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Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity. Prof. Khaled H. Abu-Elteen. Infection and Disease. A. Definitions B. Generalized Stages of Infection C. Virulence Factors and Toxins. A. Definitions. Disease and Infectious Disease Disease

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Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

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  1. Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity Prof. Khaled H. Abu-Elteen

  2. Infection and Disease A. Definitions B. Generalized Stages of Infection C. Virulence Factors and Toxins

  3. A. Definitions • Disease and Infectious Disease • Disease • Any deviation from a condition of good health and well-being • Infectious Disease • A disease condition caused by the presence or growth of infectious microorganisms or parasites

  4. A. Definitions • Pathogenicity and Virulence • Pathogenicity • The ability of a microbe to cause disease • This term is often used to describe or compare species • Virulence • The degree of pathogenicity in a microorganism • This term is often used to describe or compare strains within a species

  5. Definitions • Acute infection vs. chronic infection • Acute Infection • An infection characterized by sudden onset, rapid progression, and often with severe symptoms • Chronic Infection • An infection characterized by delayed onset and slow progression

  6. Definitions • Primary infection vs. secondary infection • Primary Infection • An infection that develops in an otherwise healthy individual • Secondary Infection • An infection that develops in an individual who is already infected with a different pathogen

  7. Definitions • Localized infection vs. systemic infection • Localized Infection • An infection that is restricted to a specific location or region within the body of the host • Systemic Infection • An infection that has spread to several regions or areas in the body of the host

  8. Definitions • Clinical infection vs. subclinical infection • Clinical Infection • An infection with obvious observable or detectable symptoms • Subclinical Infection • An infection with few or no obvious symptoms

  9. Definitions • Opportunistic infection • An infection caused by microorganisms that are commonly found in the host’s environment. This term is often used to refer to infections caused by organisms in the normal flora.

  10. Definitions • The suffix “-emia” • A suffix meaning “presence of an infectious agent” • Bacteremia = Presence of infectious bacteria • Viremia = Presence of infectious virus • Fungemia = Presence of infectious fungus • Septicemia = Presence of an infectious agent in the bloodstream

  11. Definitions • The suffix “-itis” • A suffix meaning “inflammation of” • Examples: • Pharyngitis = Inflammation of the pharynx • Endocarditis = Inflammation of the heart chambers • Gastroenteritis = Inflammation of the gastointestinal tract

  12. Definitions • Epidemiology • The study of the transmission of disease • Communicable Disease • A disease that can be transmitted from one individual to another • Noncommunicable Disease • A disease that is not transmitted from one individual to another

  13. Definitions • Endemic Disease • A disease condition that is normally found in a certain percentage of a population • Epidemic Disease • A disease condition present in a greater than usual percentage of a specific population • Pandemic Disease • An epidemic affecting a large geographical area; often on a global scale

  14. Definitions • Reservoir of Infection • The source of an infectious agent • Carrier • An individual who carries an infectious agent without manifesting symptoms, yet who can transmit the agent to another individual • Fomites • Any inanimate object capable of being an intermediate in the indirect transmission of an infectious agent

  15. Definitions • Animal Vectors • An animal (nonhuman) that can transmit an infectious agent to humans • Two types: mechanical and biological • Mechanical animal vectors: The infectious agent is physically transmitted by the animal vector, but the agent does not incubate or grow in the animal; e.g, the transmission of bacteria sticking to the feet of flies • Biological animal vectors: The infectious agent must incubate in the animal host as part of the agent’s developmental cycle; e.g, the transmission of malaria by infected mosquitoes

  16. Definitions • Direct Mechanisms of Disease Transmission • Directly From Person to Person • Examples: Direct Skin ContactAirborne (Aerosols)

  17. Definitions • Indirect Mechanisms of Disease Transmission • Examples: Food & Waterborne Transmission Fomites Animal Vectors

  18. Pathogenicity - ability to cause diseaseVirulence - degree of pathogenicity • Many properties that determine a microbe’s pathogenicity or virulence are unclear or unknown • But, when a microbe overpowers the hosts defenses, infectious disease results!

