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Summary The Most Important Notes on General Microbiology and Immunology $30.49   Add to cart

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Summary The Most Important Notes on General Microbiology and Immunology

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In this capsule between your hands, we have done hard and precise work to summarise the most important notes on general microbiology and immunology (for undergraduate medical students). We hope you all guys find this capsule helpful. - - - - This capsule consists of 18 pages.

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  • September 27, 2024
  • 18
  • 2023/2024
  • Summary
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General Microbiology
 Prokaryotes have no Nucleus, no nuclear membrane, No Mitochondria, have 70S Ribosomes,
have No sterol in cytoplasmic membrane (Except Mycoplasma), Prokaryotes = Bacteria and Blue
green algae.
 Eukaryotes have True nucleus, Nuclear-membrane, Mitochondria, 80S Ribosomes, have sterol in
cytoplasmic membrane, Eukaryotes includes Human and animal and plant and Fungi and algae.
 Viroids are only RNA which causes plant diseases – Prions are only proteins.
 Bacteria has one chromosome (Nucleoid) which is essential for Life.
 Plasmids are extrachromosomal circular DNA, not essential (dispensable), carry extra
information.
 Ribosomes of bacteria are 70S (50S + 30S), consist of protein and RNA  site of protein synthesis.
 Inclusion granules are storage sites of nutrients and energy  Volutin granules are
metachromatic.
 Mesosomes are invaginations of cytoplasmic membrane  site of respiration (alternative for
mitochondria) and are involved in cell division.
 Cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria  phospholipid bilayer  selective permeability + Excretion
of enzymes + Respiration (Mesosomes) + Cell wall synthesis + Reproduction (Mesosomes) +
Chemotaxis.
 Cytoplasmic membrane Resynthesize cell wall of bacteria.
 Cell wall of bacteria is formed of peptidoglycan  Protection + Shape + Division + Staining
affinity.
 Gram positive cell wall  Thick PG + Teichoic acid
 Gram negative cell wall  Thin PG + Periplasm + Outer membrane (LPS).
 Outer membrane of Gram negative  LPS  Lipid A (Endotoxin) + O Saccharide (antigen)
 Endotoxin  Part of gram-negative cell wall (Lipid A)  Causes Septic Shock.
 Mycoplasma is the only bacteria that exist naturally without cell wall  No shape – Not affected
by penicillin + Not stained with Gram stain.
 L-Forms  Cell wall defective bacteria due to exposure to lysozyme or penicillin  can
resynthesize cell wall – Causes relapses of infections.
 Capsule  extracellular layer that adhere to surface of the bacterium  Polysaccharide (except B.
anthracis = Polypeptide)  Appear as halo when stained with gram  Protect bacteria from
phagocytosis + Used for adherence.
 Slime layer  Loosely distributed layer
 Glycocalyx  Meshwork of polysaccharide fibrils (Form biofilms)  Strept mutans Dental caries.
 Flagella  Organ of motility  Protein  Seen by EM  Antigenic (H antigen).
 Monotrichous (One flagellum) – Peritrichous (flagella around bacterium) – Lophotrichous
(Multiple polar flagellae) – Amphitrichous (Flagella at both poles).
 Axial filaments  Endoflagella  Spirochetes.
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, Pili = Fimbria  Proteins  Adherence (Fimbriae) / Conjugation (Sex pili).
 Endospores  Highly resistant structure formed by bacteria in response to unfavorable conditions
 Dormant (No reproduction or metabolism)  formed by Two bacteria  Bacillus + Clostridium.
 Spores are resistant because of thermal resistance, presence of Dipicolinic acid, impermeability,
low water content and Low metabolism.
 Germination (Return of spores to vegetative state) occurs within 15 minutes when environment
becomes suitable for growth.
 Bacterial Growth = Binary fission = increase in number (starts with slight size increase).
 Generation Time = Doubling time  time taken by bacteria to double in number = Time between
2 successive divisions  13 minutes in V. cholera / 24 hours in M. tuberculosis.
 Autotrophs  Bacteria which synthesize organic compounds (Glucose) from inorganic compounds
(CO2 and ammonium salts).
 Heterotrophs  Bacteria which Cannot synthesize organic compounds.
 Obligate (Strict) aerobes  Require oxygen for growth.
 Obligate anaerobes  Require absence of oxygen for growth.
 Facultative anaerobes  prefer oxygen but grow in its absence (Grow better in oxygen presence)
