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Microbiology Textbooks
Microbiology
Concept Version 6
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Sources of Essential Nutrients

The sources of common essential nutrients are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur.

Learning Objective

  • Describe the types of nutrients that are used by microorganisms for growth and metabolism


Key Points

    • Nutrients are materials that are acquired from the environment and are used for growth and metabolism. Microorganisms (or microbes) vary significantly in the source, chemical form, and amount they will need of these essential elements.
    • Macro-nutrients are needed in large amounts and micro-nutrients are needed in trace or small amounts.
    • Organic nutrients contain some combination of carbon and hydrogen atoms. Inorganic nutrients are elements or simply molecules that are made of elements other than carbon and hydrogen.

Terms

  • metabolism

    the complete set of chemical reactions that occur in living cells.

  • organic

    relating to the compounds of carbon, and relating to natural products

  • inorganic

    relating to a compound that does not contain carbon.


Example

    • Carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, hydrogen, and oxygen are all examples of essential nutrients.

Full Text

Sources of Essential Nutrients for Microorganisms

Nutrients are materials that are acquired from the environment and are used for growth and metabolism. Microorganisms (or microbes) vary significantly in terms of the source, chemical form, and amount of essential elements they need. Some examples of these essential nutrients are carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur.

There are two categories of essential nutrients: macro-nutrients (which are needed in large amounts) and micro-nutrients (which are needed in trace or small amounts). Macro-nutrients usually help maintain the cell structure and metabolism. Micro-nutrients help enzyme function and maintain protein structure.

Organic and Inorganic Nutrients

Organic nutrients contain some combination of carbon and hydrogen atoms . Inorganic nutrients are elements or simply molecules that are made of elements other than carbon and hydrogen.

Methane, a simple organic molecule.

Methane is one of the simplest organic molecules.

Essential Nutrients

The sources of common essential nutrients are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur. Organisms usually absorb carbon when it is in its organic form. Carbon in its organic form is usually a product of living things. Another essential nutrient, nitrogen, is part of the structure of protein, DNA, RNA, and ATP. Nitrogen is important for heterotroph survival, but it must first be degraded into basic building blocks, such as amino acids, in order to be used. Oxygen is an important component of both organic and inorganic compounds. It is essential to the metabolism of many organisms. Hydrogen has many important jobs including maintaining the pH of solutions and providing free energy in reactions of respiration. Phosphate is an important player in making nucleic acids and cellular energy transfers. Without sufficient phosphate, an organism will cease to grow. Lastly, sulfur is found in rocks and sediments and is found widely in mineral form.

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