mcb 229
Microbial Growth and its Control
Last revised: Monday, February 3, 2003
Reading: Ch. 6, 7 in text

Batch vs. Continuous culture methods


Mechanics of batch growth.

Growth curve (see Fig. 6.1 in text)

4 phases: lag, exponential, stationary, and death

  1. Why lag phase?
    • Previous cells ran out of food, shut down many metabolic pathways needed for active growth, made adaptations necessary for dormancy and protection. Need to regenerate pools of essential nutrients before growth can resume, requires new enzyme synthesis and time for pathways to function.
    • Can reduce or eliminate lag phase by using cells that are not in stationary phase.
  2. Why exponential phase?
    • Cells in optimum growth state, divide repeatedly by binary fission at maximal rate.
    • Note: useful to calculate doubling time; can vary from 20 min to several days
  3. Why stationary phase?
    • Can be due to exhaustion of some critical nutrient, or to accumulation of waste products that slow down growth (e.g. acid buildup from fermentation).
  4. Why death phase?
    • Continued accumulation of wastes, exposure to oxygen, loss of cell's ability to detoxify toxins, etc. Note that death is exponential; 90% of cells die in certain time, another 90% in same time period, etc.
    • Note: in practice, try to prolong stationary phase, reduce death phase. Don't store cultures at room temperature on plates (ready exposure to oxygen, dessication, high temperature speeds oxidation reactions). Better, transfer to slants (tubes), store capped in refrigerator once grown. Still better, transfer to stab tube (soft nutrient agar), stopper and seal with airtight seal. Can recover viable culture even after a year of sitting on shelf!

Mathematics of growth; generation time

Growth equation

# of generations# of bacterialog2Nlog10N
0 1 or 20 0 0
1 2 or 21 1 .301
2 4 or 22 2 .602
3 8 or 23 3 .903
4 16 or 24 4 ...
5 32 or 25 5 ...
n 2n n .301n

growth equation Example:
measure culture at 9 a.m.: No = 10,000 cells/ml
measure culture at 3 p.m.: Nf = 100,000 cells/ml
calculate n = (5 - 4)/0.301 = 1/0.3 = 3.33 generations
total time = 6 hours = 360 minutes
360 minutes/3.33 generations = 108 minutes/generation
Conclude: generation time = 108 minutes
Note: be able to calculate g.t. Pay attention to units, ask if your answer is reasonable.

Graphical measurement of growth

See text fig. 6.1

Plotting # of cells vs. time gives a curved line.
Plotting log # of cells vs. time gives a straight line -- easier to interpolate, use.
Plotting # of cells vs time on semilog paper also gives a straight line -- easiest way in practice to work with growth measurements.
Note: often what is plotted on the Y-axis of semilog paper is not # of cells, but something more easily measurable, such as Absorbance (see below).


Measurement of growth

  1. Total Cell count
    • Petroff-Hausser chamber slide -- needs large conc. (107 cells/ml minimum) -- see Fig. 6.3
    • Coulter Counter (for larger microbes; fungi, yeasts, protozoa, etc.) -- uses electrical charge difference in passing through small hole. Not so useful with bacteria, get errors due to clumping, debris, etc.
  2. Viable count
    • This is typically carried out by CFU (colony forming units) assay:
      1. carry out dilution series
      2. plate known volumes on plates
      3. count only plates with 30-300 colonies (best statistical accuracy)
      4. extrapolate to undiluted cell conc.
    • CFU may or may not be same as number of cells --
    • Method is accurate, but requires time for incubation.
    • Two ways to carry out viable count:
      1. Spread plate: bacteria are spread on the surface of agar using some sterile spreading device.
        • Advantages: if properly carried out, all colonies should be easily counted.
        • Disadvantages: takes some time, not always reliable in inexperienced hands, cells with low tolerance to oxygen won't grow. If "spreaders" are present, may overgrow plate surface.
      2. Pour plate: bacteria are mixed with melted agar and cooled; colonies grow throughout the agar.
        • Advantages: almost fail-proof technique, colonies well separated. Can allow growth of organisms with lower oxygen tolerance in agar.
        • Disadvantages: colonies variable size, harder to see similarity in colony morphology between those on surface and in agar. Counting may be more difficult. Heat may kill some cells before agar cools and gels.
  3. Optical techniques
    • Often, can estimate cell numbers accurately by measuring visible turbidity. Light scattered is proportional to number of cells.
    • This only works above cell densities of 107 in pure cultures. With less than 107 cells/ml, cannot detect bacteria.
      1. Eyeball method. This is not a precise measurement, but shoud allow estimation within an order of magnitude
        • no turbidity means less than 107 cells/ml
        • slight turbidity = 107-108 cells/ml
        • high turbidity = 108-109 cells/ml
        • Very high turbidity = greater than 109 cells/ml (cultures rarely get as high as 1010 cells/ml)
      2. Absorbance method
        • Use a spectrophotometer to accurately measure absorbance, usually at wavelengths around 400-600 nm.
        • Accurate measure of cells when concentration not too high. Easy and quick to measure (can sample in less than a minute)

