![]() |
![]() |
Contact by email: |
Home MicroBiology Products Dust Suppression(Xfoam) Dust Measurement Micro-T-Log Consulting
Company Profile World-wide Distributors Direct Sales/Shipping Information
INTRODUCTION TO MICROBIOLOGY
| MICROBIOLOGY: The
section of biology concerned with organisms which are not visible by the naked eye. The
study of micro-organisms, or microbiology began when the first microscopes were developed
in the 1600's. In 1665 the English Scientist, Robert Hooke constructed a simple microscope
and published a book with many illustrations of a previously unseen world of biological
materials. His drawings of the honeycomb structure of cork, in which he named the
compartments as "cells", resulted in the use of the workd "Cell
Biology". Hooke also observed fungi and protazoa, i.e. micro-organisms. Greater
advances were made by the Dutch merchant Aton van Leeuwenhoek in 1674 with a microscope
which observed minute forms of life in droplets of pond, rain, and sea water.
The serious study which is the basis of modern Microbiology began only with the pioneering work of Louis Pasteur in the mid 1800's. Pasteur showed that putrefaction of food arose from micro-organisms present in ordinary air. Lactic acid fermentation was shown to be due to bacteria, but wine and beer fermentation by yeasts. He identified the organisms which caused silkworm disease (pebrine) and developed a vaccine. He also showed how to prevent the spread of anthrax, developed a vaccine for rabies, and established the pasteurisation process for milk. Although Pasteur proposed the Germ Theory of disease, Robert Koch provided the proof with experiments on the spread of anthrax, clearly showing that specific micro-organisms caused specific diseases, and isolated the bacilli of tuberculosis, cholera and diptheria.
SIZES OF MICRO-ORGANISMS: Viruses: 0.02 to 0.2 microns Bacteria: 0.2 to 5 microns Yeast Cells: 8 to 10 microns Fungal cells: 20 to 40 microns Note: One micron is a millionth of a metre or 1/1,000,000 of a metre = 1/1000 of a millimetre |
VIRUSES: These are the smallest
micro-organisms. They take various shapes, e.g. icosahedron (20 sided), a helix (coil), or
complex. They are made up of nucleic acids (DNA or RNA).Viruses cannot replicate
themselves except by invading another cell, then utilising its cell metabolism to produce
a copy of itself. The host cell can be destroyed or damaged by this process. Although they
are very simple structures, viruses are the cause of many diseases such as influenza,
hepatitis, chicken pox, polio and AIDS. Antibiotics are of no value in control of viral
infections, which can be treated with anti-viral drugs or by use of vaccines. BACTERIA: Bacterial cells contain a single chromosome made up solely of a
single long strand (closed loop) of DNA. Chemical activities take place in the cytoplasm
which surround the cytoplasm. Also suspended in the cytoplasm are ribosomes. These are
small particles of protein and ribonucleic acid (RNA). There can be several thousand
ribosomes in a bacterial cell. This is all contained by a cell membrane surrounded by a
cell wall. Movement is by coiled tubes of protein called flagellum. Bacteria are the most
abundant organisms on Earth, they can survive in air, soil or water, under extreme
conditions of heat, cold, acidity, with or without oxygen. They play a very important role
in many essential natural processes, e.g. digesting sewage, digesting the remains of dead
animals and plants, extract nitrogen from air, and manufacture foods for human
consumption. However some bacteria (there are about 200 species) cause disease by growing
in body tissues, destroying healthy cells, and producing toxins. Bacteria reproduce by
binary fission, providing the conditions for a particular bacteria are suitable.
YEASTS AND FUNGI: Strictly fungi may me yeasts or moulds.
Yeasts are unicellular organisms, the size of large bacteria, moulds are multicellular
with long chains and filaments. Both obtain food by direct absorption of nutrients.
Yeasts are spherical, oval or cylindrical. Reproduction or growth is by budding, where a new cell forms a growth on a cell, enlarges, then separates. Yeasts remain a collection of single cells. Yeasts flourish in the presence of sugars, found naturally in fruits, flowers and other plants. Bakers and brewers yeasts members of the Saccharomyces genus are important commercial yeasts. Moulds with their filament structure (furry appearance) can frequently be seen on stale bread, fruit, cheese and other foods. Together with bacteria they are responsible for the decay and decomposition of all organic matter. Some can cause serious plant and animal disease. |