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History of Microbiology

  • Pathogens

    • Virus

      • Hepatitis, SARS, Herpes, Mono, AIDS

    • Bacteria

      • Tuberculosis, pneumonia, anthrax, urinary tract

    • Fungi

      • Ringworm, yeast infection

    • Protozoa

    • Parasites

  • The earliest humans used microorganisms for…

    • Preservation - but happened mysteriously for some time

    • Neolithic human societies did it to make beer and wine through fermentation

      • 7000-6600 BCE in China

      • 6000 BCE in Georgia

      • 3150 BE in ancient Egypt

      • 2000 BCE in pre-Hispanic Mexico

  • Seeing is believing

    • Robert hooke

      • Saw the first cells and coined the term cell when he noticed that cork tree bark looked like monk’s chambers

      • Published Micrographia, spurring a new interest in the microscopic world

    • Anton Van Leeuwenhoek (1674-1676)

      • Known as the founder of microbiology as he discovered microorganisms and improved the microscope

      • Made glass lenses and coined the term animalcules

      • Methods kept private, but he shared his accurate drawings and aroused interest in microbiology and challenges the theory of Abiogenesis

        • Corresponded with a scientific institution

        • Abiogenesis: spontaneous generation

          • The thinking was that they don’t know how microorganisms came about, but we know that they do

          • Therefore, they came up with something like observing that bees were burrowed in the rotted flesh of dead animals, making them think that that’s how you make bees

          • Started with Socrates as he believed life could be born spontaneously from dead things

            • Aristotle continued this saying insects grew in mud or dung (thought that all living things came from things like this)

      • Looked at protists, pond water, and sperm (was seen as weird and wished he hadn’t seen it)

    • Francesco Redi -1665

      • First scientist who documented that he challenged Abiogenesis

      • Used flies and flesh

        • Demonstrated spontaneous generation did not occur at the macroscopic level

        • But other scientists said no

      • John Needham - 1749

        • Boiled and stoppered flasks but later found the flasks to be teeming with microorganisms

        • Told him spontaneous generation was true

      • Lazzaro Spallanzani -1766

        • Repeated Needham’s experiments, but boiled the flasks longer than the vital force

        • Proved spontaneous generation did not occur

    • Theodor Schwan and Franz Schultz (1830s - Germany)

      • Boiled broth and exposed the flasks to open air - no microorganisms were found

      • Schwann agreed with others’ proposition that products of fermentation were created by microorganisms

      • Schwann also said that all animals were made of cells

      • Test to prove Abiogenesis is wrong

        • He lets air into broth and shows that there were no microorganisms (before we knew that microorganisms could travel in air)

        • Louis Pasteur came up with a better method

          • Used a glass with a curved arm, allowing water to condense in the arm of flask and seal it

          • Won the prize from Paris Academy of Sciences for ending Abiogenesis

          • Known as the founder of bacteriology

            • Fermentation was caused by desirable ones

            • Perfected the boiling method for preservation of dairy products

          • Pasteurization

          • Supporter of germy theory of disease

            • Experiments showed bacteria can cause disease and grow in tissues

    • Jakob Mathias Schleiden (1830s - Sweden)

      • Said that all plants are made of cells

    • Rudolf Virchow (1850s)

      • Founder of cellular pathology

      • Said that new cells arise from pre-existing cells

      • His experiments were accepted because the scientists thought he was right, but we believe that he plagiarized Jewish scientist Robert Remak

  • Edward Jenner (1749-1823)

    • Discovered a safe and efficient vaccination against smallpox

    • Known as the founder of immunology

      • Led to the eradication of smallpox when he noticed that dairy workers exposed to cowpox never got smallpox

      • Proved that experimentally that resistance to smallpox can be induced by injecting material from diseases pustules into humans

  • John Snow (1853-1854, London)

    • English physician considered the founder of epidemiology

      • The study of epidemics and how they affect a community

    • Cholera outbreaks were a major issue

      • Bacterial disease manifested by diarrhea, which was so severe that life threatening amounts of water are lost from the body