Effects of temperature on growth

Different microbes adapted to different temperature ranges


Effects of oxygen on growth

Note: higher organisms all require oxygen; we are not used to thinking about other alternatives. But many microbes grow anaerobically some or all of the time.

Terminology

  1. Obligate aerobes -- grow only when oxygen is present
  2. Facultative anaerobes -- grow with or without oxygen, grow better in oxygen (respire)
  3. Aerotolerant anaerobes -- ignore oxygen, grow equally well with or without
  4. Obligate anaerobes -- die in presence of oxygen
  5. Microaerophiles -- won't grow at normal atmospheric oxygen (20%), but require some oxygen for growth (2-10%)
Anaerobic habitats more common than expected. Ex: in human mouth, plaque contains bacterial zoo. Facultative anaerobes consume oxygen, create anaerobic microenvironment fit for obligate anaerobes.In general, wherever organic matter accumulates, microbes will use up oxygen faster than it can be replaced, create anaerobic environment. Esp. true under water, since oxygen is poorly soluble in water. Lakes and ponds stratify into aerobic (upper) and anaerobic (lower) zones in summer due to vigorous microbial growth on sediments.

Why obligate anaerobes?

Oxygen itself is reactive (oxidizing agent), capable of degrading organic molecules. But oxygen can easily generate very toxic byproducts, strong oxidizing agents that react indiscriminately with any organic molecules, including DNA, proteins, etc.:
Aerobes (and all cells able to tolerate oxygen) must have enzymes to get rid of these radicals. Superoxide dismutase and catalase are two crucial enzymes.
superoxide (O2-)+ H+ ---(superoxide dismutase)right arrow O2 + H2O2
peroxide (H2O2) ---(catalase)right arrow O2 + H2O
Note: If E. coli (a facultative anaerobe) is mutated so it loses these two enzymes, resulting mutant behaves like an obligate anaerobe -- good confirmation of idea.

Culture techniques


Effects of pH on growth

Diff microbes have diff pH optima:

Effects of solutes and water activity on growth

Effects of radiation on growth

Mechanisms of damage:


Control of Microbial Growth

Overall Effectiveness (from least to most specific)

  1. Sterilizing Agents-- kill everything (e.g. heat, radiation)
  2. Disinfectants-- kill most things. Too strong for living tissues (e.g. lysol, NH3)
  3. Antiseptics-- milder in action. Can be used topically, but not ingested. (e.g. alcohol, iodine)
  4. Chemotherapeutics-- can be ingested (e.g. penicillin, sulfa drugs)

1: Sterilizing Agents

A. Heat

  1. Boiling. OK for most food, but not sterilizing. Endospore formers, hepatitis virus can resist.
  2. Autoclaving. Most common sterilizing procedure. 15 min @ 121 deg. Celsius. Adequate for l liter volumes. Longer times for larger volume.
  3. Dry Heat. Used for dry products. Typically 170-200 deg. C. overnite.
  4. Pasteurization. Not a sterilizing treatment, but kills pathogens in milk. 63-67 deg. C. for 30', Now 71 deg. C. for 15 sec.

