Microbial Pathogenesis and Host-Parasite Relationships
350 likes | 830 Vues
Medical Microbiology. Microbial Pathogenesis and Host-Parasite Relationships. BIOL 533 Lecture 1. Definitions. Microbial pathogenesis—process of causing disease Colonization—presence of microbes at site of body Does not imply tissue damage or disease symptoms
Microbial Pathogenesis and Host-Parasite Relationships
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Medical Microbiology Microbial Pathogenesis and Host-Parasite Relationships BIOL 533 Lecture 1
Definitions • Microbial pathogenesis—process of causing disease • Colonization—presence of microbes at site of body • Does not imply tissue damage or disease symptoms • Does imply invasion of site and multiplication
Characteristics of Parasitism • Encounter: agent meets host • Entry: agent enters host • Spread: agent spreads • Multiplication: agent multiplies • Damage: agent, host response, or both cause damage • Outcome: agent or host wins, or coexist
Encounter • In utero • Do not normally come in contact with organisms • Protection of fetal membranes • Do not normally come in contact with organisms from mother • Normally only present sporadically • Exceptions: sexual diseases, virus causes, rubella
Encounter • At moment of birth • Come in contact with organisms present in vaginal canal and on skin • Previously, antibodies passed from mother to fetus • Defenses are good for a period of time, then they wane
Encounter • Challenge between man and microbe wages many times during lifetime • Most disappear rapidly • Some become part of normal flora • Only a few cause disease
Later Encounters • Exogenous: encountered in environment • Endogenous: encountered in or on body • Organisms present on skin can cause disease when they go into deeper tissues
Later Encounters • Example: • Staphylococcus aureus enters cut and forms boil • In this case, encounter took place long before disease (at time skin was colonized) • Encounter is not always sharply demarcated
Normal Flora • What constitutes normal flora? • Some people possess Streptococcus pyogenes in their throat for long periods, but rarely contract disease • Opportunistic pathogen existence (carrier state) • 95% of people never have this bacterium, and when they do, they get sick
Normal Flora Defined • Constitutes normal flora if definition is “any organism present that is not causing disease” • Not normal flora if used to mean organisms present in majority of population
Host-Parasite Interaction • Exposure to virulent agents does not always lead to disease • Typhus and Black Plague epidemics: only half of population became sick, even though most likely exposed
Host-Parasite Interaction • Response of particular microbe to particular host • Depends on factors unique to each interaction • Within a single individual • Changes with: • Age • Nutritional state • Other factors
Entry • Much of inside of body is connected to the outside; for example: • Lumen of intestine • Alveoli of lung • Tubules of kidney • Almost all organs within thorax and abdomen are topologically connected to the outside
Entry • Mechanisms to keep out invaders • Sphincters and valves • With exception of digestive and genitourinary systems, these sites are normally sterile • Organism that resides on lumen side of intestine or lung alveoli has not penetrated body
Entry Defined • Ingress of microbes into body cavities contiguous with outside
Digestive System • Enter through eating • Numbers of organisms are reduced one million or more in stomach • Bacillary dysentery can result from only a few hundred organisms • Not many survive in intestine because of digestive enzymes and strong force of peristalsis
Digestive System • More survive in ileum, but need mechanisms to prevent expulsion • Surface components serve as adhesins to allow adherence to epithelial cells • Pili and surface polysaccharides • Diseases such as cholera and “traveler’s diarrhea” are caused without penetrating epithelium • Toxins that affect epithelial cells
Respiratory System • Enter through being inhaled • Air containing microbes goes through air passages (nasal turbinates, oropharynx, larynx) • Microbes reaching lower respiratory system face powerful epithelium sweeping action • Colonization requires adhesion mechanisms
Other • No term for urinary or genital entry • By bypassing epithelial tissue, microbes can cause disease without penetrating deep into tissues • Cholera, whooping cough, infection of urinary bladder
Penetration into Deeper Tissues • Very few organisms can penetrate unbroken skin (worms are an exception) • Some organisms can penetrate epithelial tissue; for example: • S. pneumoniae, Treponema pallidum • Normally after some injury to tissue (many times caused by a virus) • Viruses, by receptors
Carried in by Macrophage • Alveolar macrophage trap organisms in lung • Normally carry upward on ciliary epithelium • Some cases, can carry deeper into tissues • Some organisms can live, grow in macrophage: • Legionella • Bordetella pertussis • HIV (via virus-laden macrophage from semen)
Penetration by Other Means • Insect bites: numerous viral and protozoan diseases • Cuts and wounds: don’t normally lead to disease • Brushing teeth or defecating vigorously causes minute abrasions of epithelium • Organisms quickly cleared from blood by reticuloendothelial system
Penetration by Other Means • Injury to internal tissue disrupts defense mechanisms and serious disease can result; for example • Subacute bacterial endocarditis • Devastating before antibiotics • Caused by oral streptococci that became implanted on heart valves damaged by rheumatic fever
Penetration by Other Means • Organ transplants or blood transfusions • Jakob-Cruetzfeldt disease from transplanted corneas • Cytomegalovirus from kidneys, probably in donor kidney • Because immunosuppressive drugs are used, virus may be endogenous • Hepatitis B, HIV transmitted by blood
Disease Causation • Why are organisms adapted to various locations? • Temperature optima; athletes foot yeast cannot grow at 37°C • Oxygen requirements • Specialized factors important for causing disease (i.e., virulence factors) • Virulence: degree of pathogenicity
Exotoxins Endotoxins Capsules IgA proteases Adhesins (pili) Motility Invasive properties Ability to acquire iron Serum resistance Ability to survive inside phagocytes Virulence Factor Examples
Inoculum Size • Inoculum size can determine whether organisms cause disease • Normally, high number needed to cause disease/overcome defenses; e.g. • Baths in contaminated hot tubs (veritable culture of bacteria—over one hundred million organisms per ml)
Inoculum Size • Normally harmless organisms can overcome defenses; e.g., • People get boils all over body • If large number of organisms deposited in deeper tissues, infection usually results • Surgeon preps area to reduce numbers
Spread of Disease • General: spread only if overcome host defenses • Sometimes precedes, sometimes follows microbial multiplication • Precede: parasite causes malaria disseminated before multiplication • Follow: S. aureus multiplies locally before being disseminated
Spread of Disease • Types: • Direct lateral propagation to contiguous tissues • Dissemination to distant sites • Characteristics: • Anatomical factors (e.g., ear infections) • Active participation by pathogens— enzymes
Multiplication • Factors that affect • Microbial nutrition: body is very nutritious, but it also has antimicrobial substances • Body contains very little free iron • Physical factors: temperature, etc. • Narrow temperature optima—prudence of lowering fever by “take two aspirin and call me in the morning”
Damage • General: type and intensity depend on specific organism and tissue • Types: • Mechanical: mostly result of inflammation • Cell death: depends on: • Which cells • How many infected • How fast infection proceeds
Damage • Types, continued: • Pharmacological: toxins alter metabolism • Damage due to host responses • Inflammation can lead to destruction of neighboring cells • Immune response
Lecture One • Questions? • Comments? • Assignments...