Microbes are organisms that are composed of only one solitary cell or a cell which lives in a colony with other cells.
Thermophilic microbes are organisms that prefer to live in areas with a temperature that is higher than the normal.Mesophilic are these microbes that prefer areas with moderate temperature.
Thermophilic enzymes are stable (they grow and thrive) at temperatures between 60-80 degrees Celsius. This makes them easier to study. This is because mesophilic enzymes will denature at these temperatures, and unlike mesophilic enzymes, thermophilic enzymes will not denature at room temp (25 degrees Celsius, making it easier for scientist to work with thermophilic enzymes. In other words, in biotechnology thermoenzymes have thermo stablity that mesophilic enzymes do not, making them much better use under certain conditions ( where mesophilic enzymes would denature).
bacteria are divided in three type acording to temperature tolerance thermophilic bacteria that grow in extremlly termall gaizers. mesophilic bacteria that grow 20 and 45 °C (68 and 113 °F) psychophile macteria that growth −15°C to +10°C. most of bacteria are mesophilic that it doesent meaan thay grow from 20 to 45 °C (68 and 113 °F)
No, not all microbes are pathogens. Microbes can be beneficial or harmful, depending on the context. Many microbes are essential for processes such as digestion, nutrient cycling, and immune system function.
It can--if you heat it enough. But for yogurt, it really depends on the type of yogurt - mesophiic or thermophiic. With thermophlic bacteria, the dairy liquid is heated to as high as 125 degrees F to allow the bacteria to multiply. Mesophilic bacteria multiply well at room temperature - around 72 degrees F, so the higher thermophilic temperatures would tend to kill them off. Most of the commercially available yogurts found in the USA are thermophilic where mesphilic yogurts are available overseas. Examples of mesohhilic yogurts - Villi, Piima, and Matsoi.
Through microbes you breath in then the microbes settle and grow into fungus
Thermophilic enzymes are stable (they grow and thrive) at temperatures between 60-80 degrees Celsius. This makes them easier to study. This is because mesophilic enzymes will denature at these temperatures, and unlike mesophilic enzymes, thermophilic enzymes will not denature at room temp (25 degrees Celsius, making it easier for scientist to work with thermophilic enzymes. In other words, in biotechnology thermoenzymes have thermo stablity that mesophilic enzymes do not, making them much better use under certain conditions ( where mesophilic enzymes would denature).
Is it possible for thermophilic prganisms to induce infections in warm blooded animals
Macro- and micro-organisms are the living things that are found in compost heaps. Micro-organisms include actinomycetes, mesophilic, psychrophilic and thermophilic bacteria as well as many- and single-celled fungi. Macro-organisms range from earthworms to feather-winged, ground and rove beetles, millipedes, slugs, snails, sow bugs and springtails.
"Philic" means "strongly attracted to or strong affinity for something".Thermophilic, would thus mean, a strong affinity for heat.
Some microbes can make us ill and give us a cold or upper respiratory viral infection (viruses like Rhinoviruses and coronaviruses), and some can kill us like meningitis and other serious bacterial infections. Some are good because they help break down foods in the digestive tract and our gastrointestinal systems have developed to work together with these "good bacteria" for our proper nutrition. See related questions via links below for more information.
E.coli, Salmonella, Klebsiella, Staphylococcus
Pathogens and other mesophilic bacteria.
The body temperature is 37º C, which is best operating temperatures for mesophiles.
bacteria are divided in three type acording to temperature tolerance thermophilic bacteria that grow in extremlly termall gaizers. mesophilic bacteria that grow 20 and 45 °C (68 and 113 °F) psychophile macteria that growth −15°C to +10°C. most of bacteria are mesophilic that it doesent meaan thay grow from 20 to 45 °C (68 and 113 °F)
grow at extremely high temperatures and low pH
Heat is the form of energy that is released from compost bins. Two temperature ranges that are micro-organism-specific obtain in aerobically decomposing compost bins. Mesophilic micro-organisms require temperature ranges of 50 to 115 degrees Fahrenheit (10 to 46.11 degrees Celsius) while thermophilic bacteria need ranges between 140 and 150 degrees Fahrenheit (60 to 71.11 degrees Celsius).
A hole in the ground is an example of a compost pit. The hole must be made in well-draining soil since - as opposed to the anaerobic, green house gas-emitting, methane-producing decomposition in landfills -- the pit supports proper aerobic breakdown of carbon- and nitrogen-rich compostables through the necessary interactions of air, heat, light, micro-organisms (actinomycetic/mesophilic/thermophilic bacteria, protozoa, rotifers, saprophytic fungi), and moisture.