Microbiology Basics: Bacteria, Viruses, Fungi, and Protists

The living world contains organisms so small that a single teaspoon of healthy soil can hold up to one billion bacterial cells (USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service). Microbiology is the branch of biology that studies these organisms — bacteria, viruses, fungi, and protists — with tools ranging from optical microscopes to genome sequencers. These four groups differ profoundly in structure, reproduction, and the roles they play in human health, agriculture, and ecosystems. Grasping those differences is foundational to making sense of infectious disease, antibiotic resistance, food fermentation, and environmental science.


Definition and scope

Microbiology covers any living thing — and some things that are arguably not quite living — too small to be seen with the naked eye. The four major groups studied in introductory courses sit across a surprising span of biological complexity.

Bacteria are prokaryotes: single-celled organisms with no membrane-bound nucleus. Their genetic material floats freely in the cytoplasm. At roughly 1–10 micrometers in length, bacteria reproduce by binary fission and can double their population every 20 minutes under ideal conditions (CDC, Principles of Epidemiology in Public Health Practice).

Viruses occupy a category that biologists still debate with genuine enthusiasm. A virus is not a cell — it is a packet of genetic material (DNA or RNA) wrapped in a protein coat called a capsid, sometimes surrounded by a lipid envelope. Viruses range from 20 to 300 nanometers, making the largest virus still smaller than the smallest bacterium. They cannot replicate without hijacking a host cell's machinery, which is why the "are viruses alive?" question continues to generate spirited arguments at biology conferences.

Fungi include yeasts (unicellular) and molds and mushrooms (multicellular). Unlike plants, fungi cannot photosynthesize — they are heterotrophs that digest food externally by secreting enzymes. Their cell walls are built from chitin, the same polymer that forms insect exoskeletons. The fungal kingdom contains an estimated 2.2 to 3.8 million species (Hawksworth & Lücking, 2017, as cited by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), though fewer than 150,000 have been formally described.

Protists are a catch-all eukaryotic group — single-celled organisms with a true nucleus that don't fit neatly into the animal, plant, or fungal kingdoms. Plasmodium (malaria) and Giardia (intestinal illness) are protists, as are the algae that produce roughly half of Earth's atmospheric oxygen (NOAA Ocean Service).

The key dimensions and scopes of bioscience page places microbiology within the broader landscape of biological disciplines.


How it works

Understanding microbiology means understanding how these groups differ at the level of cell structure and reproduction.

  1. Cell structure: Bacteria lack a nucleus (prokaryotic); protists, fungi, and algae have one (eukaryotic). Viruses have neither — they are not cells at all.
  2. Reproduction: Bacteria divide asexually by binary fission. Fungi reproduce asexually via spores or budding, and sexually through specialized structures. Protists use mitosis, meiosis, or both. Viruses replicate by injecting their genome into a host cell and co-opting its ribosomes.
  3. Metabolism: Bacteria display extraordinary metabolic diversity — some are aerobic (requiring oxygen), some anaerobic, some chemosynthetic. Viruses have no independent metabolism. Fungi are obligate heterotrophs. Protists range from photosynthetic (algae) to predatory (amoebae).
  4. Scale: A human cell is roughly 10–100 micrometers. A bacterium: 1–10 micrometers. A virus: 0.02–0.3 micrometers. A protist: 10–100 micrometers, sometimes larger.

The mechanism by which viruses infect cells follows a predictable sequence: attachment to a host-cell receptor, injection or fusion, genome replication using host enzymes, assembly of new viral particles, and release — often destroying the host cell in the process. The how-science-works-conceptual-overview resource explains the broader scientific method framework that guides microbiological research.


Common scenarios

These four groups intersect with daily life at almost every point.


Decision boundaries

The most practically important distinction in clinical microbiology is the bacterial/viral divide, because that boundary determines whether antibiotics are appropriate. Secondary distinctions matter in diagnosis:

For those building a working vocabulary in biological science, the bioscience frequently asked questions page addresses common conceptual sticking points across these distinctions.


References