B. Membrane Filters.

  1. 0.45 um filters retard bacteria. Good for heat-labile materials. Rapid. But expensive, and filters will clog.
  2. View examples of membrane filters

C. Chemicals

D. Radiation

  1. UV light. Reacts with DNA, causes DNA damage -- death. Thymine dimers!. But much damage can be repaired, esp. if light available (PHOTOREACTIVATION). NOTE: cannot penetrate glass.
  2. Ionizing radiation. Gamma rays produce free radicals, destroy all kinds of chemicals. E.g. OH-

2. & 3: Disinfectants & Antiseptics (not mutually exclusive; depends on concentration)

  1. heavy metals (Mercury, Silver, Arsenic)- cause protein denaturation
  2. halogens (Chlorine, Iodine, Hypochlorite)- oxidizing agents. Not usually used as antiseptics, but good for swimming pools, hot tubs, water supplies. Household bleach = 5% soln of hypochlorite- good for all-purpose disinfectant. But don't use with ammonium compounds or acids, can produce explosive gases (nitrogen tricholoride or chlorine gas).
  3. phenols & cresols- dissolve membranes, denature proteins
  4. alcohols- denature proteins, dissolve membranes.
  5. detergents- dissolve membranes
Note: disinfectants are classified into 3 groups:
  1. High level: effective against all life, incl. endospores. E.g. ethylene oxide, 2% glutaraldehyde. May require 10 hours to kill all pop of endospore-forming bacteria
  2. Intermediate level: defined as tuberculocidal (kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis ), as well as more resistant viruses (hepatitis, rhinovirus). Not effective against endospores.
  3. Low level: not effective against tuberculosis or endospores, or viruses without membranes. But do kill vegetative bacteria and fungi, used extensively. Economical, not overly toxic to humans. E.g. Lysol, detergents, mercurials.

4: Antimicrobial Chemotherapy

A. History:

  1. Antibiotics known for long time= chemicals produced by certain organisms that killed other organism. E.g. mushroom poisons. Early searches for antibiotics (ca. 1900) had bad side-effects. People decided that therapeutic applications were probably too dangerous.
  2. Ehrlich's "magic bullet": 1909, discovered "Salvarsan", chemical used to treat syphillis. Ehrlich stressed Selective toxicity as key factor in success.

B. Structural analogues as drugs


C. Antibiotics:

1. Cell Wall antibiotics

2. Inhibitors of protein synthesis


D. Drug resistance

Testing for Drug Resistance

History:

Different ways for bacteria to develop drug resistance

  1. mutations affecting cell surface can affect entry of drug
    • prevents entry of drug into cell
  2. receptor normally used by drug altered- no binding.
    • example: mutations can affect drug target in cell (e.g. slight change in ribosomal RNA can change affinity of ribosomes for erythromycin)
  3. bacteria or plasmids can produce enzymes which inactivate drug; e.g. pencillinases hydrolyze ß-lactam ring.
    • Plasmids = small, circular DNA elements that reside in bacterial cells, duplicate separately from bacterial chromosome.
    • Some plasmids carry genes for antibiotic resistance (enzymes that degrade antibiotic). Called R-plasmids. Have been found for most classes of antibiotics.
    • When antibiotics are in use, most bacteria are killed. If R-plasmid exists, can be transferred to other cells, resistance spreads through population. Result: new population is resistant to drug.
    • Note: possible for a single plasmid to carry multiple drug resistance genes, spread all of these as a single unit!
  4. plasmid encoded drug pump
    • production of protein "pumps" to pump drug out of cell

Ways to deal with antibiotic resistance

  1. higher dose, different antibiotic, more than one drug simultaneously
  2. also restraint by physicians and control (no over the counter use)
  3. CORRECT use of drug. Most people take drugs improperly, miss doses, allow conditions that favor selection of drug resistant mutants.

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