Microbiology Flashcards

1
Q

Learning Outcomes from L23 - Upper RT Infections

A
  • relate distribution of normal microbiota to the functional anatomy of the oropharyngeal and respiratory tracts
  • describe the defence mechanisms of the URT that are important in containing microbial colonisation
  • describe two diseases of the URT
    • characteristics of the pathogen
    • symptoms
    • pathogenesis
    • control and treatment
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2
Q
  1. True or False?

Lots of microbes in the Lower Respiratory Tract is normal and usually no problem.

A

False, this applies to the Upper Respiratory Tract.

Lots of microbes in the lower respiratory tract is abnormal and impairs function - gas exchange (O2 rich​ air in, CO2 enriched air out)

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3
Q
  1. Describe the defence mechanisms of the respiratory tract.
A

Filter barriers and ejection mechanisms:

  • noise hairs (vibrissae) - filter large particles out
  • cilia (mucosa) - traps particles before lungs. The upper RT mucosal epithelium is ciliated; the beating of cilia moves mucous upward: mucociliary escalator.
    • Mucin constantly moves up and out. For microbes to remain in the RT, they must attach to the epithelial cell surface, resist translocation upwards, or replicate at a greater rate than the mucin is removed.
  • mucous - for mucin to be functional, it must be of appropriate volume and viscosity
  • bioactive secretions - control microbe growth and survival in the mucous
    • iron limitation - lactoferrin (nutrient competition)
    • cell wall destruction - lysozyme (antimicrobial)
    • membrane permeabilisation - cationic peptides (antimicrobial)
  • histological - epithelial cells tightly oriented
  • anatomical - epiglottis
  • physiological - coughing/sneezing reflexes, salivation
  • microbiological - normal flora of oral and nasal cavities. Impaired defence mechanisms can change relationship with normal microbes; disturbance can lead to endogenous infections

NB - there must be a balance - if filter barriers block the flow of air then they impair respiratory function.

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4
Q
  1. Describe the significance of normal flora.
A

Contribute to normal state (homeostasis)

  • maintain characteristics of site such as low nutrients
  • Host adapted to them
  • tolerates their presence in mucosa (little/no inflammation)
  • has specific antibody to them - sIgA limits adhesion to, or penetration of, mucosal barrier. Other Ig’s facilitate rapid control of “accidental breaches”

Exclude potential invaders:

  • compete for nutrients
  • occupy attachment sites on the host
  • produce bacteriocins, lantibiotics
  • May* contribute to pathogenesis
  • if relationships goes wrong - can invade and cause disease
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5
Q
  1. What are some of the symptoms, predisposing factors and potential complications of URTIs?
A

Symptoms:

  • irritated nose or throat, sneezing, watery nasal discarchage, nasal mucous build up, sinuses swell, cough, headache, slight fever

Predisposing factors:

  • Immune function (fatigue/stress, poor nutrition)
  • respiratory function (smoking)
  • exposure (crowded conditions)

Potential complications:

  • inflammation (middle ear, sinusitis, bronchitis)
  • secondary infection (streptococcal septicemia, pneumonia)
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6
Q
  1. Describe two diseases of the URT wrt:
  • characteristics of the pathogen
  • symptoms
  • pathogenesis
  • control and treatment
A

1) The Common Cold

Microorganism: numerous; >200 viruses

  • typically rhinovirus - 30-50% of colds
    • small 30nm, non-enveloped, icosahedron, ssRNA genome
    • 4 protein capsid -> over 100 serotypes
    • virus particles must attach to cell for entry (and replication)
    • most target ICAM-1 (intercellular adhesion molecule 1) for attachment
    • hijack host cell machinery for replication

Symptoms: stuffy nose, sore throat, headache, body aches, congestion, cough, malaise, etc.

