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The Tools of Microbiology

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Presentation on theme: "The Tools of Microbiology"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Tools of Microbiology
Chapter 3 The Tools of Microbiology

2 Microscopy 1. Light microscopy Structure of the light microscope
Two lenses – Ocular and Objective Image formation Uses glass or plastic lenses to focus the image Resolution and determining resolving power Resolution: the ability to distinguish between two objects that are very close together. Working distance The distance from the end of the objective lens to the slide Oil-immersion microscopy Prevents further refraction of light because the oil has the same refractive index as the slide – therefore increasing resolution

3 Fig

4 The Five I’s of Microbiology
Inoculation – Obtaining a specimen and placing it in media Incubation – Placing specimen at optimal for growth Isolation – separating one organisms from other Inspection – viewing object under microscope Identification – using differential staining, biochemical and genetic testing to identify the organisms

5 Brightfield Microscopy

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8 3. Dark-field and phase-contrast microscopy
Use of star diaphragm - refracts light around the object – slide is dark, objects that are 3 dimensional are light Phase contrast – special objective lenses put the image slightly out of “phase” to give more resolution 4. Fluorescent and electron microscopy The fluorescent antibody technique – fluorescent antibody will attach to a specific structure and the pigment will fluoresce so that the specific structure can be distinguished from other structures.

9 Darkfield

10 Fluorescent Fluorescent pigments attached to antibodies bind to particular structures (ie. Microtubules, Nucleic Acid, Cell wall Structures, etc… used to identify structures

11 Confocal – many layers in focus

12 Light vs. Electron Microscopes

13 Resolution differences

14 Electron Microscopy Transmission electron microscopy
Transmission of electrons through the object – gives a 2-D look at the inside of a cell – uses magnets to focus the electron beam. Photographic film collects the beams that go through the object – giving various areas of “light” and “dark” depending on whether the electrons exposed the film or not. Scanning electron microscopy Bounces electrons off of the object – gives a 3-D look at the surface of objects – works like “SONAR” but uses electron beam instead of sound waves to detect the shape of objects. – uses magnets to focus the electron beam – collects information to form a “picture” through a television monitor or computer.

15 TEM – Transmission Electron Microscope

16 SEM – Scanning Electron Microscope

17 2. Staining techniques Simple stain technique Negative stain technique
Basic dyes – pigment is on the positive charged ions attracted to the negatively charged cell Stain cell Negative stain technique Acidic dyes – pigment is on the negative charged ions and are repelled by the negatively charged cell Stain background Gram stain technique Primary Dye – Crystal Violet Mordant – Iodine Decolorizer – Ethanol Secondary Dye - Safranin

18 Simple Stain

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20 Gram Stain

21 Acid Fast Stain

22 Capsule Stain

23 Spore Stain

24 Fluorescent Microscopy


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