INF1 - F. TOXIN TARGETS AND SEPSIS-COVERED Flashcards
how do bacteria make us feel ill after infection
- release toxins that weaken immune system and cause diarrhoea and autonomic dysfunction (heart rate or blood pressure)
- immunological response to toxins can lead to symptoms of illness: fever and shock
what are exotoxins
- secreted proteins (enzymes and accessory proteins) secreted from living bacteria that attack host cells
- specific molecular targets
- high toxicity
examples of exotoxins
ADP-ribosyltransferases
Monoglycosyltransferases
Metalloproteases
what bacteria mainly releases exotoxins
anaerobic gram positive bacteria - especially Clostridium species
ie - botulism, whooping cough, cholera, dysentry
what are the 3 classes of exotoxin
- enzyme mechanism (ie, by the type of enzyme they secrete)
- ADP-ribosyltransferases, monoglycosyltransferases
metalloproteases - cellular target
- neurotoxins, cytotoxins, enterotoxins - molecular target
- synaptic release apparatus
- GPCRs
- cytoskeleton
- protein synthesis apparatus
what are the 2 main neurotoxins
- botulinum toxin produced by clostridium botulinum
- Zinc metalloproteases that cleave SNARE proteins
- degrades vesicle release machinery
- prevents fusion of vesicle with membrane
- BoNT acts on ACh releasing cells - tetanus toxin produced by clostridium tetani
- same enzymatic mechanism as BoNT
- TeNT acts on glycine and GABA releasing cells
what is a SNARE complex
mediates fusion of synaptic vesicles with the presynaptic plasma membrane resulting in exocytosis of neurotransmitters
what 2 toxins target GPCRs
- cholera toxin produced by vibrio cholerae
- ADP-ribosyltransferase adds ADP-ribose moiety to alpha-s subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins
- persistent activation of adenylyl cyclase by activation of Gs - pertussis toxin produced by bordetella pertussis (whooping cough)
- ADP-ribosylation of alpha-i subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins
- persistent activation of adenylyl cyclase by activation of Gi
pharmacology of cholera toxin
normally: GDP substituted with GTP and G alpha-s binds to AC and releases cAMP
when toxin binds: targets G alpha-s, causes ribosylation and causes G alpha-s to be permanently switched on and cAMP continually produced
pharmacology of pertussis toxin
normally: GDP substituted with GTP, G alpha-i binds to AC, AC is switched off and prevents cAMP being produced
when toxin binds: binds to inactive form Gi-coupled receptor and keeps receptor in inactive state, switches off ‘off’ switch so cAMP continually produced
what toxins target cytoskeleton in the cell
numerous clostridium sp. toxins
- ADP-ribosylation of monomeric G-actin
- inhibits actin polymerisation
- disrupts cell morphology, division, transport of organelles etc
clostridium difficile toxins A and B
- glycosyltransferases: use UDP-glucose to transfer glucose moiety to Rho family of small GTPases
- inhibits actin polymerisation (+ many other signalling cascades)
pharmacology of disruption of actin polymerisation
F-actin is a polymer of individual G-actin monomers and polymerisation is promoted by Rho proteins (Rho-GTPase)
C. perfringens toxin causes ADP ribsosylation of G-actin
This prevents G-actin from forming F-actin polymer
Depletes pool of monomers
C. difficile (processed) catalyses transfer of glucose from UDP-glucose and it binds to Rho protein and inactivates it. Can’t have polymerisation without Rho-GTPase so can’t get F-actin formation
what 2 toxins target protein synthesis
- diphtheria toxin produced by corynebacterium diphtheriae
- ADP-ribosylation of elongation factor 2
- inhibition of translation - shiga toxin produced by shigella dysenteriae
- N-glycosidase: hydrolyses the 28S RNA in the ribosome
what are endotoxins
- structural macromolecules (lipids, polysaccharides) released where bacteria are destroyed (ie - from cell wall)
- gram -ve
- non-specific
- low toxicity but immunogenic
- not released intentionally
what is the main endotoxin
LPS
Lipid A contributes toxicity
Polysaccharides (O and R) contribute immunogenicity
LPS activates signalling through Toll-like receptors (TLR4) in immune cells (macrophages, monocytes) - polysaccharide recognised as an epitope by immune system
This triggers release of cytokines and activation of complement cascade