General Microbiology for Dental Students PDF

Summary

These lecture notes cover general bacteriology, including bacterial structure, components, differences between Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, and functions of bacterial cell walls.

Full Transcript

BMS271 General Microbiology for Dental Students MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY Dr. Waleed Eldars Professor of Medical Microbiology and Immunology Faculty of Medicine Mansoura University MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY The science which is concerned with the study of microbes an...

BMS271 General Microbiology for Dental Students MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY Dr. Waleed Eldars Professor of Medical Microbiology and Immunology Faculty of Medicine Mansoura University MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY The science which is concerned with the study of microbes and the interaction between microbes and hosts leading to infectious diseases. Microbes are living organisms that can only be seen by microscopes and they are sometimes called microorganisms although viruses are not true organisms. Microorganisms Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Pro = premature Eu = true DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PROKARYOTES AND EUKARYOTES Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Nuclear membrane Absent Present Chromosomal N. One copy Two copies (Haploid) (Diploid) Ribosome 70 S 80 S Mitosis Absent Present Examples Bacteria, viruses Fungi CLASSES OF PATHOGENIC MICROORGANISMS Viruses Bacteria Fungi Size 0.02-0.2 µm 1-5 µ m 3-10 (yeast) nucleus No nucleus Nuclear body True nucleus Ribosome No ribosome 70 S 80 S Nucleic acid Either RNA or DNA Both Both replication Intra cellular replication Binary fission Budding or cycle Mitosis Motility None Some None Cell wall Protein or lipoprotein Peptidoglycan Chitin Growth Intracellular Intra and extra The same cellular MORPHOLOGY OF BACTERIA 1. Size of bacterial cell:- The size of bacterial cell is measured by micron (micron= 1/ 1000 mm) 2. Gram staining: Bacteria are stained with Gram stain that can differentiate bacteria into: Gram positive bacteria appearing violet Gram negative bacteria appearing pink. 3. Shape of the bacterial cell:- (a) Cocci or spherical. e.g. Staphylococci (b) Bacilli or cylindrical e.g. Diphtheria. (c) Spiral (d) curved or comma shaped. 4. Arrangement of bacteria:- (*) Single as Gram negative bacilli (E. coli) (*) Pairs. As Neisseria and pneumococci. (*) Tetrads as staphylococci. (*) Grape like as staphylococci. (*) Chains as streptococci, Anthrax bacilli. (*) Angular as Diphtheria bacilli. BACTERIAL STRUCTURE The basic components of bacterial cells include: A)- Cell envelope: » Cell wall. » Cytoplasmic membrane. » Capsule. B)- Cytoplasmic components: » Nuclear body. » Plasmid. » Ribosomes. C)- Cell appendages: » Flagellae. » Fimbriae "Pili“. A) CELL ENVELOP (1)Cell wall ▪It is the layer that lies outside the cytoplasmic membrane ▪All bacterial cells, the cell wall composted of , peptidoglycan". ▪The peptidoglycan layer present in both Gram positive & negative bacteria. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN GRAM POSITIVE & GRAM NEGATIVE BACTERIA CELL WALL: Gram positive Gram negative Peptido- Thick. Very thin glycan. Special Special Special components: structure components: 1.Lipoprotein 1.Teichoic acid and 2.Outer membrane lipoteichoic acid 3.Periplasmic space 2.Polysaccharides. 4.Lipopolysaccharides (Endotoins) FUNCTIONS OF THE CELL WALL Preservation of the shape of the cell. Protective function Permeability of the cell Antigenic character Staining reaction Toxicity. Target action of antibiotics:- as penicillin and cephalosporins. (2) Cytoplasmic membrane Def:- It is a thin elastic membrane that lies immediately under the cell wall Nature: protein and phospholipids. Functions Transport and permeability function. Excretion of hydrolytic enzymes and toxins Biosynthetic function. Chemotactic function. Energy Production (by mesosomes) (3) Capsule. Def:- It is gelatinous material surrounding bacterial cells produced by some pathogenic bacteria inside the host tissue. Chemical structure:- All bacteria is complex polysaccharides e.g. Streptococcus pneumoniae. Polypeptides e.g. bacillus anthracis. Functions:- 1) Protect bacterial cell against phagocytosis. 2) Determining virulence of the organism. 3) Antigenic. BMS271 General Microbiology for Dental Students B) CYTOPLASMIC COMPONENTS (1) Ribosomes: The factory of protein synthesis in the cell. Complex structures composed of RNA & proteins. It is a target for some antibiotic as tetracycline and chloramphenicol. Bacterial ribosomes consist of (70S): Large subunit: 50S. Small subunit: 30S. S value = Svedberg unit. (2) Nuclear body (Nucleoid): No nuclear membrane. DNA molecules folded on itself. Single chromosome is double stranded circular DNA carries genetic characters. (3) Plasmids: Extrachromosomal genetic elements. Circular double stranded DNA. Carry certain function: antibiotic resistance. C)CELL APPENDAGES 1- Flagellae: They are long helical filaments attached to cytoplasm and pass out the cell wall. Formed of contractile protein "Flagellin". Demonstration: Motility test: Hanging drop, semisolid agar Electron Microscope. Functions: 1) Motility 2) Antigenicity: H antigen. 2- FIMBRIAE (PILI): They are short, hair like filaments. They are shorter and thinner than flagella straight and not originating from cytoplasm. They are formed of protein "pilin". Functions: Organs of adhesion to host cell "common pili". Sex pili “conjugation”. Virulence. Flagella Pili Long Short Helical Straight Formed of flagellin Formed of pilin Motility Adhesion No role in Have role in conjugation conjugation BACTERIAL SPORES Bacterial endospores are resting body phase formed under unfavorable conditions. They are highly resistant forms produced outside the body by some organisms like Bacillus and Clostridium groups. Shape: Spores may be spherical or oval. Site: They may be Central, sub-terminal or terminal. Ca. dipicolinic acid SUMMARY AND RAP UP 10/4/2024

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