MICB 202 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek, Louis Pasteur, Bacterial Taxonomy

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10 Sep 2016
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Pathogenicity: the ability of a pathogen to cause disease (qualitative). Infection: when a pathogen colonizes the body (not necessarily causes disease). Pathogen: bacterium capable of harming a normal host. Opportunistic pathogen: a pathogen which harms a compromised host. Primary infection: an initial event; may or may not lead to disease. Secondary infection: a second infection caused by opportunistic organisms following a primary infection, on a now weakened host (e. g. cold followed by pneumonia). Subclinical infection: an infection with no obvious symptoms. Nosocomial infection: an infection acquired in the hospital; a major problem today. Using a primitive microscope, anton van leeuwenhoek was able to achieve magnifi- cations of over 200 times and describe various biological specimens, including numerous types of microorganisms. The fathers of bacteriology were the first to see that bacteria cause diseases and that this can be prevented. Louis pasteur prevented diseases by vaccination and pasteurization (some bacteria have important uses, such as fermentation).

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