Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

45

Transcript of Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Page 1: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 2: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Figure 4.1

Page 3: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Different tools are employed to study bacteria

MorphologyMicroscopyStaining

Page 4: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Three general shapes◦ Coccus- roughly spherical

◦ Bacillus- rod-shaped Coccobacillus- short and plump Vibrio- gently curved

◦ Spirillum- curviform or spiral-shaped

◦ Pleomorphism- when cells of a single species vary to some extent in shape and size

Page 5: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 6: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Cocci- greatest variety in arrangement

◦ Single◦ Pairs (diplococci)◦ Tetrads◦ Irregular clusters (staphylococci and micrococci)◦ Chains (streptococci)◦ Cubical packet (sarcina)

Page 7: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Bacilli- less varied

◦ Single◦ Pairs (diplobacilli)◦ Chain (streptobacilli)◦ Row of cells oriented side by side (palisades)

Page 8: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

SimpleCompoundElectron

Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)

Page 9: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

[INSERT FIGURE 4.4]

Page 10: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Originally developed for studying nonbiological materials

Biologists began using it in the early 1930s

Forms an image with a beam of electrons ◦ Electrons travel in wavelike patterns 1,000 times

shorter than visible light waves◦ This increases the resolving power tremendously

Page 11: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Magnification can be extremely high (between 5,000X and 1,000,000X for biological specimens)

Allows scientists to view the finest structure of cells

Two types: ◦ transmission electron microscope (TEM)◦ scanning electron microscope (SEM)

Page 12: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Creates an extremely detailed three-dimensional view of all kinds of objects

Electrons bombard the surface of a whole metal-coated specimen

Electrons deflected from the surface are picked up by a sophisticated detector

The electron pattern is displayed as an image on a television screen

Contours of specimens resolved with SEM are very revealing and surprising

Page 13: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 14: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Figure 3.23

Page 15: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 16: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

[INSERT FIGURE 4.13]

Page 17: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 18: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 19: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 20: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 21: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Often used to view structures of cells and viruses

Electrons are transmitted through the specimen

The specimen must be very thin (20-100 nm thick) and stained to increase image contrast

Dark areas of a TEM image represent thicker or denser parts

Page 22: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

[INSERT FIGURE 4.11]

Page 23: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Figure 3.22

Page 24: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 25: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 26: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 27: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Smear technique developed by Robert Koch◦ Spread a thin film made from a liquid suspension of cells

and air-drying it◦ Heat the dried smear by a process called heat fixation ◦ Some cells are fixed using chemicals

Staining creates contrast and allows features of the cells to stand out◦ Applies colored chemicals to specimens◦ Dyes become affixed to the cells through a chemical

reaction◦ Dyes are classified as basic (cationic) dyes, or acidic

(anionic) dyes.

Page 28: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 29: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Simple staining: the dye sticks to the specimen to give it color

Negative staining: The dye does not stick to the specimen, instead settles around its boundaries, creating a silhouette.◦ Nigrosin and India ink commonly used◦ Heat fixation not required, so there is less

shrinkage or distortion of cells◦ Also used to accentuate the capsule

surrounding certain bacteria and yeasts

Page 30: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Require only a single dye◦ A basic dye is used◦ Examples include methylene blue, crystal violet,

basic fuchsin, and safranin◦ All cells appear the same color but can reveal

shape, size, and arrangement

Page 31: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 32: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Require only a single dye

◦ An acidic dye is used◦ Examples include nigrosin, congo red, india ink◦ All cells appear clear with the background stained

which reveals the shape, size, and arrangement

Page 33: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 34: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Use two differently colored dyes, the primary dye and the counterstain

◦ Distinguishes between cell types or parts◦ Examples include Gram, acid-fast, and endospore

stains

Page 35: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

The most universal diagnostic staining technique for bacteria

Differentiation of microbes as gram positive(purple) or gram negative (red)

Page 36: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 37: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

[INSERT FIGURE 4.18]

Page 38: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Important diagnostic stain Differentiates acid-fast bacteria (pink) from

non-acid-fast bacteria (blue) Important in medical microbiology

Page 39: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 40: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Dye is forced by heat into resistant bodies called spores or endospores

Distinguishes between the stores and the cells they come from (the vegetative cells)

Significant in medical microbiology

Page 41: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 42: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Used to emphasize certain cell parts that aren’t revealed by conventional staining methods

Examples: capsule staining, flagellar staining

Page 43: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.
Page 44: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

Figure 3.25

Page 45: Figure 4.1 Different tools are employed to study bacteria Morphology Microscopy Staining.

[INSERT FIGURE 4.27]