host-bacteria interactions Flashcards

1
Q

what are virulence factors

A

Molecules that allow bacteria to adhere, invade, evade host defence, cause tissue damage, replicate or persist in the host

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2
Q

what is a virulence gene

A

Gene encoding a virulence factor

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3
Q

how have virulence genes evolved

A

horizontal transfer of virulence genes => rapid evolution
- Plasmids
- Transposons
- Phage transduction

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4
Q

outline the steps in the bacterial infection process

A
  1. adhesion
  2. invasion (intra/extra cellular survial)
  3. subversion of host defence
  4. replication
  5. long term survival in host OR spread to further hosts (survival in environment)
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5
Q

describe adhesion

A

bacteria attach to cells, secretory products, structural components and other bacteria
via: fimbriae/pili, adhesive macromolecules imbedded in membrane, capsules, flagellum, proteinaceous fibrils

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6
Q

what strategies do bacteria use to survive the host defense

A
  • resistance to host defence
  • Active subversion of host defence (killing of phagocytic or changing host cell)
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7
Q

how do bacteria resist the host defence

A
  • 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
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8
Q

how do bacteria survive by active subversion of host defence

A
  1. toxins
  2. superantigens
  3. bacterial effector proteins injected into host cells
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9
Q

compare intacellular vs extracellular survival of bacteria

A

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
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10
Q

describe how streptococcus equi survives extracellularly

A
  • prevention of phagocytosis (has hyaluronase capsule, antiphagocytic enzymes, M-proteins, binding of fibrinogen to mask binding sites)
  • rapid killing of neutrophils (toxins production)
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11
Q

how do bacteria get inside cells

A
  • 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
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12
Q

how do bacteria move inside cells

A

manipulation of host cytoskeleton (actin and microtubules)

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13
Q

how do bacteria obtain nutrients inside the cells

A

manipulation of host metabolism (poor access to nutrients inside cells and even worse inside vacuole)

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14
Q
A
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