Pathogenesis: mild, self-limiting

  • incubation period = 2-3 days
  • infectious during first 2-3 days
  • recover within 1 week
  • transmission: twofold, but not highly infectious (30-40% transmission rate)
    • aerosols (coughing, sneezing, talking)
    • direct contact via hands

Treatment, prevention: none

  • manage symptoms
  • no antiviral
  • no vaccine (antibodies are part of clearance but cold viruses evolve too quickly/frequently for effective vaccination development)
  • difficult to target due to antigenic variation and attachment site not immunologically exposed (bottom of deep cleft)

2) Pharyngitis (sore throat)

  • bacterial or viral (50:50)
  • oral Streptococcus species, most commonly S. pyogenes (GAS; Group A Strep)

Virulence factors

  • alpha, beta haemolysins (strain dependent)
  • adhesins
  • cell envelope/capsule, surface and secreted proteins/antigens
  • peptidoglycan layer

symptoms

  • often accompanied by pus
  • serious secondary effects; septic shock

Infection with GAS dangerous due to wide range of virulence factors and potential for toxic shock

  • cell lysis improves access to nutrients - especially iron
  • reduces targeting by adaptive immunity
  • improves dispersal by releasing from aggregates
  • releases nutrients (amino acids, nucleotides)
  • cell adhesion
  • immune evasion
  • superantigens promote tissue damage by inflammation and necrotising fasciitis

Control, treatment

  • antibiotics - penicillin (most strains)
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7
Q
  1. LEARNING OUTCOMES L24 LRTI’S
A
  1. Know the defence mechanisms of the LRT that are important in preventing establishment of disease
    • Understand why the LRT is free of normal flora
  2. Recognise both viruses and bacteria cause LRT infections
  3. Give examples of LRT infections that are endogenous vs. environmentally acquired vs. contagious
    • Able to describe key characteristics of the pathogen, symptoms, pathogenesis, control and treatment
  4. Relate the significance of selective pressure on bacterial populations to vaccine strategies
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8
Q
  1. What are some of the specific functions of the LRT?
A
  • gas exchange: absorb oxygen, remove CO2
  • maintain air flow: removal of obstructions
    • mucociliary escalator keeps lungs free of mucus accumulation, foreign particles and microbes
  • protection from infection:
    • mucous provides a medium to concentrate defence molecules
      • antimicrobial substances: lactoferrin, lysozyme, cationic peptides
      • secretory IgA
    • alveolar macrophages
    • humoral factors
      • IgG
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9
Q
  1. How might infection of the LRT occur?
A

Aerosols (from outside) and aspirates (from oral microbiota) contain potentially infectious particles of varying size and hygroscopicity:

  • 6-10 um - trapped in nose
  • < 6 um, non-hygroscopic - impeded in trachea, bronchi; may be cleared by escalator
  • < 3um, hygroscopic - make way to alveoli - clearance requires immune function (macrophages, humoral factors)
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10
Q
  1. Describe the defences of the LRT against microbes.
A

LRT has less exposure to microbes than URT and additional defences to remove the few microbes that get there.

  • Immune: macrophages, humoral factors

Macrophages - many roles

  • Antibacterial affector - recognises pathogen, produces alarm and coordinated response to infection
  • Antibacterial effector - apoptotic death reduces pneumococcal burden - antibacterial
  • Proresolution, Anti-Inflammation - efferocytosis (clearance of dying leukocytes), signalling to the epithelium to dampen inflammatory signalling
  • Bad - necroptosis/pyroptosis - outcome reflects bacterial toxins - uncontrolled death risks inflammatory injury and infection risk - pathological
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11
Q
  1. Describe the LRT: Pneumonia
A

Microbial infection of bronchial tubes/lungs (parenchyma/lining)

Microbes:

  • Bacteria - Legionella, Mycoplasma, Streptococcus
  • Viruses - influenza
  • Protozoa - Pneumocystis
  • Fungi - Aspergillus, Cryptococcus

Infection routes and reservoirs:

  • aspiration - normal URT microbes
  • inhalation - aerosol generators (mechanical devices, air-breathing animals, any habitat of spore-forming organisms)

Compounding factors:

  • depressed cough reflex
  • immunosuppression
  • mucus accumulation - genetic defect (CF), co-infection/epithelial damage

Virulence attributes pertinent to LRT infection:

  • readily aerosolised/aspirated
  • resist macrophages
  • avoid humoral immunity
  • RT-specific adhesins

Viral Pneumonia: see #12

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12
Q
  1. Describe viral pneumonia
  • examples
  • cellular targets
  • symptoms
A

~200 million cases/yr

Adults: typically influenza, coronavirus

  • Bacterial 70%, viral 30%

Children: typically respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), parainfluenza

Dual viral infections exist, as do dual-viral (30% of cases).

