Encourage - antibiotics, bioplastics
Capable of removing ,man made contaminants in the environments
- eg. oil spills - microbes that break down long chain hydrocarbonsÂ
Avoid - antibiotic resistance, cyanobacterial bloomsÂ
Associated with infection and diseaseÂ
In vitro = grown in the lab in a mediumÂ
Doesnât provide clear pic of what it's like in the wild - they're given all the nutrients they need to survive- natural environment not like thisÂ
Generic strategy of growth:
Resting state - not very active - some produce spores
Bacteria have small molecules in cell surface that can detect conditions
Signal sent into cellÂ
Genes turned on or off so they can respond to the environmentÂ
E.coli O14:H4Â
Major 2011 E.Coli outbreakÂ
Impacted mainly healthy adultsÂ
Contaminated salad vegetables - huge economic effectÂ
Parthenogenesis - bloody diarrhoea, kidney damage/failureÂ
Different from normal E.Coli in gut due to virulence factorsÂ
Genome sequenced during the outbreakÂ
E Coli could bind to colonic tissueÂ
Produced shiga-toxinsÂ
Resistant to many drugsÂ
Evaded the immune systemÂ
Trouble identifying this - clinical microbiology tests didn't test for this type of E.coliÂ
CaulobacterÂ
flagella , proteins on surface detect nutrient gradient - only moves towards nutrientsÂ
Finds ideal environment - gene expression changes - prostheca attached to ground creating a sessile stalkÂ
When nutrients is low - cells divide creating flagella to move againÂ
Growing in the lab:Â
BatchÂ
ClosedÂ
No addition or removal of nutrients or culture (except gases)Â
Allows us to synchronise the cells growing in a cultureÂ
ContinuousÂ
Open systemÂ
Continuous addition of medium balanced by removal of culture to balance medium - one problem is contamination
Overnight culture when cells are in stationary phase - take sample - put into fresh media so they grow at the same timeÂ
LAG PHASE of batch cultureÂ
Cells adapt to new mediumÂ
Carbon, nitrogen sourcesÂ
Period of non-replicationÂ
Adjust to the new conditionsÂ
Synthesise enzymes, RNA etc.Â
Dynamic, adaptive phase that protects the bacteria from potential threats and promotes reproductive flexibilityÂ
MediaÂ
Complex - always rich, made from peptone or yeast extract,Â
Defined - more than minimal but it is defined - molecules can be quantifiedÂ
MinimalÂ
LOG PHASEÂ
Rapid growthÂ
Doubling through bacterial binary fissionÂ
Number of new bacteria appearing per unit time is proportional to the present populationÂ
Continuation up until there is a depletion in nutrientsÂ
STATIONARY PHASE
Nutrient limitation and waste accumulationÂ
Secondary metabolism eg. storage compounds, glycogen, antibiotics
Number of dividing cells is equal to the number of dying cells so there is no overall population growth
Bioplastics, kinases producedÂ
Spore forming bacteria produce endosporesÂ
Pathogenic bacteria produce substances (virulence factors) which consequently make them pathogenicÂ
DEATH/DECLINE PHASEÂ
Â
Monitored over long periodÂ
Number of dying cells continues to riseÂ
Number of living cells declines exponentiallyÂ
Dying cells lyse/break open and release their contents to the environment -Â nutrients now available to other bacteria - this helps spore forming bacteria to survive long enough for spore productionÂ
Spores can survive in harsh conditions of the death phase and can become growing bacteria when placed in an environment that supports life Â
Continued survival of GASP mutants (growth advantage in stationary phase)Â
Cell growth:Â
Some of the peptidoglycan has to be broken down and reassembled for bacteria to grow (elongasome)Â
Escherichia coli structure:
Ribosomes are located at the poles of the cell - protein synthesis occurs here
Peptidoglycan sacculusÂ
Structure in the cell wall of most bacteria cellsÂ
Flexible mesh withstands turgor pressureÂ
Extension is trickyÂ
Glycan chain broken by lysosome and autolysinsÂ
Formation of this structure involves the formation of monomeric precursors in the cytoplasm, their transport to the periplasm and polymerisation to form a functional peptidoglycan sacculusÂ
The cytoplasmÂ
Crowded but probably non-uniform
Axial nucleoid with loops - excludes ribosomesÂ
Expression: RNA polymerase active in axial region and possibly loops but translation mainly at peripheral and capsÂ
Transertion:Â
Insertion of proteins into wall at peripheral site of expression â multi-protein hyperstructure Â
Cell division must sync with DNA replicationÂ
Bidirectional DNA replication from originÂ
Chromosome separation involves four macrodomainsÂ
Z rings produced in the centre of the cell âseptumÂ
Cells first copy DNA
Meanwhile, replication initiated at originÂ
Cell cycle in E. coliÂ
Poles / end-capsÂ
Formed by divisome
Formed during division by contraction on Z ring - contains FtsZ (tubulin homolog)Â
Some lipids and proteins specifically localise to pole - eg. cardiolipin Caulobacter flagellumÂ
Old and new poled ie. ageing - old pole gets misfolded proteins (inclusion bodies)Â
Allows a mechanism for gene expressionÂ