Exotoxins Flashcards

1
Q

Exotoxins that inactivate elongation factor (EF-2) via ribosylation, thus inhibiting host cell protein synthesis

A
  • Diptheria toxin (Cornyebacterium diptheriae) - pharyngitis with pseudomembranes and severe LAD (bull neck)
  • Exotoxin A (Pseudomonas) - host cell death
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2
Q

Exotoxins that inactivate 60S ribosome by removing adenine from rRNA, thus inhibiting host cell protein synthesis

A
  • Shiga toxin (Shigella) - dysentery (via GI mucosal invasion) and HUS (via cytokine release)
  • Shiga-like toxin (EHEC) - HUS (via cytokine release); EHEC does not invade host cells
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3
Q

Exotoxins that overactivate adenylate cyclase by ribosylation, increasing cAMP, and thus increasing fluid secretion

A
  • Heat-labile toxin (ETEC) - watery diarrhea (“labile in the air, stable on the ground”)
  • Cholera toxin (Vibrio cholera) - voluminous “rice-water” diarrhea; toxin permanently activates Gs
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4
Q

Exotoxin that mimics the adenylate cyclase enzyme, increasing cAMP, and thus increasing fluid secretion

A
  • Edema factor (Bacillus anthracis) - likely responsible for characteristic edematous borders of black eschar in cutaneous anthrax (lethal factor causes necrosis)
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5
Q

Exotoxin that overactivates guanylate cyclase, increasing cGMP, and thus increasing fluid secretion

A
  • Heat-stable toxin (ETEC) - watery diarrhea (“labile in the air, stable on the ground”)
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6
Q

Exotoxin that overactivates adenylate cyclase (increasing cAMP) by disabling Gi, thus impairing phagocytosis of the microbe

A
  • Pertussis toxin (Bordetella pertussis) - “whooping cough”
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7
Q

Exotoxins (proteases) that cleave SNARE proteins required for neurotransmitter release

A
  • Tetanospasmin (Clostriudium tetani) - toxin prevents release of GABA and glycine (inhibitory NTs) from Renshaw cells in spinal cord, leading to spasticity, risus sardonicus, and “lockjaw”
  • Botulinum toxin (Clostridium botulinum) - toxin prevents release of ACh (stimulatory) signals at NMJ, leading to flaccid paralysis and floppy baby
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8
Q

Exotoxins that lyse cell membranes

A
  • Alpha toxin (Clostridium perfringens) - phospholipase (lecithinase) that degrades tissue and cell membranes; results in myonecrosis (“gas gangrene”) and hemolysis (“double zone” of hemolysis on blood agar)
  • Streptolysin O (Strepococcus pyogenes) - lyses RBC cell membranes, contributing to beta-hemolysis
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9
Q

Superantigens that cause shock via induced release of INF-gamma and IL-1

A
  • Toxic shock syndrome toxin (S. aureus) - fever, rash, shock; other S. aureus toxins cause scalded skin syndrome and food poisoning (enterotoxin)
  • Exotoxin (Streptococcus pyogenes) - toxic shock syndrome
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10
Q

Exotoxin that induces actin depolymerization leadin to mucosal cell death

A
  • Cytotoxin B (Clostridium difficile) - necrosis of colonic mucosal surfaces and pseudomembrane formation
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