Lecture 1 Introduction PDF
Lecture 1 Introduction PDF
NT20203
Food Microbiology
MICROBIOLOGY – STUDY ON MICROORGANISMS
Functions:
– Protect cell from dehydration
– Enable bacteria to stick to inert surfaces or stick to each
other
– Protective barriers against antibiotics and ingestion of
phagocytes
– Capsular polysaccharide may act as receptor for
bacteria viruses attachment
– Protect cell against viral (bacteriophage)
Enterococcus faecium
Binary fission - one cell splits into two cells, offspring are genetically
identical to parent
Bacterial conjugation - a form of sexual reproduction where bacteria
exchange genetic information before dividing, offspring have new genes
Transformation - bacteria incorporate genes from dead bacteria
Transduction - viruses insert new genes into bacterial cells. This method is
used in biotechnology to create bacteria that produce valuable products
such as insulin
Glycocalyx
• Complex exopolysaccharides
• Adhesion
• Protection from
- biocides
- antibiotics
- bacteriophage
- free-living amoebae
- WBC
Bacterial flagella
10-20 um in length and 0.1-0.7 in diameter
Originate from cell membrane and appear to be
attached to membrane and cell wall by basal body.
Made of unique helical protein – flagellin
Responsible in the movement of bacteria in liquid
medium.
Flagella arrangement – peritrichous Vs polar
Absence or presence and types of flagella – bacteria
classification.
Bacillaceae and Enterobacteriaceae – peritrichous
Rapid darting type of movement
Psudomonadaceae – polar
Leisurely in which flagella rotation is synchronised
Bacteria flagella (cont..)
Cannot be seen with ordinary microscope and
staining of flagella is not easy/not reliable
Use indirect methods for examination – hanging drop
technique and motility agars
Flagella attachment in bacteria
BACTERIAL MOVEMENT
Thebacterial flagellum can rotate both
counterclockwise and clockwise
Clockwise rotation results in a tumbling motion and
changes the direction of bacterial movement.
Counterclockwise rotation leads to long, straight or
curved runs without a change in direction
Motility serves to keep bacteria in an optimum
environment via taxis. Taxis is a motile response to an
environmental stimulus
chemicals (chemotaxis),
light (phototaxis),
osmotic pressure (osmotaxis),
oxygen (aerotaxis),
temperature (thermotaxis).
Chemotaxis is a response to a chemical gradient of attractant or
repellent molecules in the bacterium's environment. In an environment
that lacks such a gradient, the bacterium moves randomly.
If they are exposed to a repellent gradient, it tumbles less frequently (has
longer runs) as it moves up the gradient, but tumbles at the normal rate if
it travels down the gradient
BACTERIAL SPORE
Found in relatively small number of bacterial
species.
Resistance of spores to adverse
environmental circumstances:
• Heat
• Chemical including disinfectants and preservatives.
• Freezing
• Extreme pH
• Dehydration and freeze drying
• Low aw
Food hygiene
Water quality
Food Foodborne
preservation disease