Bacterial associations Flashcards
Define carriage?
Establishment of a long term harmless relationship
Define pathogenicity?
Ability to cause disease
Define virulence?
Severity of the disease caused
Define commensal?
An animal or plant which lives attached to or as a tenant of the other, and both share their food.
Define symbiosis?
Association of two different organisms which live attached to or as a tenant of the other and contribute to each other’s support
What is syntrophy/origin of eukaryotes?
Highly nutritionally interdependent (syntrophic) communities of eubacteria and archaea exist in anoxic environments
Patterns of gene exchange among members of these communities suggest that they evolved as communities rather than independent organisms
May be that the eukaryotic cell originated from such interactions
Stages of host adaptation? (Genome getting smaller)
- Free living and extracellular: everything happens outside of the genome, gene loss
- Facultative intracellular: gene loss occurs
- Obligate intracellular: gene loss, transfer to host genome
- Obligate intracellular mutualist: no longer recombination, or genomic island, or phage, or plasmid
- Organelle: gene loss, transfer to host genome occurs in the genome
What are diatoms?
Abundant microscopic algae and contribute about 20% global photosynthesis
Associated with proteobacteria, and bacteriodetes. Bacteria contribute to diatom genomes via HGT – recruitment of metabolic capacity
Describe the lichen mutualism?
The mycobiont (fungal constituent of a lichen) protects the photobiont and absorbs mineral nutrients
The prokaryotic photobiont (photosynthetic part of a lichen) synthesises organic nutrients and fixes nitrogen
Multiple combinations of mycobiont and photobionts are possible – not a tight association
Describe the Rhizobium interaction?
Widespread & important biological symbiosis
Species specific with the bacteria and the plants
Plant: provides nutrients
Bacterium: fixes nitrogen
- > formation of Rhizobium root nodules:
1. Recognition and attachment
2. Signalling
3. Invasion
4. Travel through infection thread
5. Bacteriod formation
6. Bacterial and plant growth to form the nodule
Insect endosymbionts?
Buchnera:
Obligate intracellular endosymbiosis of aphids, without the bacteria, which are maternally transmitted, the aphids die.
The bacteriocytes are intracellularly located
Host role: supplies energy, carbon, and nitrogen, in the form of glutamine from phloem
Symbiont: production of amino acids, especially tryptophan
Coevolution of the bacteria and host, apparent in the similar aphid & symbiont phylogenetic trees
Human microbiota?
More microbial cells than human cells in the human body. There are a variety of environments in terms of temperature, oxygen acidity, and host defence.
Highly diverse with variation among, but stability within, individuals
Lifestyle is probably important
Presence of professional pathogens is rare in the normal microbiota
When does disease in animals occur?
- Microbes have an effect on host biology, e.g. cancer or immunological diseases
- Normal microbiota invade, e.g. accidental pathogens which don’t gain from destroying host, bacteria gain virulence factors
- Other microorganisms invade, e.g. obligate professional pathogens, and opportunistic pathogens (can cause disease when the host’s resistance is low – normally a commensal)
Microbiome and cancer links?
Can promote cancers by a number of specific mechanisms, e.g. promotion of inflammation by Helicobacter pylori
Human/Microbe “super organism” can become disrupted, with cancer caused by: immune response; dysbiosis; genotoxicity; and metabolism
What is septic shock?
Sepsis develops when the chemicals the immune system releases into the bloodstream to fight an infection cause inflammation throughout the entire body instead
Toxic shock