Gram Positive Bacteria Flashcards
Why is it important to treat streptococcal pharyngitis with antibiotics?
Early treatment can reduce the risk of developing rheumatic fever
Enterococci are [Gram, shape]
Enterococci are Gram-positive cocci
What kind of toxin is anthrax toxin?
Describe the structure of anthrax toxin
A-B toxin
Actually two toxins that share the same B subunit
B subunit: edeme factor and lethal factor
A subunit: protective antigen
What are the major differences between botulism and tetanus infetions?
Type of paralysis
- Tetanus = increased muscle tone
- Botulism = no muscle tone
Method of contracting the disease
- Tetanus = puncture wound
- Botulism = canned food, wound, honey (infant)
Treatment
- Tetanus = Human tetanus immunoglobulin, penicillin or metronidazole
- Botulism = Trivalent equine antitoxin, respiratory support
If you don’t see any pus, which organism is likely causing an erythmatous skin legion?
Strep spp (especially S. pyogenes)
Staphylococci are [gram stain, shape, growth pattern]
Gram-positive cocci that grow in grape-like clusters
List the determinants of pathogenicity of Staphylococcus aureus
- Toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (TSST-1)
- Staphylococcal enterotoxins A-E, G-I
- Exfoliatin (exfoliative toxin)
- Alpha toxin (alpha-hemolysin)
- Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL)
- Coagulase
- Protein A
What clinical disease is associated with M protein?
M protein is the virulence factor associated with rheumatic fever. (Streptococcus pyogenes produces M protein)
Where are Enterococci infections commonly acquired?
Where in the body do Enterocci infections occur?
Hospital (nosocomial)
UTIs, wounds, biliary tract, intra-abdomen, blood (intravascular catheters, endocarditis)
What cells does tetanus toxin act on?
What is the result?
Tetanus toxin acts on Renshaw cells (inhibitory neurons in the CNS) to prevent the release of GABA and glycine
The result is loss of inhibitory signaling -> rapid firing of motor neurons -> increased muscle tone
How is Staphylococcus aureus infection treated?
Why is treatment difficult?
Drainage of all collections of pus and antibiotics
Almost all isolates produce a beta-lactamase that degrades penicillin
Antistaphylococcal penicillins (methicillin, nafcillin, oxacillin) and cephalosporins are resistant to beta-lactamases but MRSA is resistant to the antistaphylococcal penicillins
VRSA is resistant to vancomycin
Why are Enterococci of medical concern?
Enterococci have antibiotic resistance especially to vancomycin
Which skin infection can be associated w/ coronary bypass surgery involving veins removed from the leg?
Which bacteria causes this?
Cellulitis
Streptococcus pyogenes
Describe the effects of streptococcal pyogenic endotoxins (SPEs)
SPEA, SPEC -> Scarlet Fever, STSS
SPEB -> Necrotizing fasciitis
What types of skin and soft tissue infections does Staphylococcus aureus cause?
- Furuncle and carbuncle
- Cellulitis (also folliculitis, other soft tissue infections)
How is Bacillus anthracis treated?
- Sensitive to penicillin
- Ciprofloxacin and doxycycline are recommended due to concerns about weaponized strains resistant to penicillin
- Second agent added for inhalational anthrax (rifampin, vancomycin, pencillin, clarithromycin)
- Raxibacumab and oblitoxaximab for inhalational anthrax
What are the determinants of pathogenicity of Bacillus anthracis?
Where are they found?
- Anthrax toxin
- Capsule composed of poly-D-glutamic acid
Both found on a plasmid
List the clinical diseases associated with Streptococcus pyogenes
- Streptococcal pharyngitis
- Scarlet Fever
- Streptococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome (STSS)
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Impetigo
- Cellulitis
- Rheumatic Fever
- Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis (PSGN)
What is unique about the growth of Actinomycetes bacteria?
They are true growing bacteria, but from long, branchin filaments that resemble fungi
How is early onset neonatal disease due to Listeria monocytogenes acquired?
What is it characterized by?
Transmission across placenta from infected mother
Disseminated abscesses and granulomas
Growth of this pseudomembrane in the oropharynx is associated with which bacteria?
