Lecture 3: Professional Pathogens Flashcards

1
Q

which factors influence whether or not a pathogen will cause disease

A
  • pathogenicity (virulence of the pathogen)

- immunological status of the patient

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2
Q

what is staphylococcus aureus

A
  • normal commensal of the nose
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3
Q

is staph aureus gram positive or negative

A

gram positive and forms clusters down the microscope and golden colonies on agar

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4
Q

which factors determine staph aureus’s virulence

A
  • adhesins
  • protein exotoxins
  • coagulase
  • capsule
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5
Q

describe staph aureus adhesins

A
  • has Protein A adhesin on surface, which binds to immunoglobin
  • S. aureus coats itself in immunoglobulin, evading the immune response
  • allows S. aureus to seed and spread to distant body sites eg heart valves, bones and joints
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6
Q

describe staph aureus exotoxins

A
  • cytotoxins eg Panton-Valentine leukocidin which lyses white blood cells
  • exfoliative enzymes which act as proteases, degrading proteins in superficial skin causing it to fall off
  • enterotoxins which have affect if eaten
  • many encoded on mobile genetic elements so only present on a few strains
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7
Q

describe staph aureus coagulase

A
  • cell wall bound enzyme

- stimulates clotting, so used as a test to determine the virulent S. aureus

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8
Q

describe staph aureus capsule

A
  • polysaccharide microcapsule

- thinner than other bacterial capsules, helps avoid phagocytosis by neutrophils

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9
Q

what does staph aureus cause

A
skin conditions
- furunculosis
- staphylococcal abscess
- impetigo
can cause food poisoning if eaten, due to enterotoxins
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10
Q

which sorts of patients are susceptible to S. aureus infections

A

patients that need vascular access devices, such as for cancer treatment

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11
Q

how does a Gram negative bacterial cell wall differ to a Gram positive one

A
  • thinner peptidoglycan layer

- have outer lipid membrane with lipopolysaccharides

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12
Q

how does the immune system respond to lipopolysaccharides

A
  • LPS interacts with toll-like receptors, especially TLR 4 on macrophages and vascular endothelium
  • results in activation of inflammatory pathways, coagulation pathways and makes blood vessels more leaky
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13
Q

what are Gram negative bacteria predominantly found in

A

bites and contaminated wounds

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14
Q

what is the cliniical manifestation of systemic immune response

A

sepsis

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15
Q

which cell wall components on Gram positive bacteria activate an immune response

A
  • peptidoglycan

- lipoteichoic acid

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16
Q

features of meningococcus

A
  • N. meningitidis causes meningococcal rash (which will not blanch when a glass is pressed over it)
  • Gram negative
  • has adhesins for respiratory epithelium and meninges
  • very big thick capsule
  • “blebs”: sheds lipopolysaccharide into surroundings
17
Q

features of streptococcus pneumonia

A
  • gram positive
  • has adhesins for respiratory mucosa
  • produces pneumolysin
  • secretes IgA protease, which prevents mucus clearance
  • has a capsule so the immune system has to develop specific antibodies
  • can disseminate in the blood, ends up on heart valves –> endocarditis and meninges –> meningitis
18
Q

what does pneumolysin do

A
  • is cytotoxic
  • binds to host cell membrane cholesterol
  • forms pores and lyses in ciliated cells
  • lyses host’s phagocytic cells