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Honors Microbiology
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Chapter 1 – Scope of Microbiology I. Why Study Microbiology? – Microbes have a major impact on human health, environment, and help maintain the balance of nature.
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– Microbes play an important role in many of our foods and medicines
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– The study of microbes provides insight into life processes in all life forms
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Microbe Types Prokaryotes – 2 Domains/Superkingdoms Bacteria – Some pathogens – Science of Bacteriology Archaea – Environmental extremophiles – Novel biochemistry
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Eukaryotic Microbes Algae (Protozoa/Plants) – Photosynthetic – Aquatic – Science of Phycology Fungi (Kingdom) – Decomposers – Single or multicellular – Science of Mycology
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Viruses (Acellular) Simple structure – Capsid – Nucleic acid Obligate intracellular growth Science of Virology Smaller relatives – Viroids – Prions
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Eukaryotic Parasites Protozoa (Kingdom) – Single celled – May be pathogenic – Science of Protozoology Helminths (Worms) – Microscopic life stages – Diagnosed microscopically – Sccience of Parasitology Arthropods – Cause/transmit disease
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– Microbes are easily studied because: Have relatively simple structures Can be grown in large numbers Can reproduce quickly
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II. Scope of Microbiology The microbes – include the bacteria, algae, fungi, viruses and protozoa Other organisms studied – helminths (worms) and arthropods Microbiologists study a variety of areas: – Particular organisms – Processes or functions – Health-related – applications
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Anthrax Bacteria
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Algae
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Athlete’s foot fungus
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Giardia lambia (protozoa)
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Guinea worm infestation
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Arthropods as disease vectors
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III. Historical Roots Mosaic laws found in the Bible involve basic sanitation practices that are still used today in preventive medicine.
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Greeks: – Set forth ethical standards for the practice of medicine
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Hippocrates associated symptoms with illnesses and realized that disease could be transmitted via clothing and other objects
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Hippocrates
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Thucydides observed that people who survived plague would not get the disease again (immunology)
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Thucydides
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Romans: – Varro proposed that tiny animals entered the body and caused disease.
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Lucretius cited “seeds” of disease in his written works
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Lucretius
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Jews practiced ancient laws of sanitation and alternative types of medical treatments which helped them survive the Bubonic Plague.
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Development of the microscope: – Anton van Leeuwenhoek – first to make and use lenses to observe living microorganisms – Electron microscopes – developed in the 1930’s and 1940’s
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Anton van Leeuwenhoek
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First microscope
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Robert Hooke – first to build a compound microscope, and coined the term “cell”
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Robert Hooke
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Hooke’s microscope
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Electron microscopes – developed in the 1930’s and 1940’s
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Electron Microscope
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IV. Important scientists and their contributions to Microbiology Louis Pasteur: – Helped disprove the idea of spontaneous generation – Developed the technique of pasteurization – Associated specific organisms with particular diseases – Contributed to the development of vaccines
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Louis Pasteur
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Robert Koch: – Identified the bacterium that causes anthrax, and the bacterium that causes tuberculosis – Developed techniques for studying cells in vitro – Formulated a set of postulates to help establish the Germ Theory of Disease – Conducted research on cholera, typhoid fever, and sleeping sickness
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Robert Koch
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Ignaz Semmelweis – worked to reduce childbed fever by establishing more sanitary practices in patient examinations Joseph Lister – ‘father of antiseptic surgery’, developed aseptic techniques, formulated carbolic acid (phenol)
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Ignaz Semmelweis
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Joseph Lister
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Edward Jenner – developed the vaccine for smallpox Elie Metchnikoff – discovered that certain cells in the body (“phagocytes”) could ingest microbes
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Edward Jenner
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Martinus Beijerinck – first to characterize viruses Wendell Stanley – isolated RNA viruses Hershey and Chase – isolated DNA viruses
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Elie Metchnikoff
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Paul Ehrlich – suggested that chemicals might selectively kill invading microbes; considered the “father of chemotherapy” Alexander Fleming – discovered penicillin Gerhard Domagk – developed sulfa drugs
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Paul Ehrlich
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Alexander Fleming
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Gerhard Domagk
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Walter Reed – discovered the cause of yellow fever Selman Waksman – developed streptomycin and other antibiotics
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Walter Reed
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Selman Waksman
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