Corynebacterium diphtheriae; seen in diphtheria patients
Which streptococcus pyogenes-associated virulence factor has a therapeutic use?
Streptokinase; it is used to lyse coronary artery clots in acute myocardial infarction
Which bacteria is this?
Bacillus anthracis
Gram (+), rod-shaped bacteria that grows in chains
How is botulism prevented?
No vaccine is available
Thoroughly cook canned foods/practice proper canning techniques
Don’t feed honey to infants <12 months
Listeria are [Gram stain, metabolic, shape]
Listeria are Gram-positive facultatively anaerobic rod-shaped bacteria
What unique infections can be caused by Staphylococcus epidermidis?
Staphylococcus epidermidis is adept at attaching to and growing on prosthetic devices
(normal inhabitant of skin, nose, and mouth of humans; less virulent than S. aureus)
This is a kinyoun stain of which bacteria?
Nocardia
Grows in long, branching filaments; stains partially acid fast
Which virulence factor is associated with necrotizing fasciitis?
SPE B
Describe the structure and action of botulinum toxin
Botulinum toxin is an A-B toxin
- B = Heavy chain
- A = Light Chain
- Protease
- Cleaves SNARE proteins in motor neurons, inhibiting the release of ACh
- This results in inhibition; muscles cannot contract, causing flaccid paralysis
What is the difference between a furuncle and a carbuncle?
Furuncles are boils, most of which begin with the blockage of hair follicle or sweat gland that subsequently becomes infected
Carbuncles are multiple abscesses formed after infection spreads from a furuncle
Describe the structure and action of tetanus toxin
Tetanus toxin is an A-B toxin
- Synthesized as a single polypeptide chain, which is cleaved and linked via disulfide bonds
- B = heavy chain
- A = light chain
- A protease that cleaves SNARE proteins in neuronal synapses
- Acts on Renshaw cells to inhibit the release of GABA and glycine
- This decreases inhibitory signaling, resulting in rapid firing of motor neurons, leading to rigidity/increased tone
List examples of ADP-ribosylating toxins
- Diphtheria toxin of Corynebacteria diptheriae
- Exotoxin A of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Cholera toxin of Vibrio cholerae
- Heat labile toxin of Escherichia coli
- Pertussis toxin of Bordetella pertussis
List the relevant alpha-hemolytic streptococci
Viridans streptococci
Streptococcus pneumoniae
What can late onset neonatal disease due to Listeria monocytogenes cause?
Meningitis
Describe the clinical findings associated with scarlet fever
- Streptococcus pyogenes infection
- Superantigens SPEA, SPEC
- Pharyngitis
- Erythmatous, sandpaper rash
- Widespread rash that spares the face/area around the mouth
- Accentuated in skin creases
- Strawberry tongue
Which two types of bacteria tend to cause skin infections?
Staphylococcus aureus, group A streptococci
How does the edema factor portion of the anthrax toxin exert its effects?
- Has adenylate cyclase activity
- Increases intracellular cAMP levels
- Causes edema and inhibition of neutrophil phagocytosis
Describe the mechanism of action of streptolysin (SLO)
Note: We generate antibodies to SLO; SLO antibodies are diagnostic of an Streptococcus pyogenes infection
SLO formes pores in the plasma membrane of human cells.
This transports virulence factors into the cell, leading to beta-hemolysis
What is notable about definitive laboratory tests for Corynebacteria diptheriae?
Require at least a week
What bacteria causes “floppy baby syndrome”
Clostridium botulinum
What is the most clinically significant Group D streptococcus?
(Hemolysis, clinical significance)
Streptococcus Gallolyticus
Gamma-hemolytic
- Rarely causes infections
- Bloodstream infection caused by S. Gallolyticus is often associated with colon cancer
How does the lethal factor portion of anthrax toxin exerts its effects?
- Zinc metalloprotease that cleaves host cell kinases
- Causes lysis or inactivation of macrophages, dendritic cells, and suppressor T cells
Describe the clinical manifestation of food-borne botulism
Symmetric descending, flaccid paralysis
- Diplopia, ptosis (droopy eyelids)
- Dysarthria
- Dysphagia
- Respiratory failure
- Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain (fever unusua)
- Look for groups presenting together (families, people who live together, anyone who may have eaten the same food)
How can Listeria monocytogenes infection be prevented?