  19. Molecular Determinants of Pathogenicity Damage to host tissues Production and delivery of various factors Attachment to host tissues Replication and evasion of immunity

  20. Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity: How Microorganisms Cause Disease

  21. Portals of Entry • 1. Mucus Membranes • 2. Skin • 3. Parentarel

  22. 1. Mucus Membranes • A. Respiratory Tract • microbes inhaled into mouth or nose in droplets of moisture or dust particles • Easiest and most frequently traveled portal of entry

  23. Common Diseases contracted via the Respiratory Tract • Common cold • Flu • Tuberculosis • Whooping cough • Pneumonia • Measles • Diphtheria

  24. Mucus Membranes • B. Gastrointestinal Tract • microbes gain entrance thru contaminated food & water or fingers & hands • most microbes that enter the G.I. Tract are destroyed by HCL & enzymes of stomach or bile & enzymes of small intestine

  25. Common diseases contracted via the G.I. Tract • Salmonellosis • Salmonella sp. • Shigellosis • Shigella sp. • Cholera • Vibrio cholorea • Ulcers • Helicobacter pylori • Botulism • Clostridium botulinum Clostridium botulinum

  26. Fecal - Oral Diseases • These pathogens enter the G.I. Tract at one end and exit at the other end. • Spread by contaminated hands & fingers or contaminated food & water • Poor personal hygiene.

  27. Mucus Membranes of the Genitourinary System - STD’s Gonorrhea Neisseria gonorrhoeae Syphilis Treponema pallidum Chlamydia Chlamydia trachomatis HIV Herpes Simplex II

  28. Mucus Membranes • D. Conjunctiva – • mucus membranes that cover the eyeball and lines the eyelid • Trachoma • Chlamydia trachomatis

  29. 2nd Portal of Entry: Skin • Skin - the largest organ of the body. When unbroken is an effective barrier for most microorganisms. • Some microbes can gain entrance through openings in the skin: hair follicles and sweat glands, wound …etc

  30. 3rd Portal of Entry: Parentarel • Microorganisms are deposited into the tissues below the skin or mucus membranes • Punctures and scratches • injections • bites • surgery

  31. Preferred Portal of Entry • Just because a pathogen enters your body it does not mean it’s going to cause disease. • pathogens - preferred portal of entry

  32. Preferred Portal of Entry • Streptococcus pneumoniae • if inhaled can cause pneumonia • if enters the G.I. Tract, no disease • Salmonella typhi • if enters the G.I. Tract can cause Typhoid Fever • if on skin, no disease

  33. Number of Invading Microbes • LD50 - Lethal Dose of a microbes toxin that will kill 50% of experimentally inoculated test animal • ID50 - infectious dose required to cause disease in 50% of inoculated test animals • Example: ID50 for Vibrio cholerea 108 cells (100,000,000 cells) • ID50 for Inhalation Anthrax - 5,000 to 10,000 spores ????

  34. How do Bacterial Pathogens penetrate Host Defenses? 1. Adherence - almost all pathogens have a means to attach to host tissue Binding Sites adhesins ligands

  35. Some cells use fimbriae to adhere. Fimbriae can play a role in tissue tropism. Example - attachment of Candida to vaginal epithelial cells

  36. Adhesins and ligands are usually on Fimbriae • Neisseria gonorrhoeae • ETEC (Entertoxigenic E. coli) • Bordetello pertussis

  37. Bacteria typically employ proteins known as Adhesins to attach to host tissues, which usually are located on ends of fimbriae. Alternatively, adhesins can consist of glycocalyx.

  38. 2. Capsules • Prevent phagocytosis • attachment • Streptococcus pneumoniae • Klebsiella pneumoniae • Haemophilus influenzae • Bacillus anthracis • Streptococcus mutans K. pneumoniae

  39. Avoidance of Phagocytosis Capsules are Involved in avoidance of phagocyte-mediated recognition and attachment.

  40. Cell Wall Components M protein: Found on cell surface and fimbriae of Streptococcus pyogenes. Mediates attachment and helps resist phagocytosis. M-protein is heat and acid resistant Waxes [ Mycolic Acid]: In cell wall of Mycobacterium tuberculosis helps resist digestion after phagocytosis and can multiply inside WBC.

  41. 3. Enzymes • Many pathogens secrete enzymes that contribute to their pathogenicity

  42. Enzymes and toxins that harm eukaryotic cells.

  43. A. Leukocidins • Attack certain types of WBC’s • 1. Kills WBC’s which prevents phagocytosis • 2. Releases & ruptures lysosomes • lysosomes - contain powerful hydrolytic enzymes which then cause more tissue damage

  44. B. Hemolysins - cause the lysis of RBC’s Streptococci

  45. 1. Alpha (α) Hemolytic Streptococci - secrete hemolysins that cause the incomplete lysis or RBC’s Incomplete Lysis of RBC

  46. 2. Beta (β) Hemolytic Streptococci - secrete hemolysins that cause the complete lysis of RBC’s Complete Lysis of RBC

  47. 3. Gamma (γ) Hemolytic Streptococci - donot secrete any hemolysins

  48. C. Coagulase - cause blood to coagulate • Blood clots protect bacteria from phagocytosis from WBC’s and other host defenses • Staphylococcus aureus - are often coagulase positive Fibrinogen ----------------- Fibrin ( Clot)

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