Answers
What is microbiology about and why is it important? - answer-Viruses, microogranisms,
microbes (fungi)
-Major key in digestion, oxygen production, carbon cycle, alcohol fermentation
What two themes does microbiology revolve around? - answer1) Understanding basic
life processes
-microbes are excellent for understanding cellular processes in unicellular and
multicellular organisms
2) Applying that knowledge to the benefit of humans
-play an important role in medicine, agriculture and industry
Why is a lab important for microbiology? - answer- safely handle microorganisms- can
cause disease
-teaching labs contribute to salmonella infections- transmitted through phones- why its
not permitted during lab
-need microscope because we cant see with the naked eye
ASEPTIC vs. STERILE: - answeraseptic- to prevent contamination- washing hands
sterile- no microbes, bacteria, fungi, viruses whatsoever
*cannot say aseptic technique is sterile technique*
Mixed vs. Pure Culture - answer-Humans: mixed culture, skin (mixed culture), bladder
(sterile, uterus, and brain)
-Pure culture: only one species vs. Mixed culture: lots of different types
Tools to study microorganisms - answer•microscopy
•culture: cells grown in/on nutrient medium
•medium: liquid/solid mixture containing all required
nutrients
•growth to form a visible colony
Historical Context of Microbiology - answer-Microscopy was first because you couldn't
really see much..could not see with the naked eye
-A lot of gap (almost 200 years) because there needed to be scientists that wanted to
go further than just looking in the microscope
-Decide- "What do we do with these"
People in Microbiology
(Robert Hooke;
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek;
,Louis Pasteur) - answerRobert Hooke:
-the first to describe the microbes
-illustrated the fruiting structures of mold
-lens maker
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek: the first to describe bacteria
Louis Pasteur:
-discovered alcohol fermentation was a biologically mediated process
-Drank wine- realized could not have wine without yeast- microbes are essential to the
formation (fermentation) of wine and beer.
-Also developed vaccines
-disproved theory of spontaneous generation
-developed vaccines for anthrax fowl cholera, and rabies
Pasteur and Spontaneous Generation - answer-Famous for disproving the concept of
spontaneous generation
-People believed that air was necessary to create life
-Recognized heat killed microorganisms
-Created sterile broth
-Proved that is was sterile because it wouldnt go bad
-Used swam neck flask- open to air, sterile broth- all dust and dirt was trapped in neck
and broth stayed sterile
-Proved that air did not create life- called biogenesis
Koch, Infectious Disease, and the Rise of Pure Cultures - answer-Robert Koch
-discovered that using solid media proved a simple way to obtain pure cultures
-observed that masses of cells (colonies) have different shapes, sizes, and colors
-began with potato slices but eventually devises uniform and reproducible nutrient
solutions solidified with gelatin and agar
-developed techniques to obtaining pure cultures, still used today
Koch's postulates - answer-Still used today
-Link between microbes and infection diseases
-Flaw in this is that some diseases will only affect a certain type of species- some only
human/some only animals- ex. HIV
-Symptoms: multiple of different outcomes
Joseph Lister
SEMMELWEISZ - answer-toward the early 1900s
-advocated for aseptic techniques (handwashing)- people really didn't believe it
-Ended up in psych ward
He was a doctor- discovered antiseptic (listerine)- phenol (antiseptic)
, Ignaz Semmelweisz - answer-Correlated frequent handwashing in the obstetrics ward
with lower rates of infection (puerperal fever)
-Women who had just given birth
The Rise of Microbial Diversity - answer-focuses on nonmedical aspects of microbiology
Martinus Beijerinck - answer-developed *enrichment culture technique* : microbes can
be isolated from natural samples in a highly selective fashion by manipulating nutrient
and incubation conditions
-Put things into enrichment culture that you want to grow
Sergei Winogradsky - answer-Concept of chemolithotrophy
-Demonstrated that specific bacteria are linked to specific biogeochemical
transformations
-Ex. S and N cycles
-*Winogradsky Collumn*: have different colors- can usually visualize different microbes
In the 20th Century, what two directions did Microbiology divide into - answer1) Applied
2) Basic
-Molecular microbiology was fueled by the genomics revolution
What are five examples of microbes? - answerEXAMPLES OF MICROBES:
1) bacteria
2) protists
3) fungi
4) archaea
(ORGANISMS- microorganisms)
5) viruses: (NOT AN ORGANISM- still a microbe)
How would you define the term microbe? - answerDefinition: obligate acellular parasite-
a microscopic unit that interacts with the environment
Definition of a "Cell"- which three structures do Microbial cells have in common -
answerCell: the basic unit of live, microorganisms and organism
LUCA: every cell has a membrane for microbes to pass through
1) Plasma membrane: viruses can get a plasma membrane from the cell they are
infecting
2) DNA genome- many viruses just have RNA genome, not DNA genome
3) Ribosomes- viruses do not have ribosomes- no gene to make ribosome- too small
Which statement is false?