- Avoiding raw meat and unpasteurized milk and cheese especially during pregnancy
- Washing raw vegetables
How can Corynebacteria diptheriae be prevented?
A diphtheria toxin toxoid vaccine (produced after DT treated with formaldehyde)
What are the 4 medically relevant clostridia spp?
- C. tetani*
- C. botulinum*
- C. perfringens*
- C. difficile*
Describe the clinical findings associated with impetigo
Infection by Streptococcus Pyogenes
- Infection of the epidermis
- Seen in children
- Associated with poor hygiene
- Small vescicles on exposed skin enlarge and become pustular
- Vescicles rupture -> yellow crust
What are the causative virulence factors of scarlet fever?
SPEA, SPEC produced by streptococcus pyogenes infection
What is the main determinant of pathogenicity for Nocardia?
It cannot be killed efficiently by neutrophils
- Neutralizes oxidants
- Prevents phagosome acidification
- Inhibits phagosome-lysosome fusion
This means that cell-mediated immunity is needed to control the infection
What is the main determinant of pathogenicity for Clostridium tetani?
Tetanus toxin
Listeria monocytogenes is [type of hemolysis, reaction to catalase, and type of motility]
Listeria monocytogenes is beta-hemolytic, catalase positive, and has tumbling motility
Which toxin is the cause of food poisoning in Staphylococcus aureus?
Describe food poisoning due to Staphylococcus aureus
Enterotoxin
A self-limited episode of vomiting and diarrhea that begins 2-5 hrs after ingestion of food contaminated w/ enterotoxins
What disease is commonly caused by Staphylococcus saprophyticus?
UTI, especially in young women
What kind of toxin is tetanus toxin?
A-B Toxin
What kind of wounds may become infected with Clostridium tetani?
Deep puncture wounds
The bacteria is an obligate anaerobe; the spores must reach a part of the body where the is no oxygen in order to germinate
What is the most virulent staphylococci?
Staphylococcus aureus
Describe the clinical presentation of CNS nocardiosis
Brain abscesses
Preceded by pulmonary nocardiosis
Which gram-positive bacteria have available vaccines?
- Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- Bacillus anthraces
- Clostridium tetani
What sort of toxin is anthrax toxin?
A-B toxin
Describe the cause of rheumatic fever
Onset ~3 weeks after onset of streptococcal pharyngitis
M protein is antiphagocytic and triggers a humoral response; M protein mimicks myosin in the heart, causing the body to mount a repsonse and attack myosin
This leads to permanent heart valve damage (M protein leads to damage of the Mitral valve)
Early treatment of pharyngitis can prevent rheumatic fever
Staphylococcus aureus is a [Gram, shape, description, metabolic]
Gram-positive cocci that grows in grape-like structures and is a facultative anaerobe
How does gastrointestinal anthrax occur?
Describe the symptoms of gastrointestinal anthrax
Ingestion of contaminated meat
Ulcers form at site of infection (mouth, esophagus, intestine)
Which organism forms these spores?
Clostridium tetani
Forms terminal spores - club/drumstick shaped
reservoir in soil
What carries the gene for vancomycin resistance in enterococci?
What biochemical change does the vancomycin resistance gene cause?
How does this make enterococci resistant to vancomycin?
Carried by a transposon that is carried by a self-transferrable plasmid
Encodes side chains that allow for synthesis and substitution of D-Ala-D-lactate for D-Ala-D-Ala in the peptide side chains of peptidoglycan
Vancomycin cannot bind to D-Ala-D-lactate
What disease is caused by Clostridium botulinum?
Botulism (Food borne, wound, or infant)
Who commonly transmits VRE from patient to patient?
How can VRE be prevented?
Healthcare workers
Hand washing and contact precautions, judicious use of vancomycin
How is an Actinomyces israelii infection treated?
Choice: Penicillin
Alternative: Tetracycline
May need surgical drainage in complicated cases
How would you treat a furuncle?
