9F: Evolving Pathogens Flashcards

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1
Q

Antimicrobial Agent:

A

an agent that kills or slows the growth of microorganism

  • E.g. Antiseptics, disinfectants, antifungals, antivirals
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2
Q

Antimicrobial Resistance:

A

the ability of a microorganism to survive exposure to an antimicrobial agent

  • Can develop either through natural selection or through allele mutations
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3
Q

Factors contributing to the formation of antibiotic resistant bacteria:

A
  • Inappropriate compliance with a treatment plan where antibiotics are either prematurely stopped or continued on for too long
    • Inappropriate use of antibiotics, where they are prescribed when not required
    • The widespread use of antibiotics which can increase the probability for an individual prescribed antibiotic to be inhabited by antibiotic resistant bacteria allow for natural selection to take place
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4
Q

Bacterial Conjugation:

A

the process in which bacteria exchange genetic material via direct cell to cell contact

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5
Q

The development of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria:

A
  1. Variation: in a population of bacteria, there are individuals resistant and susceptible to an antibiotic
    1. Selection Pressure: the exposure to the antibiotic serves as an environmental selection pressure
    2. Selective Advantage: the selective advantage is conferred to bacteria with resistance to the antibiotic
    3. Heritability: Bacteria resistant to the antibiotic are able to replicate and pass on the allele via bacterial conjugation, increasing the allele frequency
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6
Q

Mechanisms contributing to the modification of viral surface antigens: Antigenic Drift:

A

Antigenic Drift: the small and gradual change in the gene encoding for viral surface antigens

- Normally memory cells will be able to recognise basic mutated surface antigens from previous viruses, however after multiple accumulated mutations, a new subtype is created, which is no longer recognized by the memory cells
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7
Q

Mechanisms contributing to the modification of viral surface antigens: Antigenic Shift:

A

Antigenic Shift: the sudden and significant mutation in the gene encoding for viral surface antigens

- Occurs when two or more different strains combine when coinfecting the same host, forming a new subtype through Viral Recombination

- Extremely infectious due to decreased ability to create natural immunity
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