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Miscellaneous bacterial pathogens

Miscellaneous bacterial pathogens. Bacteria without cell walls Bacteria that require host cells Spiral and curved bacteria Some of these are related to Gram positives and some are Gram negative, but all stain pink in a Gram stain. Most are difficult or impossible to grow in the lab.

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Miscellaneous bacterial pathogens

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  1. Miscellaneous bacterial pathogens • Bacteria without cell walls • Bacteria that require host cells • Spiral and curved bacteria • Some of these are related to Gram positives and some are Gram negative, but all stain pink in a Gram stain. • Most are difficult or impossible to grow in the lab.

  2. Mycoplasma • Mycoplasmas have unusual properties • Very small, pleomorphic (cocci to filaments) • Have no cell walls, but have sterols in their membranes • Require numerous growth factors to grow • Species of interest: M. pneumoniae, • M. pneumo attaches to epithelial cells, kills them • Buildup of mucus, other infections • Fever, malaise, sore throat, etc. walking pneumonia • No cell wall! Can’t treat with penicillins

  3. Mycoplasma-2 • Ureaplasma urealyticum • Sexually transmitted, cause of urethritis • Similar to M. pneumoniae, but urease + • Other Mycoplasmas also cause NGU • Non-gonococcal urethritis, infections caused by something other than N. gonorrhoeae. http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/tk/ce/mycoplasma-s.gif

  4. Rickettsiae • Gram negative, very small, obligate parasites • Leaky membranes? • Most diseases spread by vectors • Rickettsiae infect endothelial cells lining blood vessels, avoid digestion in lysozome • Have LPS, generate fever • Damage to capillaries produces spots, rashes • Damage to vessels deprives organs of oxygen

  5. Rickettsial diseases • R. rickettsii: Rocky mountain spotted fever • Spread by tick bite; rodents are the reservoir • Most common through southeast, mid-south • R. prowazekii: epidemic typhus • Humans primary host; vector is the louse • Disease spread in crowded, unhygienic conditions • R. typhi: murine/endemic typhus • present in rodent population, vector is the flea

  6. Rickettsiae-2 • Ehrlichia chaffeensis- cause of 2 types of ehrlichiosis. • Similar to other rickettsial diseases, seldom rash • Spread by lone star tick and dog tick • Infects leukocytes rather than endothelial cells • “emerging disease”, first identified by case at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas.

  7. Chlamydia • Very small, obligate intracellular parasites • Cell and outer membrane, but no peptidoglycan • Spread directly rather than by vectors • Two stage life cycle • Elementary body: tiny (0.2-0.4 µm) and inert • Spore-like: dormant and resistant • Infectious: form that moves between cells • Reticulate body: 0.6-1.5 µm, metabolically active, reproduce inside host cells

  8. Chlamydial diseases • C. trachomatis: infects cells of mucous membranes, conjunctiva. Mostly eye & STD • Infection kills cells, stimulates inflammation which also causes cell destruction • Trachoma- leading cause of non-traumatic blindness. Caused by certain strains. • Infection of conjunctiva causes scarring, turning in on eyelashes which scratch cornea. • Scarred cornea, with ingrown blood vessels, obscure vision. • STD strains can also infect eyes, self-inoculation.

  9. Sexually transmitted Chlamydial disease • Non-gonococcal urethritis, about 50% of cases • Chlamydia infections are the most common STD, but even more are infected and asymptomatic • Lymphogranuloma venereum • Lymph nodes in genital region (inguinal) become enlarged (buboes), may even rupture. • Blocked lymph ducts lead to genital elephantiasis, other damage in genital region. • 85% of women asymptomatic; others can develop PID; scarring of uterine tubes can lead to sterility, ectopic pregnancy. • Eye infections of newborns prevented with antibiotic drops.

  10. Spirochetes • Spirochetes: teeny weeny squiggly things • Have internal flagella in bundles called axial filaments; corkscrew through liquid • Treponema pallidum: cause of syphilis, STD • Initial stages: chancre, hard, painless genital ulcer following long incubation • Ulcer disappears, spirochete spreads, causes systemic disease (rash, fever, etc) • Either goes away, comes back, or tertiary syphilis in which gummas form; serious stage.

  11. Spirochetes-2 • Borrelia burgdorferi: cause of Lyme disease • Reservoir in rodents, deer; spread by deer tick • Slow developing; fever, usually bulls-eye rash; arthritis and heart or CNS involvement. • Borrelia recurrentis: cause of relapsing fever • Leptospira interrogans: cause of leptospirosis • From contact with animal fluids, esp. urine. • Infects liver and kidneys, from kidney enters urine • Note: tidy cycle of spread and infection

  12. Gram negative curved rods • Vibrio: comma shaped • Like enteric but oxidase positive; polar flagella • Halotolerant to halophilic, grow in estuarine and marine environments • V. cholerae: cause of cholera • Toxin-mediated severe diarrhea • Salt, fluid leave intestinal cells, patient dies of dehydration. • Oral rehydration therapy (ORT): water, salts, and glucose, now saving lives. • Causes pandemics that spread around the world • Lack of adequate sewage treatment

  13. Other curved rods • Campylobacter jejuni: number one cause of bacterial gastroenteritis; zoonotic • More common than Salmonella and Shigella combined for food borne disease. • Helicobacter pylori: cause of ulcers • Correlated with stomach cancer. • Produces urease enzyme • Released ammonia neutralizes stomach acid, irritates stomach lining. • Basis for radioactive urease test.

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