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Typically refers to an increase in population rather than in size

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Presentation on theme: "Typically refers to an increase in population rather than in size"— Presentation transcript:

1 Typically refers to an increase in population rather than in size
Microbial growth Typically refers to an increase in population rather than in size

2 Growth curves Carried out using batch cultures or a closed system (no fresh media added) Characterized by several phases

3 Lag phase Occurs when cells are placed into fresh media Likely due to the cells’ need to synthesize new components before reproducing

4 Lag phase Can vary depending on: 1. Type of media 2. Condition of the cells

5 Exponential phase Cells are growing at the maximum rate possible under given conditions Rate of growth is constant Population most uniform

6 Stationary phase Bacteria in stationary phase are usually at a concentration of 109 cells per ml Balance between cell division and cell death or cells cease to divide

7 Stationary phase Due to: Nutrient depletion Toxic waste accumulation Critical cell density reached

8 Stationary phase Bacteria subjected to starvation may become resistant to killing Some pathogens may become more virulent when starved

9 Death phase Decline in viable cells due to toxic wastes and nutrient depletion Death may be at a constant rate (logarithmic) Death rate may decrease after majority of population has died (resistant cells)

10 Mathematics of growth Cells dividing at a constant rate during exponential growth Generation time/doubling time = time it takes for population to double

11 Mathematics of growth More convenient to graph as log10 of cell number vs. time

12 Generation time

13 Determining generation time

14 Measurement of microbial growth
Measurement of cell number Measurement of cell mass Measurement of culture turbidity

15 Measurement of cell number
Counting chambers Coulter counters Plating techniques Membrane filter techniques

16 Petroff-Hauser chamber
Used for counting prokaryotic cells Use of stains or fluorescent or phase-contrast microscopes make counting easier

17 Using a Petroff-Hauser chamber
Chamber is of known depth and has grid etched into bottom 25 squares cover an area of 1 mm2 Determining average number per square and multiplying by 25 gives total number of cells in chamber

18 Using a Petroff-Hauser chamber
280 cells in 10 squares 280/10 = 28/square 28 x 25 = 700 cells/ mm2 Chamber is 0.02 mm deep 700/0.02 = 700 x 50 = 3.5 x 104 cells/mm3 = 3.5 x 107 cells/cm3

19 Coulter counter Cells forced through small opening with electrodes on either side Passage of cell will cause resistance to increase and cell is counted More useful for counting eukaryotes

20 Counting chambers and Coulter counters
Neither can distinguish between living and dead cells

21 Plating techniques Diluted sample spread over the surface of agar plate Number of cells can be calculated by multiplying colony number by dilution factor

22 Membrane filter techniques
Useful for measuring number of cells in aquatic samples Sample passed through filter with small pore size Filters placed on agar plates to allow growth of colonies

23 Membrane filter techniques

24 Measurement of dry weight
Cells collected by centrifugation, washed and dried in an oven and weighed Most useful for fungi

25 Measurement of turbidity
Degree of light scattering induced by a culture is indirectly related to the cell number Spectrophotometers measure amount of light scattering Can measure transmittance or absorption of light

26 Continuous culture of microorganisms
Two most common systems Chemostat Turbidostat

27 Chemostat Sterile media fed into vessel at same rate that media containing bacteria are removed Final cell density is dependant on the conc. of a limiting nutrient

28 Turbidostat Makes use of a photocell to measure turbidity of culture Flow rate of media is regulated to maintain a constant cell density

29 Influence of environmental factors on growth

30 Influence of environmental factors on growth

31 Influence of environmental factors on growth

32 Influence of environmental factors on growth
Acidophiles Neutrophiles Alkalophiles

33 Influence of environmental factors on growth

34 Influence of environmental factors on growth

35 Quorum sensing Bacteria can communicate via quorum sensing or autoinduction Cell senses concentration of signal When threshold is reached, cell begins expressing sets of certain genes

36 Quorum sensing Most common signal molecules in gram-negative bacteria are acyl homoserine lactones (HSLs) Gram-positives often use an oligopeptide signal molecule Important in pathogenicity and biofilm formation


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