bacteria: part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Normal 3 tpes of naceria

A

Cocci, bacilli, spiral

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2
Q

How does flagella and pili contribute to virulence

A

Flagella (movement, attachment) Pili (important adherence factors)

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3
Q

How does biofilms contribute to virulence. Examples

A

(organized agregrates of bacteria embedded in polysaccahride matricesi. e. Pseudomonas aeruginosa i.e. Staphylococcus epidermidis

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4
Q

Outline neurotoxin wiht examples

A

act on nerves or motor endplate i.e. Tetanus or Botulinum toxins

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5
Q

What is endotoxin released by

A

Only produced by Gram-negative bacteria

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6
Q

What is endotoxin

A

Not a protein but it’s the the lipid A moiety of LPS

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7
Q

What is haemolytic-uraemic syndrome

A

triad of acute renal failure, hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia

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8
Q

What are E.coli strains which release shiga toxin known as

A

EHEC enterohemorrhagic E. coli

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9
Q

When does human infection with EHEC often occur

A

occurs through the inadvertent ingestion of fecal matter and secondary through contact with infected humans

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10
Q

Why can a shiga toxin bacteria infection affect gut microbiota

A

Bacterial ribosomes are also a substrate for StxA and this will result in decreased proliferation of susceptible bacteria might affect the commensal microflora in the gut

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11
Q

When are shiga toxins highly expressed

A

Toxins are highly expressed when the lytic cycle of the phage is activated (so that the gene can be taken up by lots of E coli)

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12
Q

What is the impact of AAF bunding to enterocytes with regard to human immune response

A

AAF stimulate a strong IL-8 response

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13
Q

What type of bacteria are TB and legionella pneumophilia

A

TB=gram +ve Legionella=gram -ve

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14
Q

List common bacterial STI

A

Chlamydia trachomatis infection Gonorrhoea Syphilis

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15
Q

What type of bacteria is each of Chlamydia trachomatis Neisseria gonorrhoeae Treponema pallidum

A

Gram neg

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16
Q

What cells does N gonorrhoeae interact with

A

Establishes infection in the urogenital tract by interacting with non-ciliated epithelical cells

17
Q

Virulence factor of Campylobacter sp. mostly C. jejuni

A

Adhesion and Invasion factors, Flagella motility, Type IV Secretion system, Toxin

18
Q

Important virulence factor with vibrio cholerae

A

type IV fimbria cholera toxin carried on a phages

19
Q

How does the cholera toxin work

A

Binds to enterocyte Through b pentamer to the GM1 ganglioside receptor on enterocyte A/B cholera toxins cleves A1 domain from A2 domain, activating A1. A1 faragment enters cytosol, activates Gsa, continually stimulating AC to produce cAMP. High cAMP activates CFTR… efflux of ions (esp chloride) and water from infected enterocytes Leads to diarrhoea

20
Q

How does listeria infect

A

Listeria can enter non-phagocytic cells and cross three tight barriers Intestinal barrier, Blood / brain barrier and Materno / fetal barrier