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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Learning outcomes
- Background reading
- What is microbiology?
- Types of micro-organisms (1)
- Historical overview
- Significant events in microbiology
- Antony van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723)
- Louis Pasteur (1822 – 1895)
- Robert Koch (1843-1910)
- Water and cholera – John Snow
- Cholera & the Broad Street pump
- Alexander Flemming (1881 – 1955)
- Why study microbiology? Good reasons
- Why study microbiology? Bad reasons
- The tree of life (1)
- Microbial diversity
- Types of micro-organisms (2)
- Viruses
- Rickettsia sp
- Chlamydia
- Bacteria
- Archaea
- Yeasts
- Fungi
- Protozoa
- Microscopes: an essential tool for microbiologists
- What’s curious?
- Bacteria: variations on a theme
- Classification and nomenclature of microorganisms
- The tree of life (2)
- Nomenclature
- Nomenclature: Genus species
- Physiology of the bacterial cell
- The eukaryotic vs prokaryotic cell
- Key features of the bacterial cell
- The cell envelope (cell wall & membrane(s))
- The bacterial cell wall
- Peptidoglycan
- Differences in peptidoglycan: Gram +ve and –ve
- Peptidoglycan assembly
- Peptidoglycan: an important target for antimicrobials
- The Gram stain (Christian Gram, 1884)
- The Gram stain
- The cytoplasmic membrane
- Bacterial energy generation
- Electron transport chain and ATP synthesis
- Bacterial energy generation: question
- Bacterial energy generation
Topics Covered
- A brief overview of the different groups of microorganisms
- Important structural features of the bacterial cell envelope
- The cell wall
- Properties of the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane
- Energy generation
Links
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External Links
Talk Citation
Goldberg, M. (2024, August 29). Introduction to microbiology 1 [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 17, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/FZCG5912.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Martin Goldberg has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: Introduction to Microbiology
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I'm Dr. Martin Goldberg.
I'm a Senior Lecturer in
Clinical Microbiology
at Birmingham City University.
I've been invited to
assemble a series of
lectures to form
a mini-course on
an introduction to microbiology.
There are some lectures,
because there's a
lot of content,
have been divided into two
parts—part 1 and part 2.
This is an example
of one of those.
The idea is to produce
a set of material that
would be of a level suitable for
first-year
undergraduate students
but would also be useful for
anybody else who wishes to
improve their knowledge of
microbiology, for example.
People in the health
sector such as nurses,
doctors, people
working in the labs,
and people in
academia or industry.
And so, it's intended as
a good level of detail,
but providing a
good foundation for
anybody interested in following
microbiology in more detail.
1:06
In this lecture,
this is going to be a
very gentle stroll.
We're going to be,
first of all, looking at some of
the important historical
developments in microbiology.
We'll be looking at the
enormous variety of
different microorganisms,
again very gentle,
very superficial,
and a lot more detail will be
applied in later lectures.
We'll be doing
specific lectures on
things like fungi and viruses.
Then we'll be looking at some of
the important
structural features of
the bacterial cell.
Particularly, the
envelope such as
the cell wall, an
important part of
the cell wall known
as peptidoglycan,
and the different
structural features
associated with the cell wall.
Then I'll be finishing
this session by
talking about how energy
is generated in the cell.