Lecture 9&10: Pathogenesis Flashcards

1
Q

Obligate intracell bacteria

A
  • Chlamydia spp
  • Mycobacterium leprae
  • Rickettsia spp
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2
Q

Facultative intracell bacteria

A
  • Brucella spp.
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • E, coli (some)
  • GBS
  • Legionella spp.
  • Listeria monocytogenes
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae (meningitides)
  • Salmonella spp.
  • Shigella spp.
  • Yersinia spp.
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3
Q

2nd step of pathogenesis: attachment/adherence

A
  • necessary for colonization (particular site)

Requires:

  • host cell receptors
  • microbial surface components (adhesins/ligands)

Defined by:

  • ability to adhere (interaction)
  • favourable environment (pH, nutrients, etc…)
  • presence/absence of normal microflora (commensals)
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4
Q

Tissue tropism/Specificity

A
  • Strep. mutans: enamel (dental plaque)
  • Strep salviarius: tongue epithelial cells
  • Campylobacter spp.: intestinal mucosa
  • B. pertussis: upper respiratory tract epithelium
  • S. aureus: nasal membranes
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5
Q

Adhesins

A

Pili & fimbriae (bacteria)

  • may be coordinated w/ othr virulence factors: cholera toxin, Toxin Coregulated Pilus A (TcpA)
  • Ex. in E. coli Type I pili (ligand) interacts w/ GM1 ganglioside in intestinal epithelium (receptor)

Afimbrial adhesins (bacteria & fungi)

  • Lipoteichoic acid
  • LPS or LOS
  • Mannans in C. albicans
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6
Q

3rd step of pathogenesis: Invasion

A

Invasins (bacterial & fungal)

  • interact w/ specific cell receptors, induce endocytosis

Host cell cytoskeleton rearrangement

  • Internalin A: usually injected into host cell -> membrane ruffling
  • Ex. L. monocytogenes, Shigella
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7
Q

4th step of pathogenesis: evasion of immune response

A
  • capsules (complement & phagcytic killing): Ex. H. influenzae produce polyribose ribitol phosphate
  • complement-binding proteins (complement): Ex1. P. aeruginosa produce Elastase inactivating C3b & C5a; Ex2. S. pyogenes produce C5a peptidase which degrades C5a and inhibits phagocyte chemotaxis
  • proteases (complement)
  • host cell mimicry (complement): Ex. Strep. pyogenes produce Hyaluronic acid, Ex2. N. meningitidis produce capsule w/ sialic acid and mimics host cells
  • Type III secretion systems (phagocytic killing)
  • intracell parasitism (phagocytic killing)
  • interfere w/ MHC function and Ag processing
  • Ig-binding/inactivating proteins
  • Antigenic variation
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8
Q

Evasion of phagocyte destruction

A
  1. inhibit phagosome-lysosome fusion (L. pneumophilia)
  2. escape phagolysosome (L. monocytogenes)
  3. inactivate oxygen radicals or degradative enzymes (S. aureus)
  4. production of surface components (H. capsulatum)
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9
Q

Evasion of macrophages & leukocytes

A
  • solution: toxins to kill macrophages & leukocytes
  • leukocidins -> kill neutrophils and macrophages
  • alters phospholipid metabolism by ADP-ribosylation of a protein controllling phosphatidylinositol -> disruption of cell activities
  • typical produces = highly invasive bacteria
  • Panton-valentine Leukocidin (phage-encoded) produced by Staphylococci
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10
Q

Evasion mechanisms

A
  • engulfing
  • degradation
  • toxins to prevent antigen processing and presentation
  • evasion of Ab
  • Ig-binding/inactivating proteins: Ex. bacterial IgA proteases
  • antigenic/phase variation
  • biofilms: general evasion strategy
  • Ex. catheter have single species biofilms whereas dental plaques are multipe species
  • attachment upregulates genes and growth rates
  • biofilms more resistant to antibiotics
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11
Q

Bacterial strategies for iron sequestration

A
  1. specific surface receptors: grab host iron (chelators); Ex. Neisseria sp.
  2. Secretion siderophores: complex with iron; Ex. E. coli, K. pneumoniae
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12
Q

Infection: direct damage mechanisms

A
  1. Degradative enzymes
  • Hyaluronidase: breaks down hyaluronic acid of CT
  • Streptokinase: breaks down fibrin clots
  • Collagenase
  1. Physical growth thru tissues: Aspergillosis unknown mechanism of damage
  2. Toxic structure: LPS
  3. Toxins
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13
Q

Fungal toxins

A
  • A. fumigatus: gliotoxin; inhibits macrophage phagocytosis, T-cell activation & induces apoptosis
  • A. flavus: Aflatoxin; carcinogenic
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14
Q

Bacterial toxins

A

Exotoxins

  • protein
  • secreted into extracell environment
  • specificity varies
  • very potent
  • Gram +ve and -ve
  • Toxicity: minute amounts
  • Effects on body: T-cell activation
  • Toxoid formation
  • no fever
  • secreted from live cells

Endotoxins

  • only acts as toxin under certain circumstances
  • LPS of Gram -ve
  • toxicity: high doses
  • systemic fever
  • cell lysis for release
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15
Q

Examples of Exotoxins

A

Excessive watery diarrhea

  • V. cholera -> cholera toxin
  • Enterotoxigenic E. coli -> LT/ST Enterotoxin

Flaccid Muscle paralysis: C. botulinum

Rigid muscle paralysis: C. tetani

Membrane disruption: C. perfringens -> cytotoxin

Shock: Staph aureus -> TSST-1

Pseudomembrane, systemic effects: Corynebacterium diphtheriae

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16
Q

Classes of Exotoxins

A
  • Class I: membrane-acting, Ex. TSST-1 & SPE (superantigens so divert/confuse host defenses) interacts directly w T-cells & APC
  • II: membrane-damaging, Ex. phospholipases, lecithinase (C. perfringens), pore formation (Listeriolysin O)
  • III: intracell, Ex. Diphtheria & cholera (ADP-ribosyltransferase), tetanus (GABA) & botulinum (ACh) (both Zinc metalloendoprotease)
17
Q

Most common toxin structures

A
  • AB: single gene encodes for single peptide; post-transcriptionally modified to A&B which are covalently linked; Ex. diphtheria toxin
  • A5B (5 rings): 2 genes encode A&B subunits, non-covalently associated in stable complex; Ex. cholera toxin, ETEC Enterotoxin
18
Q

Toxin-based vaccines

A
  • DTaP
  • tetanus
  • inactivated by heat or chemicals
19
Q

Dissemination

A
  • direct: Aspergillus (growth thru tissues)
  • CSF: H. influenzae
  • blood: B. anthracis (plasma), Listeria (mononuclear cells)
  • lymphatics: Yersiniapestis
20
Q

Transmission

A
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis: highly transmissible b/c requires low effective dose