Koch and Pasteur — Germ Theory
In 1859, most doctors still believed disease arose spontaneously from bad air. Pasteur's swan-neck flask changed that forever — and Koch turned the insight into a scientific method still used today.
Practise this lesson
Four printable worksheets that build from the foundations up to exam-style questions — start at whatever level suits you.
Consider this claim, which was widely accepted by educated physicians in 1850:
"Disease arises spontaneously from within the body or from decaying matter in the environment — there is no external living agent that causes it."
What evidence would you need to collect to prove this claim wrong? Write down at least two specific types of evidence that would challenge this idea — before reading on.
Know
- Pasteur's swan-neck flask experiment and what it proved
- Koch's four postulates in sequence
- How Koch's postulates were applied to identify a specific pathogen
- The historical context — what was believed before germ theory
Understand
- Why Pasteur's experiment was a controlled investigation
- How Koch's postulates establish causation, not just correlation
- The limitations of Koch's postulates in modern microbiology
Can Do
- Describe Pasteur's experiment and explain what each step controlled for
- Apply Koch's postulates to a novel disease scenario
- Evaluate the strength of evidence for germ theory using experimental logic
Core Content
Miasma theory and spontaneous generation
Getting the cause of disease right was the difference between useless interventions and effective ones — and for nearly 1,400 years, medicine had it wrong.
For nearly 1,400 years after the Greek physician Galen, the dominant explanation for disease was miasma theory — the idea that "bad air" from rotting organic matter caused illness. The smell of decay, it was believed, was itself the agent of disease. This is why hospitals were built on hills (better air), why doctors carried aromatic herbs, and why the city of London in 1854 was still dumping raw sewage into the Thames — considered safer than decaying matter on land.
Alongside miasma theory sat spontaneous generation — the belief that living organisms could arise from non-living matter. Maggots appeared in meat; therefore meat generated maggots. Mice appeared in grain stores; therefore grain generated mice. Applied to disease: illness arose spontaneously within the body from corrupted humours or from the environment itself. There was no external agent to transmit.
This mattered enormously for public health. If disease arose from bad air, the solution was ventilation and urban planning. If disease was transmitted by invisible living agents — pathogens — the solution was isolation, sterilisation, and hygiene. Getting the cause right was the difference between useless interventions and effective ones.
What to write in your book
- Miasma theory: disease caused by "bad air" from decaying matter (dominant for ~1,400 years)
- Spontaneous generation: living things arise from non-living matter — no external agent
- Getting the cause right changes the response: ventilation vs isolation/sterilisation/hygiene
Miasma theory held that disease was caused by:
Pasteur's Swan-Neck Flask Experiment
The swan-neck flask, 1859
Pasteur suspected that microorganisms in the air — not the liquid itself — were responsible for fermentation and spoilage, and he designed a flask that could prove it.
Louis Pasteur (1822–1895) was a French chemist who became interested in fermentation — the process by which grape juice became wine. He suspected that microorganisms in the air were responsible for fermentation and spoilage, not spontaneous generation from the liquid itself.
His most famous experiment, published in 1859, used specially designed swan-neck flasks — glass flasks with long, curved necks that allowed air to enter freely but prevented airborne particles (and microorganisms) from reaching the broth inside.
Fill flasks with nutrient broth
Identical nutrient broth placed in two sets of flasks — straight-neck (control) and swan-neck (experimental). Both sets sterilised by boiling to kill any existing microorganisms.
Allow to stand open to air
Both sets left open to the atmosphere. Air could enter both. The swan-neck design meant airborne particles settled in the curved neck before reaching the broth — the broth itself was exposed to air but not to particles.
Observe for microbial growth
Straight-neck flasks became turbid (cloudy) within days — microorganisms had entered and grown. Swan-neck flasks remained clear indefinitely — no growth. This directly contradicted spontaneous generation: the broth did not generate microorganisms on its own.
Break the swan-neck (critical step)
When the curved neck was snapped off the swan-neck flasks, exposing the broth directly to unfiltered air and particles, growth appeared within days. This confirmed that microorganisms came from the air — not from the broth itself.