    • Identified the broad street pump as the contaminated source of water

SA

History of Microbiology

  • Pathogens

    • Virus

      • Hepatitis, SARS, Herpes, Mono, AIDS

    • Bacteria

      • Tuberculosis, pneumonia, anthrax, urinary tract

    • Fungi

      • Ringworm, yeast infection

    • Protozoa

    • Parasites

  • The earliest humans used microorganisms for…

    • Preservation - but happened mysteriously for some time

    • Neolithic human societies did it to make beer and wine through fermentation

      • 7000-6600 BCE in China

      • 6000 BCE in Georgia

      • 3150 BE in ancient Egypt

      • 2000 BCE in pre-Hispanic Mexico

  • Seeing is believing

    • Robert hooke

      • Saw the first cells and coined the term cell when he noticed that cork tree bark looked like monk’s chambers

      • Published Micrographia, spurring a new interest in the microscopic world

    • Anton Van Leeuwenhoek (1674-1676)

      • Known as the founder of microbiology as he discovered microorganisms and improved the microscope

      • Made glass lenses and coined the term animalcules

      • Methods kept private, but he shared his accurate drawings and aroused interest in microbiology and challenges the theory of Abiogenesis

        • Corresponded with a scientific institution

        • Abiogenesis: spontaneous generation

          • The thinking was that they don’t know how microorganisms came about, but we know that they do

          • Therefore, they came up with something like observing that bees were burrowed in the rotted flesh of dead animals, making them think that that’s how you make bees

          • Started with Socrates as he believed life could be born spontaneously from dead things

            • Aristotle continued this saying insects grew in mud or dung (thought that all living things came from things like this)

      • Looked at protists, pond water, and sperm (was seen as weird and wished he hadn’t seen it)

    • Francesco Redi -1665

      • First scientist who documented that he challenged Abiogenesis

      • Used flies and flesh

        • Demonstrated spontaneous generation did not occur at the macroscopic level

        • But other scientists said no

      • John Needham - 1749

        • Boiled and stoppered flasks but later found the flasks to be teeming with microorganisms

        • Told him spontaneous generation was true

      • Lazzaro Spallanzani -1766

        • Repeated Needham’s experiments, but boiled the flasks longer than the vital force

        • Proved spontaneous generation did not occur

    • Theodor Schwan and Franz Schultz (1830s - Germany)

      • Boiled broth and exposed the flasks to open air - no microorganisms were found

      • Schwann agreed with others’ proposition that products of fermentation were created by microorganisms

      • Schwann also said that all animals were made of cells

      • Test to prove Abiogenesis is wrong

        • He lets air into broth and shows that there were no microorganisms (before we knew that microorganisms could travel in air)

        • Louis Pasteur came up with a better method

          • Used a glass with a curved arm, allowing water to condense in the arm of flask and seal it

          • Won the prize from Paris Academy of Sciences for ending Abiogenesis

          • Known as the founder of bacteriology

            • Fermentation was caused by desirable ones

            • Perfected the boiling method for preservation of dairy products

          • Pasteurization

          • Supporter of germy theory of disease

            • Experiments showed bacteria can cause disease and grow in tissues

    • Jakob Mathias Schleiden (1830s - Sweden)

      • Said that all plants are made of cells

    • Rudolf Virchow (1850s)

      • Founder of cellular pathology

      • Said that new cells arise from pre-existing cells

      • His experiments were accepted because the scientists thought he was right, but we believe that he plagiarized Jewish scientist Robert Remak

  • Edward Jenner (1749-1823)

    • Discovered a safe and efficient vaccination against smallpox

    • Known as the founder of immunology

      • Led to the eradication of smallpox when he noticed that dairy workers exposed to cowpox never got smallpox

      • Proved that experimentally that resistance to smallpox can be induced by injecting material from diseases pustules into humans

  • John Snow (1853-1854, London)

    • English physician considered the founder of epidemiology

      • The study of epidemics and how they affect a community

    • Cholera outbreaks were a major issue

      • Bacterial disease manifested by diarrhea, which was so severe that life threatening amounts of water are lost from the body

    • Identified the broad street pump as the contaminated source of water

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