5.5 Gram negative aerobes 1 Flashcards
Main characteristics Enterobacterales: type, habitat, motility, fermentation, agar
- Gram negative rods
- Aerobes or facultative anaerobes
- Mostly live in the intestines
- Most have motility (flagella)
- Lactose fermenters vs non-lactose fermenters
- Grow on MacConkey agar
major opportunistic pathogens associated with multidrug resistance in the enterobacterales order
Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter
How is E. coli classified?
Pathotypes: based on the ability to produce virulence factors and ability to cause disease
>Sub-sets of clones differentiated by their ability to cause disease
>EPEC, STEC, ETEC, ExPEC
Serotypes: classified based on antigenic composition
why is it important to classify E. coli?
Differentiate commensal vs. pathogenic E. coli
what is multidrug resistance?
resistance to 3 or more drugs
E Coli serotypes/ virulence factors
classified based on antigenic composition
* Capsule (K)
* LPS (O)
* Fimbriae (F)
* Flagella (H)
*eg. O157: H7
how is pathogenic E coli classified?
Intestinal Pathogenic:
EPEC - Enteropathogenic E. Coli
STEC/EHEC - Enterohaemorrhagic
ETEC - Enterotoxigenic
Extraintestinal Pathogenic:
APEC - Avian pathogenic
UPEC - uropathogenic
ecology of the pathogenic E coliand most important route of transmission:
Most important route: Fecal – oral
-contamination of environment, wildlife, water, and agriculture
-Transmission between production animals
-Transmission animal to person (farms, abattoirs, markets, etc.)
-Transmission person to person and between person and domestic animals
-transmission food and water to person
What is ETEC? what are its symptoms in various species?
EnteroToxigenic E. coli
- Neonatal diarrhea: piglets and calves (can also affect goats, sheep)
>Neonatal diarrhea (scour) Calve 0-1 week - Post-weaning diarrhea (4-8 weeks): pigs
- Dog : diarrhea in young animals
- Severe, may die within hours/days
what are the virulence factors of ETEC? what are the enterotoxins?
ETEC: EnteroToxigenic E. coli
- Virulence factors
-Fimbriae/pili (adherence) - Enterotoxins:
LT: Heat-Labile Toxin (pigs)
STa: Heat-Stable Toxin (pigs, calves, dogs)
STb: Heat-Stable Toxin (pigs)
lesions caused by ETEC
No histological lesions: only action of toxins Macro: fluid in the small intestines
pathegenesis of ETEC
EnteroToxigenic E. coli
- ingestion of ETEC
- Colonization of jejenum and ileum
>electrolyte imbalance, “biochemical reaction”, irreversible - water and electrolytes exit cells
- diarrhea and weight loss
The action of heat-label and heat-stable toxins produced by ETEC cause destruction of the microvilli of intestinal epithelial cells and lead to diarrhea in calves.
a) Correct
b) Incorrect
Why?
Incorrect - they do not destroy microvilli. There is merely a biochemical reaction
what does EPEC stand for? what symptoms does it cause is rabbits, dogs, pigs, cows?
- Rabbits: newborn and weaning diarrhea (sometimes with blood)
– Where: +++ large intestine and +small intestines - Dogs: diarrhea in young animals
– Where: small and large intestines - Pigs: postweaning diarrhea
– Where: small intestines - Cattle: hemorrhagic dysentery
- Where: colon
EPEC invasion strategy? What are its virulence factors?
EnteroPathogenic
makes a pedestal and has a syringe-like apparatus
Virulence factors:
-Intimin (adhesin)
-Tir (Intimin-receptor)
-EspA, EspB, EspD, EspC (enterotoxins)