What to write in your book
- Swan-neck flask: air enters but airborne particles settle in the curve before reaching broth
- Straight-neck → turbid (growth); swan-neck → stays clear (no spontaneous generation)
- Breaking the neck → growth appears: confirms particles (microbes) come from the air
- IV = whether particles reach broth; DV = microbial growth (turbidity); controls constant
In Pasteur's experiment, the swan-neck flasks stayed clear because air could not enter them at all.
Pasteur's swan-neck flask experiment disproved spontaneous generation by showing that boiled broth remained sterile when air but not dust could enter.
Koch's postulates can be applied to all pathogens, including viruses that cannot be cultured on nutrient agar.
Koch's Postulates — 4 Steps
Four criteria that prove a microbe causes a disease
Koch took Pasteur's insight and turned it into a rigorous experimental method — four criteria that must all be met before a microorganism can be declared the cause of a disease.
Robert Koch (1843–1910) was a German physician who took Pasteur's insight — that microorganisms cause disease — and transformed it into a rigorous experimental method for proving causation. Working first on anthrax (1876) and then tuberculosis (1882), Koch developed four criteria that must all be satisfied before a microorganism can be declared the cause of a specific disease.
These became known as Koch's postulates.
The microorganism must be found in all organisms suffering from the disease
Examine diseased organisms — the suspected pathogen must be consistently present in all cases. It should not be present in healthy organisms. This establishes association.
The microorganism must be isolated and grown in pure culture
Extract the suspected pathogen and grow it in isolation — separate from the host and from any other organisms. This ensures you are working with a single, identified agent.
The cultured microorganism must cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism
Inoculate a healthy host with the pure culture. The host must develop the same disease. This establishes causation — the organism alone is sufficient to cause the disease.
The microorganism must be re-isolated and shown identical to the original
Extract the pathogen from the newly infected host and confirm it is the same organism as in step 2. This closes the causal loop — the organism introduced is the same one causing the disease.
Koch's four postulates — each step adds a new layer of proof, from association to confirmed causation
What to write in your book
- P1 Association: microbe in all diseased, absent in healthy
- P2 Isolation: grown in pure culture
- P3 Causation: pure culture causes same disease in healthy host
- P4 Confirmation: re-isolate identical microbe from new host
Postulate 3 — the cultured microbe causing disease in a healthy host — establishes _____ rather than mere correlation.
Tuberculosis, 1882 — and where the postulates break down
Koch's proof that Mycobacterium tuberculosis caused TB was one of medicine's most important demonstrations — but the postulates have real limits in modern microbiology.
Koch applied his postulates to prove that Mycobacterium tuberculosis caused tuberculosis in 1882 — one of the most important demonstrations in medical history. He isolated the bacterium from tuberculosis patients, grew it in pure culture, infected healthy guinea pigs (who developed TB), and re-isolated the same bacterium from those animals.
| Postulate | Koch's TB Investigation — What He Did |
|---|---|
| 1 | Examined lung tissue from TB patients — found the same rod-shaped bacterium in every case. Not found in healthy individuals. |
| 2 | Cultured the bacterium on coagulated blood serum — first successful pure culture of M. tuberculosis. |
| 3 | Injected pure culture into healthy guinea pigs — all developed TB-like disease. |
| 4 | Re-isolated the bacterium from infected guinea pigs — confirmed identical to original isolate. |
However, Koch's postulates have well-recognised limitations in modern microbiology:
- Viruses cannot be grown in pure culture on artificial media — they require living host cells. Koch's postulates were designed for bacteria.
- Some pathogens cannot be cultured at all — Treponema pallidum (syphilis) still cannot be grown reliably outside a living host.
- Asymptomatic carriers — some individuals carry a pathogen (e.g. Vibrio cholerae) without developing disease, violating postulate 1's requirement that healthy organisms are free of the agent.
- Ethical constraints — postulate 3 requires infecting a healthy host. This is not possible in humans, and even animal experimentation is subject to strict ethical oversight.
