Lecture 3: Professional Pathogens Flashcards
which factors influence whether or not a pathogen will cause disease
- pathogenicity (virulence of the pathogen)
- immunological status of the patient
what is staphylococcus aureus
- normal commensal of the nose
is staph aureus gram positive or negative
gram positive and forms clusters down the microscope and golden colonies on agar
which factors determine staph aureus’s virulence
- adhesins
- protein exotoxins
- coagulase
- capsule
describe staph aureus adhesins
- 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
describe staph aureus exotoxins
- 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
describe staph aureus coagulase
- cell wall bound enzyme
- stimulates clotting, so used as a test to determine the virulent S. aureus
describe staph aureus capsule
- polysaccharide microcapsule
- thinner than other bacterial capsules, helps avoid phagocytosis by neutrophils
what does staph aureus cause
skin conditions - furunculosis - staphylococcal abscess - impetigo can cause food poisoning if eaten, due to enterotoxins
which sorts of patients are susceptible to S. aureus infections
patients that need vascular access devices, such as for cancer treatment
how does a Gram negative bacterial cell wall differ to a Gram positive one
- thinner peptidoglycan layer
- have outer lipid membrane with lipopolysaccharides
how does the immune system respond to lipopolysaccharides
- 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
what are Gram negative bacteria predominantly found in
bites and contaminated wounds
what is the cliniical manifestation of systemic immune response
sepsis
which cell wall components on Gram positive bacteria activate an immune response
- peptidoglycan
- lipoteichoic acid