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Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

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Presentation on theme: "Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Figure 4.1

3 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining

4 Bacterial Morphology  Three general shapes ◦ Coccus- roughly spherical ◦ Bacillus- rod-shaped  Coccobacillus- short and plump  Vibrio- gently curved ◦ Spirillum- curviform or spiral-shaped ◦ Pleomorphism- when cells of a single species vary to some extent in shape and size

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6 Arrangement, or Grouping  Cocci- greatest variety in arrangement ◦ Single ◦ Pairs (diplococci) ◦ Tetrads ◦ Irregular clusters (staphylococci and micrococci) ◦ Chains (streptococci) ◦ Cubical packet (sarcina)

7 Arrangement, or Grouping  Bacilli- less varied ◦ Single ◦ Pairs (diplobacilli) ◦ Chain (streptobacilli) ◦ Row of cells oriented side by side (palisades)

8 Simple Compound Electron  Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)  Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)

9 [INSERT FIGURE 4.4]

10 Electron Microscopy  Originally developed for studying nonbiological materials  Biologists began using it in the early 1930s  Forms an image with a beam of electrons ◦ Electrons travel in wavelike patterns 1,000 times shorter than visible light waves ◦ This increases the resolving power tremendously

11 Electron Microscopy  Magnification can be extremely high (between 5,000X and 1,000,000X for biological specimens)  Allows scientists to view the finest structure of cells  Two types: ◦ transmission electron microscope (TEM) ◦ scanning electron microscope (SEM)

12 SEM  Creates an extremely detailed three-dimensional view of all kinds of objects  Electrons bombard the surface of a whole metal-coated specimen  Electrons deflected from the surface are picked up by a sophisticated detector  The electron pattern is displayed as an image on a television screen  Contours of specimens resolved with SEM are very revealing and surprising

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14 Figure 3.23

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16 [INSERT FIGURE 4.13]

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21 TEM  Often used to view structures of cells and viruses  Electrons are transmitted through the specimen  The specimen must be very thin (20-100 nm thick) and stained to increase image contrast  Dark areas of a TEM image represent thicker or denser parts

22 [INSERT FIGURE 4.11]

23 Figure 3.22

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27 Fixed, Stained Smears  Smear technique developed by Robert Koch ◦ Spread a thin film made from a liquid suspension of cells and air-drying it ◦ Heat the dried smear by a process called heat fixation ◦ Some cells are fixed using chemicals  Staining creates contrast and allows features of the cells to stand out ◦ Applies colored chemicals to specimens ◦ Dyes become affixed to the cells through a chemical reaction ◦ Dyes are classified as basic (cationic) dyes, or acidic (anionic) dyes.

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29 Simple and Negative Staining  Simple staining: the dye sticks to the specimen to give it color  Negative staining: The dye does not stick to the specimen, instead settles around its boundaries, creating a silhouette. ◦ Nigrosin and India ink commonly used ◦ Heat fixation not required, so there is less shrinkage or distortion of cells ◦ Also used to accentuate the capsule surrounding certain bacteria and yeasts

30 Simple Stains  Require only a single dye ◦ A basic dye is used ◦ Examples include methylene blue, crystal violet, basic fuchsin, and safranin ◦ All cells appear the same color but can reveal shape, size, and arrangement

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32 Negative Stains  Require only a single dye ◦ An acidic dye is used ◦ Examples include nigrosin, congo red, india ink ◦ All cells appear clear with the background stained which reveals the shape, size, and arrangement

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34 Differential Stains  Use two differently colored dyes, the primary dye and the counterstain ◦ Distinguishes between cell types or parts ◦ Examples include Gram, acid-fast, and endospore stains

35 Gram Staining  The most universal diagnostic staining technique for bacteria  Differentiation of microbes as gram positive(purple) or gram negative (red)

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37 [INSERT FIGURE 4.18]

38 Acid-Fast Staining  Important diagnostic stain  Differentiates acid-fast bacteria (pink) from non-acid-fast bacteria (blue)  Important in medical microbiology

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40 Endospore Stain  Dye is forced by heat into resistant bodies called spores or endospores  Distinguishes between the stores and the cells they come from (the vegetative cells)  Significant in medical microbiology

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42 Special Stains  Used to emphasize certain cell parts that aren’t revealed by conventional staining methods  Examples: capsule staining, flagellar staining

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44 Figure 3.25

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