- Prions and viroids — non-cellular pathogens with no nucleic acid (prions) or no protein (viroids) cannot be "grown in pure culture" in any meaningful sense.
What to write in your book
- Koch proved M. tuberculosis caused TB (1882) by satisfying all four postulates
- Limits: viruses can't grow on artificial media; some pathogens can't be cultured
- Asymptomatic carriers break P1; infecting healthy humans (P3) is unethical
- Molecular Koch's postulates use pathogen DNA instead of culture
Why are Koch's original postulates difficult to apply to viruses?
Pasteur's 1859 swan-neck experiment did not just refute spontaneous generation — it dismantled the theoretical foundation of miasma theory and forced medicine to confront a new question: if microorganisms come from the air and cause spoilage, could they also come from the air and cause disease in humans? Pasteur believed so, but he needed Koch to build the proof. When Koch announced in 1882 that he had satisfied all four of his postulates for tuberculosis — then the leading cause of death in Europe, killing one in seven people — the reaction in the Berlin Physiological Society was described as stunned silence followed by a standing ovation. Koch's proof was so methodologically complete that it changed the entire practice of medicine. Within a generation, the germ theory of disease had replaced miasma theory entirely, hand-washing became standard medical practice, and the era of vaccine development and antibiotic discovery had begun. The swan-neck flask experiment is still taught because it is a near-perfect example of experimental design: a simple, elegant manipulation of a single variable that collapsed a 2000-year-old theory. You will apply Koch's postulates to a novel scenario in the practice questions.
Germ Theory — Key Milestones
Pasteur's Swan-Neck Experiment
- Disproved spontaneous generation — microorganisms come from air, not broth.
- Swan-neck: air enters but particles cannot — broth stays clear.
- Straight-neck: particles enter freely — broth becomes turbid.
- Breaking the neck: particles enter, growth appears — confirms particles carry microorganisms.
Koch's Four Postulates
- 1. Microorganism found in all diseased, not in healthy organisms.
- 2. Isolated and grown in pure culture.
- 3. Pure culture causes disease in healthy host.
- 4. Microorganism re-isolated from new host — identical to original.
Why Postulates Matter
- Postulate 1: establishes association (correlation).
- Postulate 3: establishes causation (not just presence).
- Postulate 4: confirms reproducibility and identity.
- Together: rule out coincidence, contamination, confounders.
Limitations of Koch's Postulates
- Viruses cannot be grown in pure culture on artificial media.
- Asymptomatic carriers violate postulate 1.
- Ethical constraints on infecting healthy humans (postulate 3).
- Prions and viroids cannot be cultured in the traditional sense.
A fresh set drawn from this lesson's question bank — feedback shown immediately. +5 XP per correct · +25 XP all correct
Pick your answer, then rate your confidence — that tells the system what to drill next.
UnderstandBand 3(3 marks) 1. Describe Pasteur's swan-neck flask experiment. In your answer, explain what the experiment was designed to test, what the results showed, and why breaking the swan-neck was a critical step.
1 mark: experimental design and purpose · 1 mark: results of intact vs broken neck flasks · 1 mark: significance of breaking the neck as a control
UnderstandBand 3(3 marks) 2. List Koch's four postulates in order and explain the purpose of each. Why is it important that all four are satisfied, rather than just the first two?
1 mark: all four postulates correctly listed in order · 1 mark: purpose of each briefly explained · 1 mark: explanation of why postulates 3 and 4 are necessary beyond correlation
EvaluateBand 5(4 marks) 3. Pasteur's swan-neck flask experiment and Koch's postulates together established the germ theory of disease as the dominant scientific explanation for infectious disease. Evaluate the contribution of each scientist, explaining what specific evidence they produced and how it addressed the limitations of the miasma theory.
1 mark: Pasteur's specific evidence and what it disproved · 1 mark: Koch's specific evidence/methodology and what it established · 1 mark: how each addressed a specific weakness of miasma theory · 1 mark: overall evaluation of how together they replaced miasma theory
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Multiple choice
MC answers and full explanations are shown inline as you complete each question. Use the retry button to attempt a fresh set from the lesson bank.
