A microbe, or “microscopic organism,” is a living thing that is too small to be seen with the naked eye. We need to use a microscope to see them.
This term is very general. It is used to describe many different types of life forms, with dramatically different sizes and characteristics:
The human body is home to microbes from all of these categories. Microscopic plants are also considered microbes, though they don’t generally live on or in the human body.
In this post, Pritish Kumar explained Microbes, their types, and the diseases caused by them.

Different types of microbes
Bacteria
Bacteria are microscopic, single-celled organisms that have no nucleus and a cell wall made of peptidoglycan. Bacteria are the direct descendants of the first organisms that lived on Earth, with fossil evidence going back about 3.5 billion years.
Most bacteria are much smaller than our own cells, though a few are much larger and some are as small as viruses. They usually do not have any membrane-wrapped organelles (e.g., nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum), but they do have an outer membrane. Most bacteria are also surrounded by at least one layer of the cell wall.
Bacteria are a huge and diverse group. Its members have many shapes, sizes, and functions, and they live in just about every environment on the planet.
Archaea
Archaea are microscopic, single-celled organisms that have no nucleus and an outer membrane containing unique lipids. On the surface, archaea look a lot like bacteria: they can have a similar size and shape, their genetic material forms a circle, they lack organelles, and they live in similar environments. But biochemically, archaea are as different from bacteria as they are from us.
Archaea are surrounded by a membrane made up of a type of lipid that isn’t found in any other organism. Most archaea also have a cell wall, but theirs is very different from the peptidoglycan cell wall of bacteria.
Archaea are best known for living in extreme environments, but they also live in non-extreme environments, including the human gut and skin.
Fungi
Fungi are single-celled or multicellular organisms with nuclei and with cell walls made of chitin. They also have membrane-wrapped organelles, including mitochondria. Unlike plants, fungi cannot make their own food.
Familiar fungi include yeasts, molds, and mushrooms. Yeasts live as small, individual cells, between the size of bacteria and our own cells. Molds and mushrooms are actually the fruiting bodies of fungi that live as long, microscopic fibers.
Fungi are important decomposers in most ecosystems. Their long, fibrous cells can penetrate plants and animals, breaking them down and extracing nutrients. Several species of fungi, mostly yeasts, live harmlessly on the human body.
Protists
Protists are single-celled or multi-cellular, microscopic organism with cell nuclei, and which aren’t plants, animals, or fungi. Multi-cellular protists live as colonies, without specialization. Protists are a category of leftovers and oddballs that don’t fit into other groups, and taxonomists are continually reorganizing them.
Because protists are defined more by what they don’t have than what they do, they’re a very diverse group. Some make their own food using chloroplasts, but most don’t. They have many ways of moving around, including flagella, cilia, and amoeboid action. They have multiple ways of reproducing, and some have quite complex life cycles. But they have membrane-wrapped organelles and an outer cell membrane.
Several parasitic protists can cause deadly diseases, including malaria, amoebic dysentery, and giardia. But the human body is also home to beneficial and neutral protists.
Viruses
Viruses are microscopic particles made of nucleic acids, proteins, and sometimes lipids. They can’t reproduce on their own. Instead, they reproduce by infecting other cells and hijacking their host’s cellular machinery. Viruses are specialized to infect a certain host, and often a specific cell type within that host. HIV, for example, infects a certain type of immune cell in primates. Other viruses infect plants, animals, bacteria, or archaea.
Since the ability to reproduce is often listed as a requirement for life, some consider viruses to be non-living. Regardless, viruses are an important part of all ecosystems, including the human body.
In our bodies, viruses infect not only our cells, but also other microbes that live in our bodies. Viruses that infect bacteria are called baceriophage. Viruses that infect archaea come in unusual shapes: some have two tails, others are shaped like bottles or flowers.
Microscopic Animals
Microscopic animals are also counted as microbes. Animals are multicellular, with different types of cells that carry out specialized functions. Their cells have membrane-wrapped compartments, including nuclei. Flexible membranes enclose each cell, but animal cells do not have rigid cell walls. In contrast to plants, they cannot make their own food. Microscopic animals include mostly arthropods, crustaceans, and rotifers.
Mites are one type of microscopic animal that can live on our bodies. These spider-like arachnids live in tight spaces, including hair follicles. Most of us have them and don’t even know it.
Microscopic Plants
The “microbe” category includes microscopic plants. Most microscopic plants are counted among the “green algae” (a general term), and they live as single cells (sometimes with flagella) or long fibers. Plant cells have membrane-wrapped compartments, they’re surrounded by both an outer membrane and a cell wall made of cellulose, and they have chloroplasts for making their own food.
Microscopic plants generally do not live in or on the human body, but they are very important food sources for animals in both freshwater and saltwater ecosystems. They also release oxygen, which is essential for animal life.
Microbes and disease
A few harmful microbes, for example less than 1% of bacteria, can invade our body (the host) and make us ill. Microbes cause infectious diseases such as flu and measles.
There is also strong evidence that microbes may contribute to many non–infectious chronic diseases such as some forms of cancer and coronary heart disease. Different diseases are caused by different types of micro-organisms. Microbes that cause disease are called pathogens.
It is important to remember that:
- A pathogen is a micro-organism that has the potential to cause disease.
- An infection is the invasion and multiplication of pathogenic microbes in an individual or population.
- Disease is when the infection causes damage to the individual’s vital functions or systems.
- An infection does not always result in disease!
To cause an infection, microbes must enter our bodies. The site at which they enter is known as the portal of entry.
Microbes can enter the body through the four sites listed below:
- Respiratory tract (mouth and nose) e.g., influenza virus which causes the flu.
- Gastrointestinal tract (mouth oral cavity) e.g., Vibrio cholerae which causes cholera.
- Urogenital tract e.g., Escherichia coli which causes cystitis.
- Breaks in the skin surface e.g., Clostridium tetani which causes tetanus.
To make us ill microbes have to:
- reach their target site in the body;
- attach to the target site they are trying to infect so that they are not dislodged;
- multiply rapidly;
- obtain their nutrients from the host;
- avoid and survive attack by the host’s immune system.