LECTURE - Campylobacter and Helicobacter Flashcards
leading cause of GI infection in NA and number one in Canada
Campylobacter
Characteristics of C. jejuni
- microaerophilic
- grows at 42C
- darting motility on wet mount vi polar flagella
- can develop coccoid, viable non-cultivatable (VNC) forms if eg. temp is reduced; resolved by passage through chickens
- see two polar flagella (TEM)
- most common human isolate
- causes colitis
reservoir of Campylobacter infections
- intracellular capabilities (hides in cells) and is a way for it to be transmitted
- chickens are major reservoir (just like salmonella)
- invasive in humans but not in chickens
result of Campylobacter infections
- GI disease
- ranges from asymptomatic carriage to life-threatening toxic megacolon
- typical disease: nausea, lower ab cramping and diarrhea (Watery or bloody) with fecal leukocytes and erythrocytes in patients
- recurrent or chronic infections can occur in immunocompromised patients
- very similar to salmonella
Campylobacter presentation in developed vs developing countries
- developed: severe inflammatory diarrhea
- developing: mild, non-inflammatory diarrhea is more typical
- microbiome and hygiene hypothesis?
Guillain-Barre syndrome
- sequelae of Campylobacter
- ascending bilateral flaccid paralysis, with various sensory signs, symmetric hand and arm weakness, w some involvement of the cranial nerves, sometimes leading to respiratory insufficiency
- serotype HS:19
- Abs to LPS to nerve gangliosides
Reiter’s syndrome
- sequelae of Campylobacter
- a reactive arthritis, associated with HLA-B27
Camylobacter antibiotic resistance
- most cases do not need antibiotics but immunocompromised could benefit
- Erythromycin and azithromycin are drugs of choice; Ciprofloxacin resistance is now common
- poultry = common source of infection therefore antibiotics use in chickens is bad (enrofloxacin)
How C. jejuni causes disease
- far end (distal) of SI and into colon; invasive
- can also grow happily outside of cell but can also affect amoebae in freshwater
- four key determinants for invasion of host cells
Four key determinants for invasion of host cells by C. jejuni
- motility and chemotaxis
- adhesion (no pili, nut other surface lipoproteins)
- LOS, LPS, capsule, N- and O- glycosylation of proteins; proteins that have sugars on them are common
- flagellar (type III-like) and type IV secretion systems
genomic variability of C. jejuni
- small genome (1.7 Mbp)
- naturally competent; can acquire DNA through transformation from other strains of C. jejuni = juggles around genomes
- hyper-variable sequences allow slipped-strand mispairing and intragenomic recombination and variation; lack of known DNA repair genes may add to variation
Features of H. pylori
- gram neg curved rod
- oxidase positive
- 4-7 polar, membrane-sheathed flagella
- microaeropilic
- few regulatory genes (only 4 two-component systems)
- chronic infection
___ structures of C. jejuni can display molecular mimicry of neuronal gangliosides, which is linked to …
LOS; Guillain–Barré syndrome and Miller–Fisher syndrome
The flagellin is modified by …
O‑linked glycosylation = required for flagellar assembly and is, therefore, important for motility, virulence and epithelial cell adherence and invasion
N-linked glycosylation
N‑linked-glycosylation system modifies some periplasmic and outer membrane proteins. The N‑linked glycan is also important for colonization and epithelial cell adherence and invasion, but the role of this glycan in these processes is unclear.