Biology Project
Biology Project
BIOLOGY PROJECT
SUBJECT: ___BIOLOGY________________________
INDEX
Sr.No. Contents Pg.No. Remarks
1 Cover page
2 Project title
3 Certificate
4 Acknowledgement
5 Objective
6 Introduction
7 Theory
History and Discovery
goal
8 What are Antibiotics?
9 What are Antibiotics made of?
10 How do Antibiotics work?
11 Why are Antibiotics important?
12 Resistance
what is Antibiotics resistance
how is resistance spread
13 7 Types of Antibiotics
14 5 basic mechanism of Antibiotics action
against bacterial cell
15 Pros and side effects of taking Antibiotics
16 Experiment work 1 Experiment work 2
aim aim
materials materials
required required
procedure procedure
observation observation
precautions precautions
result result
17 Precautions
18 Conclusion
19 Bibliography
The objective of this study is to investigate the impacts of antibiotics
on microorganisms. Antibiotics play a pivotal role in healthcare, but
their overuse has led to concerns about antibiotic resistance and
ecological disruption. This research aims to comprehensively assess
how antibiotics affect diverse microbial communities, exploring
changes in composition, diversity, and functional traits. By
understanding these effects, we can develop strategies to mitigate
antibiotic-induced disturbances in microbiomes, promote responsible
antibiotic use, and potentially discover novel ways to combat
antibiotic-resistant pathogens. This study holds significance for public
health, environmental conservation, and the sustainable
management of antibiotic resources.
INTRODUCTION
Antibiotics Have been widely used for several decades for human
therapy and farming production. Since high percentage of antibiotics
are discharged from the human or animal body without degradation,
this means that different habits from the human body to river water
or soil are polluted with antibiotics.
Antibiotics were widely used for treating soldiers during world war-II,
caring for battle wounds infections and pneumonic. By the mid to late
1940s it became widely accessible for the general public
Antibiotics are among the most successful drugs used in the human
therapy. In addition, they have been used for several decades in animal
growth promotion, prophylaxis metaphylaxis, treatment and general
farming production. This wide antibiotics use had led to a different
habitats becoming polluted by large range of concentration of antibiotics.
Since antibiotics are inhibitor of bacterial growth, this situation has an
impact on the structural and the activity of bacterial population. The
effects of the antibiotics on the bacterial population. Has mainly focused
on the aspects related to the human health, in particular the section of
antibiotic-resistance mutants and the acquisition, selections, and spread
of antibiotics resistance genes. While this has obvious revealed to the
treatment of inflectional disease, other aspects of the roles that
antibiotics may play in bacterial population are much less studied in the
comparison.
Antibiotics come
in many forms,
including:
Tablets
Capsules
Liquid
Creams
Ointments
WHAT ARE ANTIBIOTICS MADE OF?
They either prevent the bacterial cells from multiplying so that the
bacterial population remains the same, allowing the hosts defense
mechanism to fight the infection or kill the bacteria for example stopping
the mechanism responsible for building their cell walls.
The more antibiotics are used, the more chances bacteria have to
become resistant to them.
Bacteria are termed drug resistant when they are no longer inhibited by
an antibiotic to which they were previously sensitive The emergence and
spread of antibacterial resistant bacteria has continued to grow due to
both the over use and misuse of antibiotics
Although there are well over 100 antibiotics the majority come from
only a few types of drugs. These are the main classes of antibiotics
ANTIBIOTIC EXAMPLE
PENICILLIN AMOXICILLIN
CEPHALOSPORINS CEPHALEXIN
FLUOROQUINOLONES ERYTHROMYCIN
MACROLIDES OFLOXACIN
SULPHONAMIDES BACTRIM
AMINOGLYCOSIDES TETRACYCLINE
TETRACYCLINES GENTAMICIN
5 BASIC MECHANISM OF
ANTIBIOTICS ACTION AGAINST
BACTERIAL CELL
SIDE EFFECTS
The most common side effects of antibiotics is it affects the digestive
system Antibiotics commonly cause the following side effects:
Diarrhea
Nausea
Vomiting
Rash
Upset stomach
Sensitivity to sunlight, when taking tetracycline
With certain antibiotics or prolonged use fungal infections of
the mouth digestive tract and vagina
EXPERIMENT WORK 1
AIM: This project aims to study the effect of antibiotics on
microorganisms.
OBSERVATION:
The effect of different antibiotics on the microorganisms can be
assessed by counting the number and size of the colonies growing
in the Petri dishes.
Sr.No. Antibiotics No. of colonies in a Petri dish
1. Penicillin NIL
2. Streptomycin 2-3
3. Terramycin NIL
4. Chloromycetin 1-2
5. Control 30-40
PRECAUTIONS:
• Do not expose the culture of the Petri dish to the atmosphere
Sterilise the Petri dishes properly in the oven before use Use proper
kind of stains for different types of microorganisms
RESULT:
Penicillin and Terramycin were the most effective antibiotic against
microorganisms in the soil with Streptomycin and Chloromycetin
not too far behind.
The surviving colonies of microorganisms in the petridish may have
developed a resistance to the stated antibiotics and there is ahigh
possibility that the antibiotic would be less and less effective on
future generations of the surviving colonies
EXPERIMENT WORK 2
AIM: To see the effect of antibiotics on bacteria count
PROCEDURE:
Step 1 Prepare a culture media plate for growing bacteria
step 2 Get a sample of polluted water for test Mix 2 ml of polluted water
with 10 ml chicken broth in a test tube and incubate it for 24 hours so the
bacteria will reproduce and increase Usually this is done on a device that
constantly moves so the bacteria can freely move in the liquid Most likely
you will not have a vibrator, so it is good if you shake the test tube a few
times during this incubation period
Step 3 While the bacteria are being incubated prepare some antibiotic
disks as described here (Antibiotic disks can also be purchased from
biology suppliers) Break an antibiotic capsule (here using Ampicillin) and
empty the contents in a clean petri dish One capsule will be enough for
hundreds of disks Dispose of the plastic shell and add a few drops of water
to the remaining powder Cut some filter papers in small pieces and soak
them in the antibiotic solution Let the disks dry in a clean space You may
cover them with another filter paper to protect them from dust. Although
they are known as antibiotic disks you can cut them in small squares The
reason that we use filter paper is that other papers often have starch and
other polymers that may affect the results of our experiments Filter
paper is pure cellulose fiber
Step 4 Use the bacteria that you have grown in step 2 and prepare
dilution of bacteria
1)Website
a) www.nps.org.au
b) www.healthline.com
c) genomemedicine.biomedcentral.com
d) www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
e) www.wikipedia.org f) www.reddit.com
2) Books
a) Comprehensive Practical Manual
b) HC biology Class XI