History of Microbiology Pt.2
Theories for explaining diseases in the past
Miasma theory: diseases were caused by bad air or miasmas emanating from decaying organic matter, filth, or other noxious environments
Diseases like cholera, malaria, and the plague were attributed to miasmas
Humoral theory: rooted in Greek medicine, this theory was based on the balance of four bodily fluids or humors: blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile. An imbalance among these was believed to cause illness
Conditions like fever and inflammation were believed to be due to this
Contagion theory: diseases could be transmitted from one person to another through direct contact or by touching contaminated objects. This was an early recognition of disease transmission but did not specify the exact nature of the pathogen.
Smallpox and syphilis were diseases understood through this theory
Divine retribution: in ancient cultures, illness was thought to be a form of punishments from deities or a result of supernatural forces. Rituals and prayers were used as cures
Leprosy and plagues
Physiological imbalances: some ancient and medieval theories proposed that diseases arose from internal imbalances unrelated to the humoral theory, such as disturbances in the body’s emotional or physical state
Epilepsy
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895)
Breakthrough from previous theories to germ theory
Fermentation
Was hired by a distillery to study why some wine spoiled into vinegar and other into alcohol
Founder of bacteriology
Isolated microorganisms such as yeasts and bacteria
Pasteurization: heating substances between 50-60 degrees C
Supporter of germ theory
Experiments showed that bacteria can cause disease and grow in tissues when placed there
Saved the silk industry by discovering Pebrine disease
Discovered attenuation that is still used in vaccine development
Developed vaccine against anthrax (Bacillus anthracis) and rabies (Lyssavirus)
Influence
One guy (Joseph Lister) believed in Pasteur over the idea that air can carry microorganisms
He wanted to kill microorganisms through heat and surgery, but this was a problem because it destroys the skin
Joseph Lister (1860s)
Founder of modern surgery and movement towards aseptic surgical conditions of today
Surgical infection might be caused by microorganisms
Promoted the idea of sterilizing surgical tools, handwashing, and sterilizing using carbolic acid (phenol)
Studied wound healing and surgical outcomes
Operated under the principles of no germs, no infection, no disease
Carbolic spray
Discovered that carbolic acid destroys microorganisms
He gradually decreased carbolic acid to prevent deaths
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis
Worked in maternity wards at a time when mortality rates ranges as high as 25-30 percent
Observed death rate of women in first division of clinic was 2-3 times as high as those in second division
Students who did surgeries were taught in first division
Midwives worked in the second division
Ordered students wash their hands in chlorinated lime between examinations with sick and healthy patients
Mortality dropped to 1.27 percent
No one believed him and he died from a wound in custody
Robert Koch (1876, Germany)
Identified the bacterium responsible for anthrax disease
Had a feud with Pasteur and thought he was a plagiarist
Founder of pathogenic microbiology
Discovered and described the TB bacteria in 1882
Challenged the idea that all disease was endogenous (disease came from within and that when you get sick, it was active)
Inspired a generation of scientists to link disease to the microbes
Henle-Koch Postulates
An organism should be considered that cause of an infectious disease if:
It occurred in every case of the disease
It can be isolated from diseased patients
After isolation and growth in culture, it could produce the same disease when inoculated into a healthy animal model
It can be isolated again from the new host
Methods
Take a healthy organism, look at the RBCs, see if positive agent is present, if not, look at diseased organism
Limitations
Some pathogens aren’t easily grown in pure culture (prions)
Viruses can’t be replicated purely without a host
Causative organism might not be present in every stage of the disease
If it is ethically unacceptable to expose a host experimentally to prove the pathogenic relationship or if a model host doesn’t exist
Spurred the golden age of microbiology and led to discovery of many microorganisms
Cholera
Leprosy
Plague
Tetanus
Tuberculosis
Typhoid fever
Diphtheria
Further developments
Fannie Hesse
Credited for suggesting a vegetable-derived jelly could have useful lab applications (agar)
Julius Richard Petri
Petri dish invention
Alexander Fleming (1881-1955)
Scottish physician scientists
Studied bacteria, one day a culture of Staphylococci was contaminated with the fungus Penicillium notatum, and noticed how it worked as an antibiotic because it killed part of the bacterial colony
Isolated the fungus, put it into a beef broth and started testing it on bacterial colonies
Shared the Nobel Prize with Howard, Florey, and Ernst Chain in 1945 when the ladder two found a way to produce penicillin in large quantities
Selman Waksman (1888-1973)
Jewish, ukrainian born American
Coined antibiotics
Studied soil bacteria, set out to find as many antibiotics in soil microbes called actinomycetes
Found antibiotics for
Actinomycin
Clavacin
Streptothricin
Streptomycin
Grisein
Neomycin
Fradicin
Candicidincandid
Sergei Winogradsky (1856-1953)
Founder of microbial ecology
Studied microbiota of the soil
Frederick William Twort & Felix d’Herelle (1915-1917)
Discovered bacteriophages
Twort observed and Herelle named it
Avery, MacLeod, McCarty (1944)
Discovered DNA
Joshua Lederberg & Edward Tatum
Bacterial conjugation
Gerald Edelman & Rodney Porter
Structure of antibodies
Paul Reumeberg
First recombinant DNA in a tube
Luc Antoine Montagnier & Robert Charles Gallo (1983)
HIV causes AIDS
Theories for explaining diseases in the past
Miasma theory: diseases were caused by bad air or miasmas emanating from decaying organic matter, filth, or other noxious environments
Diseases like cholera, malaria, and the plague were attributed to miasmas
Humoral theory: rooted in Greek medicine, this theory was based on the balance of four bodily fluids or humors: blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile. An imbalance among these was believed to cause illness
Conditions like fever and inflammation were believed to be due to this
Contagion theory: diseases could be transmitted from one person to another through direct contact or by touching contaminated objects. This was an early recognition of disease transmission but did not specify the exact nature of the pathogen.
