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)
How does EPEC cause disease?
- ingestion
- colonization of small and large intestine
- Attachment to epithelial cells, and effacement of microvilli
- diarrhea
What is STEC? what is its toxin and what does it do? how is it related to EHEC?
STEC: Shiga Toxin producing E. coli
- What is Shiga-Toxin?
Stx1 and Stx2 are major groups
Ingestion cause diarrhea and damage in the vascular endothelium
=verotoxin = shiga-like toxin = shiga toxin - EHEC (Enterohemorrhagic E. coli): diarrhea and systemic disease, can lead to hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) in humans
Serotype: O157:H7
what does STEC cause in pigs
edema disease, in the small intestines
what disease does it cause and how does STEC cause disease in pigs? what are the virulence factors and toxins?
causes edema disease in pigs
- ingestion
- colonization of jejenum and ileum
- transport of toxin to circulation
>It opens the tight junctions of endothelial cells=> leakage of plasma - Edema, ataxia, death
- Virulence factors: Fimbriae/pilli: F18
- Toxin: Stx2e (Shiga-toxin)
This STEC is highly transmissible!
what is UPEC? what kind of disease does it cause, and what is the basic pathogenesis? what are its virulence factors?
UPEC: UroPathogenic E. coli
-Extraintestinal
- Most common UTI pathogen in small animals
- Origin: fecal, ascending infection
> neutrophils are recruited to kill UPEC but also damage epithelial cells
-cytotoxins produced by UPEC cause further tissue damage
Virulence factors:
- Fimbriae (pili/adhesins)
- LPS
- Siderophores (iron scavenging)
- Capsule (antiphagocytic)
* Recurrent infections: E. coli may invade uroepithelial cells (persistence, protection)
Overall summary of pathogenic species of ExpEC and what they do
Extraintestinal E Coli
Uropathogenic E. coli: UTIs
Avian Pathogenic E. coli:
Systemic and localized Opportunitistic infections Mastitis, pyometra etc