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MICB 211 Unit 1 and Unit 2 Notes

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MICB 211 complete, detailed notes for Unit 1 and Unit 2 with diagrams

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Week 1: Ch.1 Introduction, Ch2. Microbial Structures, Ch.3 Growth & Environment

Chapter 1: Introduction to Microbiology and Data Analysis

Microbiology: “Microbiology is the study of microscopic organisms such as bacteria, viruses, archarea,
fungi and protozoa.
Branches of Microbiology:




Distinguishing fields of Microbiology:
Environmental Microbiology: the impact of microbes on the environment. Concerns how pathogens are
spread but not how they affect a host.
●​ In the “natural” environment.
●​ Researchers at Cornell University found a new species of soil bacteria that’s good at breaking
down organic matter, including carcinogens, e.g. polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). ​
Microbial Ecology: ​study of microbes in their respective niches (where they live) ex: contributions made,
resources needed.
●​ Story of Heliobacter Pylori (Heliobacter: Genus/Pylori: Species)
Medical Microbiology: How microbes cause human disease

Classifying Organisms:
●​ Acellular (i.e. Non-cellular) cannot live independently, and cannot be included in the Tree below.

,Prokaryote: No nucleus, No membrane-bound organelle, often circular chromosome
Eukaryote: True nucleus, membrane-bound organelles, linear chromosome




Diversity and Model Organisms:
Note: Archaea and Bacteria are prokaryotes however, Eukaryotes appeared to have evolved from
Archaea.

Model Organisms:
●​ It’s impossible to be an expert on all species so we learn the basic
principles by studying one species in detail.
●​ Not all principles apply but a lot of them are often conserved.

Types of Data:
Interpreting Qualitative Data:
●​ Is there a control group?
●​ Is there a reference group to compare to?
●​ Are there characteristics that you know of that you can identify in the treatment or control?
●​ Are there features that you expected to be in the treatment?

, ●​ Are there features that you did not expect in the treatment?
Interpreting Quantitative Data:
●​ Data is a collection of values that relate to a particular subject
●​ How to analyze the data depends on the data type.
1.​ What is being measured on the y-axis and shown on the x-axis?
2.​ What is the control group?
3.​ How do the treatment groups differ from control? Increase decrease?
4.​ Are the differences observed actually significant?




Interpreting Differences on a Data Set in MICB 211:
Option 1: look for Asterisks) (*) first. Statistical differences are shown by symbol [asterisks, p-values, etc]
or NS = not significant
Option 2: Error Bars show variability in the data.
●​ Non-overlapping error bars may indicate a difference.
●​ Standard deviations can give a sense if the difference is significant based on
whether they overlap.
Option 3: If missing error bars and statistics, we can assume there is a difference by
if the means are different. E.g. glas pipette is higher than all other measurements.
This method is not acceptable outside of MICB 211.
1.​ Asterisk (*) – show data is statistically different than comparator.
2.​ Error bars – show variability.
3.​ Brackets – shows which data are being compared.
4.​ NS – not statistically significant
Note: number of * indicate lower p value e.g. * p = 0.05; ** p = 0.01, *** p
= 0.001 etc

, Scientific Controls:
Type Details Expected Result
Experimental Control Receives no treatment to ensure Negative (no bacterial killing)
sterility, etc
Negative Control: does not Treated with chemical that does Negative (no bacterial killing)
produce intended result not kill bacteria
Positive Control: produces Treated with chemical that does Positive (bacterial killing)
intended result kill bacteria
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