host-bacteria interactions Flashcards
what are virulence factors
Molecules that allow bacteria to adhere, invade, evade host defence, cause tissue damage, replicate or persist in the host
what is a virulence gene
Gene encoding a virulence factor
how have virulence genes evolved
horizontal transfer of virulence genes => rapid evolution
- Plasmids
- Transposons
- Phage transduction
outline the steps in the bacterial infection process
- adhesion
- invasion (intra/extra cellular survial)
- subversion of host defence
- replication
- long term survival in host OR spread to further hosts (survival in environment)
describe adhesion
bacteria attach to cells, secretory products, structural components and other bacteria
via: fimbriae/pili, adhesive macromolecules imbedded in membrane, capsules, flagellum, proteinaceous fibrils
what strategies do bacteria use to survive the host defense
- resistance to host defence
- Active subversion of host defence (killing of phagocytic or changing host cell)
how do bacteria resist the host defence
- complement resistance (long polysaccharide chains to inhibit binding and capsule)
- avoiding phagocytosis (capsules, M proteins, production of Fc-binding proteinfs to prevent interaction with Fc receptors on phagocytes)
- protection against recognition by antibodies
how do bacteria survive by active subversion of host defence
- toxins
- superantigens
- bacterial effector proteins injected into host cells
compare intacellular vs extracellular survival of bacteria
intracellular:
- not exposed to immune cells, antibiotics, defensins or complement
- limited nutrients
extracellular:
- exposed to immune cells, antibodies, defensins and complement
- nutrient rich (lots of glc, glutamine), iron limited
describe how streptococcus equi survives extracellularly
- prevention of phagocytosis (has hyaluronase capsule, antiphagocytic enzymes, M-proteins, binding of fibrinogen to mask binding sites)
- rapid killing of neutrophils (toxins production)
how do bacteria get inside cells
- phagocytic cells (pro: will take up actively bacteria, con: deigned to kill bacteria - need to interrupt process of digestion to survive)
- forced phagocytosis (manipulate cells to phagocytose bacteria
how do bacteria move inside cells
manipulation of host cytoskeleton (actin and microtubules)
how do bacteria obtain nutrients inside the cells
manipulation of host metabolism (poor access to nutrients inside cells and even worse inside vacuole)