celled organisms


1

,• Advocated the use of phenol as disinfectant in 1860 • In 1866 Haeckel classified microorganisms separately
• Modern era of aseptic surgery born from plants and animals in a third kingdom namely Protista
• Lower Protista (prokaryotes: bacteria, blue green algae,
mycoplasmas, Rickettsia, Chlamydia)
• Russian zoologist • Higher Protista (eukaryotes: protozoa, algae, slime fungi
• Received Nobel prize in 1908 for his work on principles of and fungi)
cellular immunity • Haeckel’s classification of the world
• Whittaker’s five kingdom classification of all living things
• Woese’s phylogenetic tree (of course, with advances in
• Discovery of streptomycin in 1944 science and technology, new and improved classifications
have emerged e.g. eubacteria (including all human
bacterial pathogens) and archaebacteria (including special
• Vaccine against yellow fever bacteria surviving in hydrovents, thermal springs) and
eukaryotes form distinct clades)
• Infectious diseases caused by five groups (bacteria,
• Polio vaccine in 1951 viruses, helminths, fungi, and protozoa)
• Helminths: complex multi-cellular organisms (metazoan)
• Helminths and protozoa are parasites
• DNA helix structure in 1959 • Viruses differ from other organisms (not independent and
• Mechanism of DNA replication, gene function and cell can only replicate within other cells)
division



• Discovery of sexual process in bacteria led to birth of
molecular biology
• DNA transfer between mating bacteria (conjugation)


2

, diameter, while eukaryotic cells range from 10 to 100 μm
in diameter




• Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus, a membrane-bound
chamber where DNA is stored, while prokaryotic cells do
not (feature that formally separates the two groups)
• Eukaryotes have other membrane-bound organelles in
addition to the nucleus, prokaryotes do not
• Cells in general are small, but prokaryotic cells are really
small (typical prokaryotic cells range from 0.2 to 2 μm in



3

, • Plasmid is smaller, circular, extra-chromosomal DNA
• Three basic forms (coccus, bacillus, and spirillum)
• Arrangement determined by orientation and degree of
attachment of bacteria during cell division
• Size is 0.2 to 5 μm




• Coccus in pairs (diplococci) • Storage of reserve metabolites
• Chains (streptococci) • Inorganic phosphate in the form of metachromatic
• Bunches (staphylococci) granules which stain red with blue dye



• In cytoplasm where protein synthesis occurs



• Phospholipids and protein
• Infoldings in the membrane known as mesosomes
• Two types (septal and lateral mesosomes)
• Bacterial chromosome attached to septal mesosome
• Chromosome is a single double-stranded circular DNA
• Chromosome is linked to mesosome (NB for cell division)

4

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