 Aerotolerant bacteria  prefer absence of oxygen but grow in its presence (prefer anaerobic)
 Microaerophilic  Require reduced oxygen level.
 Aerobic respiration  Oxygen is the final electron acceptor.
 Anaerobic respiration  Nitrate or sulfur is the final electron acceptor.
 Oxygen Use  Toxic compounds (Superoxide – Hydrogen peroxide)  aerobic bacteria have
Enzymes which detoxify these molecules  Superoxide dismutase and catalase.
 Capnophilic bacteria  Require higher concentration of CO2  Neisseria / Brucella.
 Mesophilic bacteria  grow in temperature range of 20-40° C
 Psychrophilic bacteria  grow in temperature range of 0-8° C
 Thermophilic bacteria  grow in temperature range of >60° C
 Bacteriophage  Viruses that parasitize bacteria  composed of Head (protect the nucleic acid)
and Tail (inject nucleic acid inside bacterial cell).
 Lytic (Vegetative) cycle  Virulent Phage  Phage destroy bacteria (Lytic) then released 
Generalized transduction (May take random DNA fragments and transfer it to another bacterium.
 Lysogenic (Temperate) Cycle  Temperate phage  phage genome is integrated with bacteria
chromosome  Prophage  bacteria is called lysogenic bacteria  Specialized transduction
(when phage is excised it takes part of bacterial DNA which is adjacent to it and transfer it to
another bacterial cell).
 Uses of bacteriophages  Cloning vectors – Phage typing – Research.
 Gene  segment of DNA carries information for specific property.
 The only essential DNA for bacteria is the chromosome.
 Plasmids can replicate independently of the bacterial chromosome.
 Functions of plasmids  Sex pilus formation (Conjugative plasmid / F Plasmid) – Antibiotic
resistance (R Plasmid) – Virulence plasmids (Toxin, Adhesins) – Bacteriocin production.
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,  Bacteriocin  Substance produced by certain bacteria against another strain of bacteria.
 F Plasmid = Sex pilus = Conjugation
 R Plasmid = Antibiotic resistance.
 Transposable genetic elements  DNA segments that can insert themselves in other DNA
molecules (Jumping genes)
 Phenotypic variation  change in bacterial characters in response to environmental changes 
Reversible  Not heritable  L-Forms / Loss of flagella after phenol exposure
 Genotypic variations  Change in bacterial characters due to change in genetics  irreversible 
heritable  Mutation / Gene transfer (Transformation – conjugation – Transduction).
 Mutation  Change in the nucleotide sequence of DNA (spontaneous or induced).
 Transformation  Uptake of Free naked DNA (from dead bacteria)  depends on competence
(ability of bacteria to take up DNA).
 Transduction  transfer of DNA from one cell to another by means of a bacteriophage.
 Generalized transduction  Lytic cycle  Virulent phage  Random DNA
 Specialized transduction  Lysogenic cycle  Temperate phage  Special part of DNA
 Conjugation  Transfer of DNA after cell to cell contact  the most frequent mechanism for gene
transfer  requires Sex pilus (F Plasmid).
 Antibiotic  antimicrobial produced by microorganism (synthetic if made synthetically /
semisynthetic if modified).
 Chemotherapeutic agent  synthesized antimicrobial agent.
 Bacteriostatic agent  inhibit growth  bacteria multiply again after removal of drug
 Bactericidal agent  Kill bacteria  Bacteria cannot multiply again
 Selective toxicity  ability of antimicrobial to harm pathogen without harming host.
 Spectrum of activity  range of microorganisms affected by antibiotics.
 Broad spectrum  wide range of Gram positive and negative
 Narrow spectrum  gram positive of negative.
 Limited spectrum  drug against single organism.
 Mechanisms of antimicrobials  cell wall synthesis inhibition – cell membrane function inhibition
– protein synthesis inhibition – Nucleic acid inhibition.
 Drugs which inhibit cell wall synthesis  B Gly Cy  Beta lactams (penicillin – cephalosporins) –
Glycopeptides (Vancomycin – Teicoplanin) – Cycloserine and bacitracin.
 Beta lactams inhibit last steps for PG synthesis while Glycopeptides and cycloserine inhibit early
steps.
 Drugs against cell membrane  I Can Play  Antibacterial (Polymyxin – Colistin) – Antifungal
(Amphotericin – Nystatin – imidazole).
 Anti-Cell membrane drugs are highly Toxin due to similarities between human and bacterial
membranes.
 Drugs against 30S subunit (inhibit protein synthesis)  TEAM  Tetracycline + Aminoglycosides
(Gentamycin – Streptomycin – amikacin).

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