Unit 6: Bacterial Infection Flashcards

1
Q

0what are some maternal factors that can impact the developing foetal microbiome?

A
  • mother’s gut microbiota
  • vaginal infection
  • peridontitis
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2
Q

what are some postnatal factors that can impact the developing foetal microbiome?

A
  • antibiotics
  • breast feeding
  • host genetics
  • environment
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3
Q

how is a healthy GIT microbiome defined?

A

a population of 10^14 bacteria of at least 1000 species and belonging to 4 major phyla, the majority (90%) of which are anaerobes

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4
Q

what are some features of a dysbiosis (bad) microbiome?

A
  • increase in firmicutes:bacteriodete ratio
  • decrease in bacteriodes fragalis = pro-inflam
  • more proteobacteria, less bifidobacteriodes
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5
Q

what are the main uses of probiotics?

A
  • used to maintain good/ healthy microbiota
  • therapeutic restoration of the microbiome
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6
Q

what are some correlations of continuous antibiotic use in early life?

A
  • development of childhood asthma + milk allergies
  • IBD (mouse model)
  • obesity (mouse model)
  • permanent alterations in microbiome
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7
Q

what is the transmission sources of canine leptospirosis?

A
  • contact with infected urine - both direct and indirect
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8
Q

how would subclinical form of canine leptospirosis be clinically presented?

A
  • inapparent, disease maintained in host
  • very common form
  • chronic shedding in urine
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9
Q

how would peracute form of canine leptospirosis be clinically presented?

A
  • acute clinical disease
  • death of incidental host
  • shock and internal bleeding
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10
Q

how would acute form of leptospirosis be clinically presented?

A
  • haemorrhage, fever, anorexia, shock, jaundice, kidney/liver failure
  • reluctance to move
  • death
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11
Q

how would chronic form of leptospirosis be clinically presented?

A
  • multisystemic organ failure, chronic hepatitis
  • chronic renal damage
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12
Q

what diagnostics can be used for diagnosing leptospirosis?

A
  • direct leptospire detection = darkfield microscopy + culture
  • molecular detection + genotyping = PCR + WGS/MLST
  • serology = MAT + other immunoassays
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13
Q

what is the difficulty of using culture to detect lepto infection?

A
  • requires specialised media
  • very rapid growth of parasite
  • takes around 13 weeks to confirm infection
  • many serovar, serogroups and genomospecies
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14
Q

what are the pros and cons of using PCR for lepto detection?

A
  • sensitive in leptospiraemic phase = early detection in acute phase
  • can be used for blood and urine samples
  • variable urine shedding = false neg
  • costly reagents
  • no identification of serovars
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15
Q

what is MLST?

A

multi locus sequence typing

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16
Q

what is the LIPS assay? what are good targets?

A
  • luciferase immunoprecipitation assay - outer membrane proteins = LigA/LigB
    antibody binds = virulence factor that is expressed when colonising
17
Q

describe the process of the LIPS assay

A
  • amplify + clone OMP gene
  • subclone into expression vector (at either N or C terminal) = fusion protein
  • express recombinant fusion protein - culture + lyse
  • immunoprecipitate = add serum + protein A sephrarose (captures IgG + immune complexes)
  • wash, add substrate + measure luminescence
18
Q

what are the current treatment options for tuberculosis?

A
  • long regimen drug treatment (MDR, XDR TB)
  • BCG vaccine (not effective to adult TB)
19
Q

what is different about the structure of the cell wall of mycobacteria?

A
  • looks similar to g-ve (lipid-peptidoglycan-lipid) with some big differences
  • long chain branched mycholic acids with glycolipids tops
  • linked with lipopolysaccharides
  • addition of porins
20
Q

how do mycobateria release virulence factors?

A
  • ESX-1 secretion system = secretion if pore-forming toxin = EsxA = escape from phagosomal compartment
21
Q

what effects can EsxA/B have on the immune system?

A
  • antagonist to TLR2
  • inhibits MHCI presentation
  • innate immune system still triggered
22
Q

what are some ways in which mycobacteria can inhibit phagolysosome fusion?

A
  • protein and lipid secretion
  • surface proteins prevent phagolysosome maturation = PI3P (maturation marker)
  • PKnG = fusion inhibition
23
Q

what is being measured during a pathogen diagnostic test?

A
  • growing/ cultivation of the pathogen
  • nucleic acid
  • surface antigens
24
Q

what is being measured during an immune response diagnostic test?

A
  • antibodies
  • T cell response
25
Q

what are the pros and cons of using sputum smear microscopy for AFB as a diagnostic for TB?

A
  • light microscopy = inexpensive
  • identifies most infectious patients
  • no identification of drug resistance
  • doesn’t distinguish MTB from non-TB mycobacteria
26
Q

what are the pros and cons of using urine LAM as a diagnostic for TB?

A
  • inexpensive and results within 30 mins
  • can be used at bedside
  • only used for HIV positive patients
27
Q

what are the pros and cons of using TB-LAMP as a diagnostic for TB?

A
  • simple and easy visual display
  • results in an hour
  • sensitivity increased as CD4 cell count decreases
  • doesn’t identify drug resistance