Animal Microbiology Part II Flashcards

1
Q

Skin layers

A

First line of defence against pathogens

Epidermis: outer layer of dead skin and inner layer of actively replicating cells

Dermis: sebaceous glands, apocrine sweat glands secrete water, salt, protein, lipids (antimicrobial) and sugars
- anaerobic environment in the glands

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2
Q

Skin as an environment

A

Healthy skin is a dry, acidic environment which does not support growth of many microbes
- microbes that do survive secrete bacteriocidin to prevent growth of others

Ducts are colonized by gram-positive adapted species

Propionobacterium acnes may inhabit hair canals

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3
Q

Sebaceous skin is highest in which microbe?

Moist skin? Dry Skin?

A

Sebaceous skin highest in propionibacteria

Moist skin highest in Corynebacteria and Staphylococci epidermis

Dry skin highest in Betaproteobacteria and Corynebacteria

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4
Q

Teeth structure and habitats

A

Teeth consist of enamel mineral matrices surrounding dentin and pulp (center) living tissue

Dental plaque is a thick layer of bacterial growth

Aerobic niche: enamel surface, Streptococcus mutans consumes sucrose from the diet and produces dextran to aid attachment to surface to continue forming plaque

Anaerobic niche: plaque S. mutans and lactobacilli ferment sugars and produce lactic acid which demineralizes tooth enamel

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5
Q

Microbes in GI tract

A

Stomach and small intestine (pH 2-5) - helicobacter can grow in this low pH environment and food particles can protect other bacteria

Colon (pH 7) - fermentation chamber, strict or facultative anaerobes
- Bacteroidetes, E. coli, yeasts, anaerobic protozoa (Enamoeba coli) - highly variable diversity between people
- Ruminococcus and methanogens

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6
Q

Microbial digestion in the colon

A

Microbes digest CHO —> VFAs

Microbes in the colon ferment VFAs —> CO2 + H2

In 1/3 of adults methanogens convert CO2 + H+ —> CH4

Sulfate reducers ferment Cys and Met —> H2S, methanethiol (smelly)

Microbes can also produce AA, B12, vitamin K, thiamin and riboflavin which can benefit host

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7
Q

Respiratory tract microbes

A

Nose and nasopharynx: Streptococci, Staphylococci, Corynebacteria
- but nasopharynx may carry pathogens under control by immune system

Lower respiratory tract (trachea, bronchi and lungs) have a low biomass microbiome

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8
Q

Genitourinary tract microbes

A

Genitourinary tract of men and urinary tract of women generally free of microbes due to urine flushing
- change in pH can lead to urinary tract infections
- urethra is more narrow in women and more prone to infection

Vaginal tract: microbes degrade glycogen —> lactic acid to keep pH low

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9
Q

Generally sterile zones in the body

A

Blood, spinal fluid, bladder + kidney (interior urinary system), peritoneal cavity (gut cavity), pleural (lung) cavity, sinuses, interior regions of other body tissues such as bone and muscle

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