Target:

  • LRT via RT-specific epithelial receptors
  • eg influenza binds to sialic acid moiety on ciliated cells
    • result: motility ceases, cells desquamate, cough triggered

Symptoms:

  • 3-4 day fever = infection of RT
  • rapid onset: chills, fever, cough
  • malaise, myalgia
  • hyperventilation
  • hyperinflation (of lungs)
  • fluid accumulates in lungs
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13
Q

Describe Bacterial Pneumonia, mentioning reservoir, infection route, colonisation success and pathogenesis.

A
  • Grav +ve diplococci
  • Reservoir: normal microbiota of the nasopharynx (~50% children carriers)
  • Infection route: aspiration, an endogenous infection
  • Colonisation success: large polysaccharide capsule protects from phagocytosis
  • Pathogenesis : multiplication in alveolar spaces; toxin destruction of cells (pneumolysin)
    • alpha-haemolytic
  • Incidence:
    • children: rate reflects immature immune system
    • elderly/sick: increased incidence reflects decline in lung function (tissue resilience) plus declining immune function
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14
Q
  1. Discuss Legionnaires’ Disease with regard to its virulence and survival characteristics.
A

High mortality rate ~20%; a frequent cause of pneumonia.

Genus Legionella:

  • ubiquitous - soil and aquatic ecosystems
  • slender, weakly staining, pleiomorphic G- rods
  • requires iron, cysteine-dependent
  • habitat: biofilms on wet surfaces (air conditioning towers, condensers, shower roses, irrigation spray heads, potting mixes)
  • survives in moist environments at relatively high temperatures

Intracellular survivor:

  • phagocytic uptake via coiling endocytosis
  • vacuole formation: intracellular phagosome, survival
  • multiplication within macrophage phagosome, ruptures, host cell lysis, bacteria escapes - further infection

Pathogenesis:

  • environmentally acquired , no person-person transmission
  • eg biofilm droplets containing Legionella -> inhaled, deposits in lung -> resists macrophage killing; growth; promotes inflammation -> systemic dissemination

Pathology/symptoms:

  • cough
  • headache
  • fever
  • chills

Treatment/control:

  • antibiotics
  • control incidence by cooling tower hygiene and source tracking to identify hygiene failure or infection risk
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15
Q
  1. Describe the symptoms and pathology of Whooping Cough (Pertussis)
A
  • Acquired, contagious infection
  • affects mainly infants and small children
  • incubation period 1-3 weeks
  • begins like cold
  • dry, unproductive cough develops:
    • paroxysmal, “whoop” sound
    • severe
    • post-tussis vomiting -> weight loss
    • haemorrhage in eyes
  • cough lasts 3 months: “100 day cough”

Bordetella pertussis:pathology is due to a variety of toxins

  • pertussis toxin
    • incr. tissue susceptibility to histamine and serotonin
    • incr. lymphocyte response
  • adenylate cyclase toxin
    • invasive
    • haemolytic
    • inhibits host response: chemotaxis, phagocytosis, phagocytic killing

2 Gram-negative endotoxins (cell well associated):

  • tracheal cytotoxin (peptidoglycan fragment)
    • kills tracheal epithelial cells
    • paralyses cilia
  • LPS
    • inflammation
    • shock

Control/treatment strategies:

  • hygiene (including quarantine)
  • vaccination - historically very effective (but not currently… see #16)
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16
Q
  1. Why is there an increased incidence of pertussis?
A

Not well-established.

