Microbiology An Introduction 10e

Tortora, Funke and Case

Introductory Material Outlines

Chapter 1 (all)

Chapter 14 pp. 404-406

Chap. 20 Antimicrobial Drugs p. 553-554

Note: The following abbreviations are used to indicate objectives and questions you need to know for the exams.

LO = Learning Objectives found at the beginning of text sections.

CYU = Check Your Understanding questions found at the end of text sections.

Q = Questions found under figures (Students should know all Q Questions of all assigned figures and the associated material in the text).

Study Questions at the end of each chapter: (R = Review, MC = Multiple Choice, CT = Critical Thinking, CA = Clinical Applications).

CM= Concept Map.

ARA = Active Reading Activity.

Chap. 1 The Microbial World and You (all)

I. Microbes in Our Lives

LO/CYU: 1-1

A. Microbes: definition

B. Ex. of different kinds of microbes

C. Majority are ‘good’ (how?)

D. Commercial Applications (examples?)

E. Pathogenic-minority of microbes

II. Naming and Classifying Microorganisms

LO/CYU: 1-2

Study Questions R6, MC1

A. Nomenclature: Genus specific epithet (species)

Staphylococcus aureus

B. Types of Microorganisms

LO/CYU: 1-3

Study Questions: R4

1. Bacteria

2. Archaea

3. Fungi

4. Protozoa

5. Algae

6. Multicellular Animal Parasites

7. Viruses

Fig. 1.1 p. 5 Types of Microorganisms

Fig. 1.6 p. 13 Parasitology: Protozoa and Parasitic Worms

C. Classification of Microorganisms

LO/CYU: 1-4

1. 1978 Carl Woese

2. Three Domain system of Classification:

A. Bacteria

B. Archaea

C. Eukarya

III. A Brief History of Microbiology

A. The First Observations

LO/CYU: 1-5

1. Hooke 1665 Cork “Cells”

2. Anton van Leeuwenhoek 1673-1723 Living Microbes

B. The Debate over Spontaneous Generation

LO/CYU: 1-6

CYU 1-7

1. Francesco Redi’s experiments 1668

2. Louis Pasteur 1861

Fig. 1.3 p. 9 Pasteur disproving the Theory of Spontaneous Generation

Study Questions: R1, R8, MC5

C. The Golden Age of Microbiology

1. Fermentation and Pasteurization

2. Germ Theory of Disease

a. Silkworms (Bassi -Fungus 1835, Pasteur -Protozoan 1865)

b. Joseph Lister 1867 Phenol on surgical wounds

c. Robert Koch 1876 Anthrax in cattle

LO/CYU: 1-9

LO/CYU: 14-5

1. Read Chap. 14 Principles of Disease and Epidemiology p. 404-406

2. The Etiology of Infectious Disease

Etiology: cause of a disease

3. Koch’s Postulates

Foundation Figure 14.3 p. 405 Steps of Koch’s Postulates-Used to determine the identity of the specific disease causing organism

Back to Chap. 1 The Microbial World and You

3. Vaccination

LO/CYU: 1-10

a. Small pox/ Cow pox vaccine Jenner 1796

b. Pasteur- fowl cholera, rabies

D. Modern Chemotherapy: Dreams of a Magic Bullet

LO/CYU: 1-11

1. First Synthetic Drugs

a. Paul Ehrlich 1910: Salvarsan (syphilis)

b. Sulfonamides (sulfa drugs) 1930s-

German physician Gerhard Domagk

2. Antibiotics Alexander Fleming

Fig. 1.5 p. 12 The discovery of penicillin

See also Fig. 20.1 p. 554 Laboratory observation of antibiosis (Lab)

3. Read Chap. 20 Antimicrobial Drugs p. 553-554 LO/CYU: 20-1, 20-2

a. Terms: Chemotherapy, Antimicrobial drugs, Selective toxicity, Antibiotic resistance

b. History of Chemotherapy

· Paul Ehrlich’s Magic Bullet, Coined the term chemotherapy

· Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin 1928 (technical definition of antibiotic?)

· Sulfa drugs from dyes, used in WWII

· Florey & Chain – 1940 first penicillin clinical trials (good strain isolated from a moldy cantaloupe in Peoria)

· More than half of the antibiotics are produced from Streptomyces, a filamentous bacterium, and a few other bacteria. Some other antibiotics are produced by molds (For example Penicillium and Cephalosporium).

Back to Chap. 1 The Microbial World and You

E. Modern Developments in Microbiology

LO/CYU: 1-12, 1-13

Fig. 1.1 p. 5 Types of Microorganisms

Fig. 1.6 p. 13 Parasitology

1. Bacteriology, Mycology, Parasitology

2. Genomics

3. Immunology

4. Virology

5. Recombinant DNA Technology

IV. Microbes and Human Welfare

LO/CYU: 1-14

A. Recycling Vital Elements

B. Sewage Treatment

C. Bioremediation

D. Insect Pest Control

Example: Bt corn

E. Biotechnology

Example: Gene Therapy

V. Microbes and Human Disease

LO/CYU: 1-16, 1-17, 1-18

Study Questions MC 7, MC 8

Fig. 1.7 p. 18 Normal microbiota on the human tongue

Fig. 1.8 p. 19 Biofilm

Fig. 23.21 p. 659 Ebola hemorrhagic virus (EID)

A. Normal Microbiota

B. Biofilms

C. Infectious Disease

D. Emerging Infectious Disease

Fig. 23.21 p. 659

EBOLA

Additional Study Questions: R1, R5 (d-f, I, j, m, n, p)

Ppt Slides

Slide 1 List of Slides

Slide 2 Fig. 1.1 p. 5 Types of Microorganisms

Slide 3 Fig. 1.6 p. 13 Parasitology

Slide 4 Fig. 1.3 p. 9

Pasteur’s experiments disproving the theory of spontaneous generation

Slides 5-9 Fig. 14.3 p. 405 Koch’s Postulates

Slide 10 Fig. 1.5 p. 12 The discovery of penicillin

Slide 11 Fig. 1.7 p. 18 Normal microbiota on the human tongue

Slide 12 Fig. 1-8 p. 19 Biofilm on a catheter (Staphlococcus bacteria)

Slide 13 Fig. 23.21 p. 659 Ebola hemorrhagic virus (EID)

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