Sidenotes:
EXTRA CREDIT:
- Probiotics → are they useful in our health in keeping us healthy.
- 3-5 pages
- 3-5 references
- short paper with title page and abstract (summary of paper) in bold.
- due October 10 <-- NOTE THIS IS CHANGED (I had previously written the 18th and meant to write 10th)
- (yogurt is a probiotic)
- title page
• 8 pager needs a snappy title.
• Knipp surgery Oct 12
• Exam 2 will probably have more organisms on it
• Keep up to date on blackboard
• Uncle Julio’s on North and Clyborne is a good place to eat.
- Gram (+) cocci (Section 12)
- Leuconostac – associated with sauerkraut
- Spore forming rods (section 13)
- Bacillus and clostridium
- Section 14
- Lactobacillus – “good guy”
- Yogurt has lactobacillus acidophilus and Lactobacillus bulgaricus – Bulgarian butter milk
- Listeria monocytogenes – food poisening, “tough guy”, found in milk and milk products – unpastuerized cheese.
- Section 15
- Gardnerella
- Arthrobacter – found in soil
- Propioibacterium acnus – the little stuff that comes out of zits is propioinic acid.
- Swiss cheese – made by propioni bacteria named after shermini. Propioni sherminii
- Mycobacteria (section 16) – acid fast
- Tuberculosis
- Leprosea
- Section 18
- Cytophaga – communicate and build things together
- Beggiatoa – found on the bottom of the north branch. It is a a sulfer bacteria
- Section 19
- Chromatium – photosynthetic bacteria
- Rhodospirillum – red photosynthetic bacteria
- Rhodopseudomonas – red photosynthetic bacteria
- Chlorobium – green photosynthetic bacteria
- Methane producers CH4 (section 21)
- halophiles
- Extreme thermophiles
- Section 23
- Gliders – the whole colony moves on a slime. They also form fruiting bodies
- Nitrogen cycle organism (section 24)
- Sulfer cycle organisms
- Streptomyces (section 28)– soil organisms - major antibiotic producing genus
- Streptomyces erythreus – produces erythromyocin antibiotic
- Along with penicillin (mold genus)
- Prokaryota
- Eubacteria –
- true bacteria
- Chlamydia and coxiella – OIP
- Mycoplasmids – no cell wall
- Cyanobacter is split off because it has a eukaryotic type of photosynthesis
- Archae bacteria
- Page 5 of handout from 9/21 is important it summarizes a lot of different thingsthings
- Cultivation
- bacteria grow on cell free media. Ex. TSA agar
- Rickettsia, Chlamydia and viruses – they are OIP’s and need host cell. This can be done with fertile eggs or tissue culture like HELA cell culture – a human culture
- Size
- Bacteria – .5-3 um
- Rickettsia - 400nm (.4um). We can see them with our lab microscope
- Viruses – 150nm (.15um). cant see them in our lab
- Inclusion bodies – a bunch of viruses together – we can see these. Nigre bodies of rabies.
- Visibility
- Filterability
- does it go through a millipore filter?
- Mycoplasma makes it through because it has no cell wall.
- Rickettsia – non filterable except coxiella
- Viruses are all filterable
- Multiplication
- Viruses – complex, no cell wall, strictly host dependent
- Nucleic acids
- Viruses – DNA or RNA, one or the other
- Antibiotics
- Viruses are resistant to antibiotics – they have no cell wall
- Cell wall
- Muramic acid. NAM
- OIP
- Bacteria no. except neisseria, salmonella typhus (typhoid fever), mycobacterium tb,
- Synthesis of ATP
- E. coli gets 38 ATP whereas we get 36.
- Viruses can’t make ATP – they are host dependent
- Ribosomes
- Macromolecular synthesis
- Metabolism (chap 7 in text) Growth Nutrition and Metabolism
- Bacterial nutrition (handout from 10/1)
- In general bacteria is either grown in a liquid broth or a pitri dish (agar)
- All life requires a carbon source. Ex. Glucose
- DNA has a carbon backbone, so does RNA and proteins
- Get ATP from oxidation of glucose
- Nitrogen source
- Phosphate source – needed for ATP, DNA, RNA, cell membrane (phospholipids)
- Sulfer source – amino acids; mathyanine - AUG start codon.
- Trace elements – minerals; iron for hemoglobin. Cytochromes – electron transport proteins that form ATP have a central molecule made of iron. Low iron=no energy. Iron deficiency – anemia.
- Magnesium – enzymatic co-factor. Enzymes can’t function without it.
- Media – 2 major groups
- Chemically defined media – we know everything that is in it and the quantities
- Gives a look inside nutrition
- M-9 media
- E. coli grows in M-9 media
- Glucose – provides energy
- Ammonium acid phosphate – provides a phosphate source
- Dipotassium phosphate – forms buffer (buffers maintain pH). Most organisms use a phosphate buffer.
- Magnesium Sulfate – trace minerals
- Sodium Chloride
- Water
- Non chemically defined – a.k.a. complex media
3 comments:
Hi- I downloaded the audios for 10/1 and 10/3 lectures but it doesnt seem to work. I downloaded previous audios and those worked. I think the 10/1 and 10/3 audios are not in .zip form. Do you think you could change them in to .zip form? Thanks!
The extra credit, probiotic paper is due Oct. 10, not the 18.
I will convert the audio to .zip format for those two lectures on Monday afternoon. Sorry for the delay.
Post a Comment