Smallpox and syphilis were diseases understood through this theory
Divine retribution: in ancient cultures, illness was thought to be a form of punishments from deities or a result of supernatural forces. Rituals and prayers were used as cures
Leprosy and plagues
Physiological imbalances: some ancient and medieval theories proposed that diseases arose from internal imbalances unrelated to the humoral theory, such as disturbances in the body’s emotional or physical state
Epilepsy
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895)
Breakthrough from previous theories to germ theory
Fermentation
Was hired by a distillery to study why some wine spoiled into vinegar and other into alcohol
Founder of bacteriology
Isolated microorganisms such as yeasts and bacteria
Pasteurization: heating substances between 50-60 degrees C
Supporter of germ theory
Experiments showed that bacteria can cause disease and grow in tissues when placed there
Saved the silk industry by discovering Pebrine disease
Discovered attenuation that is still used in vaccine development
Developed vaccine against anthrax (Bacillus anthracis) and rabies (Lyssavirus)
Influence
One guy (Joseph Lister) believed in Pasteur over the idea that air can carry microorganisms
He wanted to kill microorganisms through heat and surgery, but this was a problem because it destroys the skin
Joseph Lister (1860s)
Founder of modern surgery and movement towards aseptic surgical conditions of today
Surgical infection might be caused by microorganisms
Promoted the idea of sterilizing surgical tools, handwashing, and sterilizing using carbolic acid (phenol)
Studied wound healing and surgical outcomes
Operated under the principles of no germs, no infection, no disease
Carbolic spray
Discovered that carbolic acid destroys microorganisms
He gradually decreased carbolic acid to prevent deaths
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis
Worked in maternity wards at a time when mortality rates ranges as high as 25-30 percent
Observed death rate of women in first division of clinic was 2-3 times as high as those in second division
Students who did surgeries were taught in first division
Midwives worked in the second division
Ordered students wash their hands in chlorinated lime between examinations with sick and healthy patients
Mortality dropped to 1.27 percent
No one believed him and he died from a wound in custody
Robert Koch (1876, Germany)
Identified the bacterium responsible for anthrax disease
Had a feud with Pasteur and thought he was a plagiarist
Founder of pathogenic microbiology
Discovered and described the TB bacteria in 1882
Challenged the idea that all disease was endogenous (disease came from within and that when you get sick, it was active)
Inspired a generation of scientists to link disease to the microbes
Henle-Koch Postulates
An organism should be considered that cause of an infectious disease if:
It occurred in every case of the disease
It can be isolated from diseased patients
After isolation and growth in culture, it could produce the same disease when inoculated into a healthy animal model
It can be isolated again from the new host
Methods
Take a healthy organism, look at the RBCs, see if positive agent is present, if not, look at diseased organism
Limitations
Some pathogens aren’t easily grown in pure culture (prions)
Viruses can’t be replicated purely without a host
Causative organism might not be present in every stage of the disease
If it is ethically unacceptable to expose a host experimentally to prove the pathogenic relationship or if a model host doesn’t exist
Spurred the golden age of microbiology and led to discovery of many microorganisms
Cholera
Leprosy
Plague
Tetanus
Tuberculosis
Typhoid fever
Diphtheria
Further developments
Fannie Hesse
Credited for suggesting a vegetable-derived jelly could have useful lab applications (agar)
Julius Richard Petri
Petri dish invention
Alexander Fleming (1881-1955)
Scottish physician scientists
Studied bacteria, one day a culture of Staphylococci was contaminated with the fungus Penicillium notatum, and noticed how it worked as an antibiotic because it killed part of the bacterial colony
Isolated the fungus, put it into a beef broth and started testing it on bacterial colonies
Shared the Nobel Prize with Howard, Florey, and Ernst Chain in 1945 when the ladder two found a way to produce penicillin in large quantities
Selman Waksman (1888-1973)
Jewish, ukrainian born American
Coined antibiotics
Studied soil bacteria, set out to find as many antibiotics in soil microbes called actinomycetes
Found antibiotics for
Actinomycin
Clavacin
Streptothricin
Streptomycin
Grisein
Neomycin
Fradicin
Candicidincandid
Sergei Winogradsky (1856-1953)
Founder of microbial ecology
Studied microbiota of the soil
Frederick William Twort & Felix d’Herelle (1915-1917)
Discovered bacteriophages
Twort observed and Herelle named it
Avery, MacLeod, McCarty (1944)
Discovered DNA
Joshua Lederberg & Edward Tatum
Bacterial conjugation
Gerald Edelman & Rodney Porter
Structure of antibodies
Paul Reumeberg
First recombinant DNA in a tube
Luc Antoine Montagnier & Robert Charles Gallo (1983)
HIV causes AIDS