Mircobes and mammalians Flashcards
What are normal microbiota?
Populations of microorganisms routinely found growing on the body of healthy individual.
What’s the difference between resident flora and transient flora?
Resident flora typically inhabit body sites for extended periods. Transient flora are temporary: they form associations for a short time and are replaced.
When’s someone’s normal flora established?
During the birthing process
What does it mean that the composition of the microflora is dynamic?
The composition changes in response to physiological variation within the host. Each member of the flora ecosystem is influenced by presence and condition of other members
What are the two main functions of the normal microflora?
Protection against potentially harmful organisms
Development of immune system tolerance
How does the ‘good’ bacteria protect the body against harmful organisms?
Normal flora competitively exclude pathogens through:
•Covering binding sites used for pathogenic attachment
•Consuming available nutrients
•Producing toxic compounds such as antibiotics
How does the body’s normal microflora help to develop an immune system tolerance?
It prevents overreaction to harmless microbes/substances
Define the term ‘symbiotic relationships’
A close, prolonged association between two or more different organisms of different species that may, but does not necessarily, benefit each member.
Name the three types of symbiotic relationships
Mutualism
Commensalism
Parasitism
Mutualism
An association in which both partners benefit
Commensalism
An association in which one partner benefits and other is unharmed, eg flora living on skin
Parasitism
An association in which the microbe benefits at expense of host eg pathogenic infection
What the six types of pathogens?
Parasites Protozoa Fungi Prokaryotes Viruses Prions
Define the term ‘pathogenicity’
Pathogenicity refers to the ability of species to produce disease.
Define the term ‘virulence’
Virulence refers to the ability of strains to produce disease.