Incision and Drainage
May follow with antibiotics
What kind of toxin is Panton-Valentine leukocidin from Staphylococcus aureus?
What sort of Staphylococcus aureus infection is it associated with?
How does it work?
What is the gene for PVL carried by?
Pore-forming toxin
Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA)
Contributes to cell lysis, causing severe necrotic infections associated w/ many CA-MRSA strains
Bacteriophage
Listeria monocytogenes are [Gram stain, metabolic, shape, intra/extracellular]
Listeria monocytogenes are Gram-positive facultatively anaerobic rod-shaped bacteria that are facultatively intracellular
What clinical disease is associated with Clostridium tetani?
Tetanus
How is Corynebacteria diptheriae diagnosed on lab test?
- Gram stain of smears: bacteria lie in clusters at acute angles (Chinese letter) or parallel groups (palisade)
- Gray to black colony on specialized medium containing tellurite that inhibits growth of most upper respiratory bacteria
What bacteria causes impetigo and cellulitis?
Staphylococcus aureus or streptococcus pyogenes
Describe viridans streptococci
- Alpha-hemolytic
- Generally nongroupable (20+ species)
- Includes S. mutans, S. sanguis, S. intermedius, S. anginosus
How can tetanus infection be prevented?
Vaccine of tetanus toxoid
Boosters to follow trauma
Which Bacillus bacteria are of medical importance?
- Bacillus anthracis (anthrax)
- Bacillus cereus (food-poisoning)
Nocardia spp. are [Gram stain, metabolic, shape distinctive morphology]
Nocardia spp. are gram (+) obligate aerobes. They grow in long, branching filamentous rods with cells that remain conjoined after division
Catalase (+), Does not form spores,
What is the function of coagulase from Staphylococcus aureus?
How does it work?
Helps create a mechanical barrier that blocks off neutrophils
- Binds to prothrombin to form a complex
- Complex initiates polymerization of fibrin to form a clot
- Fibrin contributes to fibrin capsule surrounding many abscesses
- Mechnical barrier prevents neutrophils from entering abscesses
What is a prominent indicator of diphtheria?
Thick grey adherent pseudomembrane observed on mucosa of oropharynx, palate, nasopharynx, nose, or larynx
(composed of necrotic cell debris, fibrin, and blood cells that accumulate after cell damage caused by diphtheria toxin)
What is a superantigen?
What biological and physiological effects does a superantigen have?
A substance that causes proliferation of entire subsets of T cells (those w/ T cell receptors w/ specific Vß domains)
Large amounts of cytokines such as IL-1 and TNF are released
Cytokines cause fever, shock, and organ failure
What is the determinant of pathogenicity of Corynebacteria diptheriae?
Diphtheria toxin
How is Listeria monocytogenes treated?
- Ampicillin (may be used in combo with aminoglycoside for synergy)
- Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is bactericidal and recommended for those with penicillin allergies
What determines the groupings for beta-hemolytic streptococci?
Groupings (A, B, D) ar based on the carbohydrate antigens in the cell wall
This baby cannot relax their face.
What is this called?
What is most likely causing this condition?
What else would you look for to confirm your diagnosis?
How would you treat it?
This face is characteristic of lockjaw, also called risus sardonicus
It is most likely caused by Clostridium tetani infection
Also look for arching of the back, increased muscle tone in other muscles. Inquire about puncture wounds (more relevant in adults maybe)
It should be treated with penicillin or metronidaole, as well as human tetanus immunoglobulin to neutralize the unbound toxin
Describe the clinical findings associated with Streptococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome (STSS)
Similar to TSS caused by staph infection
- Fever, hypotension, multi-organ failure
- No rash
- Not associated with tampon use
- Most patients are bacteremic, have an associated soft tissue infection
What are the major differences between Nocardia spp. and Actinomyces israelii?
Metabolism
- Nocardia = obligate aerobe
- A. israelii = obligate anaerobe
Staining
- Nocardia stains partially acid fast
- A. israelii does not
How is Tetanus diagnosed?
Consistent clinical findings
Tetanus toxin production
Note: Isolating spores is not indicative of disease; sometimes healthy people have spores, sometimes diseased people do not