Short Answer Model Answers
Q1 (3 marks): Pasteur designed the experiment to test whether microorganisms arose spontaneously from nutrient broth (spontaneous generation) or came from pre-existing microorganisms in the environment. He used two types of flasks: straight-neck flasks, which allowed both air and airborne particles to reach the broth, and swan-neck flasks, whose long curved necks allowed air to enter but caused airborne particles to settle in the curve before reaching the broth. Both sets were sterilised by boiling. The straight-neck flasks became turbid (cloudy) within days as microorganisms grew; the swan-neck flasks remained clear indefinitely, showing no spontaneous growth. When the swan-neck was broken off, exposing the broth to unfiltered air and particles, growth appeared. Breaking the neck was a critical internal control — it demonstrated that the same broth, under the same conditions, would readily support growth if exposed to airborne particles. This confirmed that the broth had not spontaneously generated organisms; growth required particles from the air.
Q2 (3 marks): Postulate 1: the microorganism must be found in all diseased organisms but not in healthy ones — purpose: establishes consistent association between the organism and the disease. Postulate 2: the organism must be isolated from the diseased host and grown in pure culture — purpose: ensures you are working with a single, identified agent, free from contaminants. Postulate 3: the pure culture must cause the same disease when introduced into a healthy host — purpose: establishes causation, not just correlation. Postulate 4: the organism must be re-isolated from the newly diseased host and confirmed identical to the original — purpose: confirms reproducibility and rules out contaminants or coincidental organisms. Postulates 1 and 2 alone only show correlation — an organism is present and can be grown. Without postulate 3, there is no proof the organism causes the disease (it might be an opportunistic secondary infection or a harmless commensal). Without postulate 4, contamination during the experiment cannot be ruled out. All four together form a closed causal chain.
Q3 (4 marks): Pasteur's specific contribution was the experimental disproof of spontaneous generation — the swan-neck flask experiment showed that microorganisms come from pre-existing microorganisms in the air, not from non-living matter. This directly addressed miasma theory's central weakness: miasma theory could not explain why some individuals in the same "bad air" environment developed disease and others did not, nor could it explain why disease sometimes appeared suddenly in previously healthy locations. Pasteur showed that the agent of disease (or spoilage) was a particulate, living entity from the environment. Koch's contribution was methodological — he provided a four-step framework (his postulates) that could prove a specific microorganism caused a specific disease, applied first to anthrax (1876) and then tuberculosis (1882). This addressed miasma theory's second major weakness: it could only identify environmental conditions associated with disease (bad air, filth) but had no method for identifying the specific causative agent. Koch's postulates provided that method. Together, Pasteur removed the theoretical basis for spontaneous generation (the idea that disease arose from within), while Koch provided the experimental tools to identify which specific living agent was responsible. By the 1890s, miasma theory had been entirely replaced — not because it was decreed wrong, but because germ theory made specific, testable, and repeatedly confirmed predictions that miasma theory could not.
Five timed questions on germ theory, Pasteur, and Koch's postulates. Beat the boss to bank a tier — gold (perfect + fast), silver (80%+), or bronze (cleared).
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☄️ Play Asteroid Blaster →You were asked what evidence would be needed to disprove the claim that disease arises spontaneously — with no external living agent.
Pasteur's evidence directly addressed your first requirement: he showed that microbial growth did not occur in sterile broth unless airborne particles were present. The agent came from outside, not from within. Koch's evidence addressed your second requirement: he showed that a specific isolated organism — and only that organism — could reliably produce a specific disease in a healthy host. Together these two lines of evidence — "the agent comes from the environment" and "this specific agent causes this specific disease" — constitute the experimental foundation of germ theory.
If you identified something like "show that disease doesn't appear in sterile, isolated conditions" or "show that introducing the suspected agent causes disease" — you were thinking like Pasteur and Koch respectively. If your answer was vaguer, the key insight to carry forward is that disproving a scientific claim requires a specific, controlled experimental design — not just a counter-argument.