Lecture 8 - Salmonella Flashcards
Salmonella enterica is a gram ______, ______ pathogen; gamma proteobacteria.
It is __-shaped and ____ (flagella surrounding).
Can live both inside a ____ and in the ______.
It has a _____ host range. What are they?
negative; opportunistic
rod; motile
host (intestinal tract); environment (water, soil, plants, human/animal excretion)
broad - humans & food animals, pets and wild animals (ducks, chickens, reptiles)
What are the diseases that salmonella enterica cause?
1) it is one of the leading causes of FOODBORNE GASTROENTERITIS (food-poisoning related or can contract them from pets)
2) TYPHOID FEVER (S. typhi causative agent)
Which statement is false regarding salmonella enterica infection:
1) It has over 1.5 million cases/year in Canada and US (6 outbreaks in Canada in 2020 with 3 food-related).
2) Globally there are 90k deaths annualy.
3) Illness typically develops between 6 hours and 1 week after infection.
2!
270k deaths per year
(T/F) only some parts of the world is affected by typhoid.
false! all parts affected.
There are two types of Salmonella enterica serovar: ______ serovar and ______ serovar.
______ serovars (typhi, paratyphi, and sendai) are human restricted and cause _____ fever, fever, abdominal pain, transient diarrhoea, etc.
______ serovar (typhimurium, enteriditis) have a ____-range and cause ______, abdominal pain, vomitting, and inflammatory diarrhoea.
Some non-typhoidal salmonella (NTS) strains can also cause ______ infections in some parts of the world and are 20-25% lethal.
Typhoid; Non-typhoid
Typhoid; enteric
Non-typhoid; gastroenteritis
Bloodstream
How does chronic carriage of Salmonella infection occur?
Where does it persist in the human body?
1) Chronic carriage occurs when S. enterica PERSIST in the body through 1) infection without obvious symptoms, 2) infection with symptoms
2) Gall bladder is a common reservoir
(T/F) Bacteria can persist in body long after initial infection even if treated with antibiotics; this occurs for typhoidal serovars only.
False!
Though bacteria can persist in body long after initial infection even if treated with antibiotics; this occurs for BOTH typhoidal and NON-TYPHOIDAL serovars.
What are the challenges associated with chronic carriage?
1) Bacteria can be SHED from host and SPREAD to others (typhoid mary - typhoid outbreaks in New York in early 1900s)
2) Antibiotic treatment CANNOT clear all bacteria from the body (ex, gallbladder). This can cause RECURRENT INFECTIONS (S. typhimurium can be invasive).
What is reactive arthritis?
Inflammatory response that occurs in other parts of the body; usually AFTER Salmonella infection is cleared.
Skin lesions can be caused due to reactive arthritis.
Which antibiotics are used as treatments for Salmonella enterica infections?
Quinolone, macrolide, or cephalosporin classes.
*antibiotic resistance (multi-drug) growing global problem
Why is it important to study drug resistance Salmonella in agriculture?
Give an example.
Important to study because Salmonella is an environmental microbe. Antibiotic resistant Salmonella are WIDESPREAD in the environment.
Resistance profiling of Salmonella enterica derived from CHICKENS in Canada! Resistance to at least one drug class common. Multi drug resistance also observed.
1) What are the two species of the Salmonella genus?
2) How many subspecies and serotypes are there for Salmonella enterica?
3) Which S. Enterica subspecies is primarily associated with warm-blooded animals, including humans?
1) Salmonella Enterica and Salmonella Bongori
2) There are 7 subspecies and over 2600 serotypes of salmonella enterica.
3) Salmonella enterica Subsp. enterica! Rest can infect warm-blooded animals as well but it is less common.
Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica includes ________ (broad host specificity and model pathogen) and _____ (humans only).
S. Typhimurium; S. Typhi
S. enterica serovar Typhimurium has 38 pseudogenes and one plasmid, while serovar Typhi has _____ pseudogenes and two plasmids.
What is a pseudogene? Why is this important?
204
Pseudogene: genetic region that resembles a protein-encoding region, but is likely non-functional. These 204 pseudogenes include effector genes. Were unneeded functions lost during the evolution to a human only host?
In the salmonella genome, there are SPIs that encode for the T3SS. Briefly describe them.
SPIs (salmonella pathogenicity islands) include genes important for survival in host. They suggest frequent gene acquisition through HORIZONTAL GENE TRANSFER.
There are two T3SS encoded on SPI-1 and SPI-2, which secrete EFFECTOR proteins to mediate infection.
SPI-1 T3SS: important for early infection
SPI-2 T3SS: important for later stages of infection
Salmonella is an ______ pathogen that resides in compartments termed _____ _____ _____.
____ are important for mediating infection; there are more than ___ produced and are secreted by the two T3SSs.
Intracellular; Salmonella-Containing Vacuoles (SCV)
Effectors; 30
Salmonella infection is important in what kind of research?
Pathogen research!
They are commonly used MODEL organism to study: bacterial pathogenesis and host response to infection!
Salmonella enterica is ingested through the mouth (route of entry).
It survives the low ___ of stomach. In the intestinal epithelium, it enters ___ cells and other ____ cells.
While _______ serotypes induce local inflammatory response, _____ ____ serotypes enter ______ and ___.
pH; M cells; epithelial
Gastroenteritis; systemic illness; macrophages; spread (to lymph nodes, liver, and spleen)
Briefly explain the roles of SPI-1 T3SS and SPI-2 T3SS and when they are turned on.
SPI-1 T3SS: turned on BEFORE INFECTION; predominantly involved in INDUCING PATHOGEN UPTAKE into SCV
SPI-2 T3SS: turned on AFTER UPTAKE into SCV; predominantly involved in PROMOTING BACTERIAL SURVIVAL, REPLICATION and SPREAD
Fill in the blanks regarding effectors:
1) Effector protein is _____ ____; proteins are only made when needed.
2) Effectors are often ______; have evolved multiple ____ to target different host processes.
3) Some effectors play important roles in ___ cell types but not ____.
4) Some effectors can function in _____ cells types, but can have ______ consequences (due to specialized pathways)
Intricately timed
Multifunctional; domains
some; all
multiple; different
Match the steps of Salmonella Infection:
1) Step 1
2) Step 2
3) Step 3
4) Step 4
5) Step 5
6) Step 6
7) Step 7
A) Endocytic pathway begins to target SCVs.
B) SCVs migrate along microtubules to cell periphery (needed for cell-to-cell spread)
C) Effectors induce the formation of tubules (Salmonella induced tubules - SITs) that extend to the cell periphery.
D) SCVs migrate to the perinuclear region and multiply near golgi.
E) SPI-1 T3SS effectors induce invasion ruffle - bacterial uptake into SCV.
F) Salmonella inhibits lysosomal pathway.
G) SPI-2 T3SS effectors secreted to promote bacterial survival & replication.
Step 1: SPI-1 T3SS effectors induce invasion ruffle - bacterial uptake into SCV.
Step 2: Endocytic pathway begins to target SCVs.
Step 3: SPI-2 T3SS effectors secreted to promote bacterial survival & replication.
Step 4: Salmonella inhibits lysosomal pathway.
Step 5: SCVs migrate to the perinuclear region and multiply near golgi.
Step 6: Effectors induce the formation of tubules (Salmonella induced tubules - SITs) that extend to the cell periphery.
Step 7: SCVs migrate along microtubules to cell periphery (needed for cell-to-cell spread)
How can we visualize Salmonella Infection?
Fluorescence microscopy: stain for both bacteria & host (SCV) and merge; often use antibodies to detect.
LAMP proteins: Markers for SCV membrane