Molecular Epidemiology of Pathogens Flashcards
What features should variables we test consist of
- Reliable
- Repeatable
- Reproducible
What is molecular epidemiology
A resolved measure of differences that determines:
- Disease distribution in time and place
- Disease transmission
- Disease manifestation
- Disease progression
What main questions does molecular epidemiology answer
- Confirming outbreaks
- Identifying disease risk
How can we use information from confirming outbreaks
inside institutions:
- Did patient A catch this pathogen from patient B?
- Do patients A, B & C from the same hospital ward have the same strain?
in the community:
- Who was the index case and what is the likely source?
in the past:
- What has driven the geographical spread of important strains?
in the lab:
- Is this an outbreak or a contaminant?
What can we target to examine
- Functional characteristics
- Genomic characteristics
Give some examples of functional characteristics that we may look for
- Classical - Biochemistry
- Serology - O157 antigen
- Virulence - Verotoxin
Give examples of genomic characteristics that we may look for
- DNA - Gene, amino acid seq, base seq
- RNA - Ribosome, miRNA
How much diversity should a factor of interest have
- Single weighting - presence or absence
- Additive weighing - Combination of single tests
- Multiple weighting - Genomic factors
What subsets can we look for in genomic factors
- Factoral - presence or absence of a gene
- Functional - Type of substitution
- Temporal - Mutation rate
How does factorial multiple copy number systems work
- PCR with RE region primers generates multiple lengths amplicons
- Hybridisation of labelled PCR products onto 43 specific oligonucleotides
- Fixed on a membrane then visualise signal with RE probe
How can we test for functional diversity
- Single base substitutions can cause changes in DNA sequence, creating different possibilities and relations between each sequence present
- Synonymous, non-synonymous and corruptive mutations can change the function output of the sequence
How can we measure mutation rate
- There is a constant molecular clock where we can expect a change to occur after that time limit
What factors affect the molecular clock
- Bacterial replication rate
- Proof reading fidelity
- Selection pressure from host/environment
- Degree of redundancy
- Transmission rate
What genes can change the most
- Hyper-variable genes change more rapidly than conserved genes
- Conserved genes are more likely to be associated with phenotype and virulence
- Not all changes are new
Some may revert to an older profile (convergent evolution) - Large and rapid changes are rare but often lead to escape from existing herd protection
Give examples of epidemiological associations
- Transmission - Hospital-acquired infection
- Reservoirs of infection - Contact tracing, Determining introduction events
- Spread or emergence of resistance