  • increase in surveillance; better detection elevating numbers recorded?
  • falling vaccination rates?
    • non-compliance - fears of side effects
    • Whole Cell vaccine (VCV) less acceptable
      • needed new vaccine; acellular vaccine (ACV) introduced in 1999
  • changed pathogen?
    • the epidemic is primarily due to increase in prevalence of strains that are genetically distinct

Vaccine strategy changes microbial ecology.

Acelullar vaccines have fewer targets - increased focus of selective pressure…

17
Q
  1. Give examples of LRT infections that are endogenous vs. environmentally acquired vs. contagious
A

Endogenous: Pneumonia - pneumococcal:
Triggered by injury, infection or immune suppression. Pathology due to pathogen growth, immune response and cytotoxin. Treat with antibiotics. Vaccine Available but doesn’t greatly affect carriage rates.

Environmentally acquired: Legionnaires’ disease:
By inhalation. Pathology due to pathogen growth and immune response. Treat with antibiotics. Control by cooling tower hygiene.

Contagious: Whooping cough:
Acquired by contact with infected person (aerosol inhalation). Pathology due to pathogen growth, immune response and range of toxins. Old vaccine now ineffective. New vaccine not used enough for control and new variants have emerged.

18
Q
  1. Many pathogens are often present in people with no disease. Explain, with examples.
A

Carriage - we are continuously exposed to microbes but they are also part of us, eg:

S. pyogenes (GAS) endogenous to URT

  • streptococcal sore throat; can cause pharyngitis
  • pathology due to pathogen growth, immune response and cytotoxic virulence factors

S. pneumonia endogenous to URT

  • Pneumococcal pneumonia; can cause lung infection
  • pathology due to pathogen growth, immune response and cytotoxic virulence factors

Legionnaires’ Disease in human environments

  • but not in URT
  • can cause lung infection
  • pathology due to pathogen growth and immune response
19
Q
  1. Define the following terms:
  • Systemic Infection
  • Bacteremia
  • Viremia
  • Sepsis
  • Septicaemia

What may bacterial systemic infection result from?

A
  • Systemic Infection - disseminated presence of microbes
  • Bacteremia - presence of bacteria in blood
  • Viremia - presence of viruses in blood
  • Sepsis - systemic response to infection
  • Septicaemia - response to bacterial factors in blood

Bacterial systemic infection may result from:

  • Infection-related damage: epithelium damaged by inflammation
  • Physical damage: Surgical or accidental wounds, burns, bites
  • Pathogen strategy: blood-borne parasites or cell invasion

Treated by intravenous antibiotic regime that keeps blood concentration above MIC constantly

(MIC - minimum inhibitory concentration - lowest concentration of a chemical which prevents visible growth of a bacterium)

20
Q
  1. Describe the stages/outcomes of infection with Tuberculosis
A

Primary TB (lungs)

  • coughing, fever, etc.
    • tubercles start to form

Control (latent infection)

  • disease process usually stops here
  • activated macrophages engulfed M. tuberculosis
    • tubercles contain bacteria
    • active cell-mediated immunity (Mantoux test detects latent TB)

Disseminated TB (lungs or extrapulmonary)

  • primary TB can progress to this in immune-suppressed
  • Latent TB can reactivate (centre of tubercles liquefy - bacteria released)
  • spread to blood, organs
  • 50% mortality rate
21
Q
  1. How is Tuberculosis treated?
A

Drugs: Isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide ethambutol

Two or more drugs given together - minimises development of resistance

Long-term: ~1 year

  • poor compliance
  • resistance
    • spontaneous chromosomal mutations
    • even by 1993 in Australia, ~20% strains showed some resistance
22
Q
  1. Why are some pathogens carried asymptomatically?
A

They have offensive weaponry, but don’t express the genes.

Some pathogens can regulate the expression of virulence factors to enable crossing of the epithelial barrier ‘when needed’

Eg strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhimurium that can inject proteins into epithelial cells to subvert their normal functions

For example, Pseudomonas exploits weaknesses in epithelial cell junctions. Salmonella and some other gut pathogens can directly invade the cells.