PNP WK2 Flashcards
bacteria, antibiotics, viruses fungis and parasites, stages/chain of infection
What is bacteria?
Single celled, prokaryotic, contain a cell wall and membrane and DNA.
What is the difference between gram +ve/ gram -ve bacteria?
+ve: simple cell wall, lack a cell wall but has a thicker layer of peptidoglycan
-ve: complex cell wall, contains a cell wall and has thin layer of peptidoglycan and lipo-polysaccharide outer layer
What are the different types of shapes for bacteria?
Spirilla: spiral
Bacilli: rod shaped
Cocci: spherical
Staph: irregular clusters
Strep: chain clusters
Diplo: pair clusters
What is a virus?
Comprise of nucleic acid molecule (DNA or RNA), encased in a protein coat (a capsid), can only multiply inside living host
What is fungi?
Eukaryotic, multicellular, contain membrane-bound nuclei, release enzymes causing topical redness, purpose is to degrade organic matter
What is protozoa?
eukaryotic, unicelluar cells, without a cell wall, PARASITES
What are the chain of infection steps?
- Infectious agent: what causes the diseases
- Reservoir: where infectious agent is sustained in (body of water, organism)
- Portal of exit: where and how it leaves reservoir
- Mode of transmission: how agent moves while staying viable
- Portal of entry: where agent enters the body
- Susceptible host: how likely the agent is to cause disease due to the host’s immunity
What is the human microbiome?
All microbiotas residing in/on the human body after years of exposure creating communities of organisms
- Plays important role in metabolism and immunology of persons
What are the different features of antibiotics that can be used to fight bacterial cells?
- Target bacteria DNA code replication (only one chromosome present in bacteria)
- Target cell wall so water rushes in and compromises cell (has a peptidoglycan cell wall)
- Target protein synthesis (ribosomes use mRNA for protein)
- Targets folate enzyme (used for protein synthesis), and becomes an inhibitor
What is the difference between exo/endo toxins?
Exo: Are proteins produced inside bacteria, are secreted into surrounding areas following lysis, UNSTABLE
Endo: -ve cells ONLY, lipid portion of lipopoly, are released when cell dies and wall breaks, heat tolerant
What are the main mechanisms of actions of antibiotics?
- disrupts cell wall synthesis causing lysis
- inhibits protein synthesis, affects ribosomes
- inhibits bacterial DNA synthesis, blocks transcription
- affects folic acid synthesis, won’t produce proteins for growth
What are examples of antibiotics that disrupt cell wall synthesis?
Pencillins, cephalosporins, Carbapenems, glycopeptides (vancomycin)
What are examples of antibiotics that inhibit protein synthesis?
Aminoglycosides (gentamicin), tetracyclines, macrolides, erythro/clindamycin
What are examples of antibiotics that inhibit DNA synthesis?
Quinolones and Rifampin
What are examples of antibiotics that affect folic acid synthesis?
Sulfonamides and trimethoprim