Title: Microbial Interference with Host Defenses
1Microbial Interference with Host Defenses
Medical Microbiology
2Overall Strategies
- Defense against complement
- Subversion of phagocytosis
- Subversion of immune responses
3General Aspects
- Pathogen finds itself in hostile territory
- Host fights back and usuallybut not alwayswins
- Hosts defenses are interrelated and so are
organisms countermeasures
4General Aspects
- Given organism sometimes has numerous different
virulence factors - Does not have to harm tissue to be called
virulence factor, although many do - Have to determine precise role of each factor if
a large number are involved - Not always sure in vitro situation is same as in
disease state
5Defense Against Complement
- Overall strategies
- Inhibit complement activation
- Mask activating substances
- Capsule
- IgA antibodies
- Cover up target of complement membrane attack
complex
6Defense Against Complement
- Overall strategies, continued
- Appropriate inhibitor to activation to surface
- Inactivate complement chemotaxin C5a
7Prevent Complement Activation
- Masking surface components that activate by the
alternative pathway - Capsules
- Murein of S. aureus good activator, but is
covered by capsule - Capsules rich in sialic acid of Group B
streptococci and strains of E. coli
8Prevent Complement Activation
- IgA antibodies
- Meningococci get coated with IgA antibody
- Does not activate complement
- Prevents other Ab that can activate from reaching
surface of cell
9Prevent Complement Activation
- Cost of having capsule antigenic
- Elicits activation by primary pathway
- Defend better against immediate defenses than
later ones
10Prevent Complement Activation
- Cover up target of membrane attack complex (outer
membrane) - Gram, such as Salmonella or E. coli
- Smooth strains with long 0 antigen
polysaccharide chain do not allow access of mac
while rough strains (with little or no 0
antigen) do - Correlates with pathogenicity
11Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Overall strategies
- Inhibition of phagocyte recruitment
- Microbial killing of phagocytes
- Escape of ingestion
12Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Overall strategies, continued
- Survival inside phagocytes
- Escape into the cytoplasm
- Inhibition of lysosome and phagosome fusion
- Resistance to lysosomal enzymes
- Inhibition of phagocyte oxidative pathway
- Antibody effects (host counters)
13Subversion of Phagocytosis
- General aspects
- Being inside cell is not necessarily bad for an
organism - Powerful strategy is to grow within nonphagocytic
cell - Shielded from antibodies and drugs
14Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Inhibition of phagocyte recruitment
- Direct inhibition of neutrophil motility and
chemotaxis - Bordetella pertussis produces toxins
- Adenylate cyclase toxin
- Increase cyclic AMP in neutrophils
- Leads to paralysis
- Pertussis toxin
- Impairs migration of monocytes
15Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Microbial killing of phagocytes
- Leukocidins (exotoxins) kill neutrophils and
macrophages - Can work at distance or after ingestion
- Typical producers are highly invasive bacteria
- Pseudomonas, staphylococci, group A streptococci,
gas gangrene clostridia
16Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Escaping ingestion
- Naked capsule is effective (pneumococci)
- Opsonized bacteria not as effective
- Countering opsonization by complement components
or Ab - Any mechanism inhibits
- Activation of complement
- Synthesis or activity of Ab
17Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Escaping ingestion, continued
- Countering opsonization when antibodies are
present - Staphylococci and streptococci
- Make surface component (protein A)
- Binds to IgG molecules by the wrong end (Fc
region) - Cannot act as opsonins because Fc region not free
to bind to Fc receptors on phagocytic cells - Not known if antiphagocytic defense is relevant
to disease process
18Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Survival inside phagocytes
- Escape into cytoplasm
- Rickettsia (Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever) or
trypanosomes of Chagas disease cross membrane of
phagosome to enter cytoplasm - Since lysosomes do not secrete contents into
cytoplasm, organism is safe - How they enter cytoplasm is not known for certain
- Possess surface-bound phospholipase, which may
weaken membrane
19Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Survival inside phagocytes, continued
- Inhibition of lysosome and phagosome fusion
- Examplesbacteria that cause
- Tuberculosis
- Psittacosis
- Legionnaires disease
20Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Mechanism of tuberculosis
- Induced by complex glycolipids (sulfatides)not
certain - Facts
- Inhibition must be due to modification of
phagosome membrane - Microorganism might contribute by compounds
secreted or present on the surface
21Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Survival inside phagocytes, continued
- Resistance to lysosomal enzymessurvive in
phagolysosome (pH as low as 4) - Leishmania (protozoa)resistance may be due to
- Resistant cell surfaces
- Excretion of enzyme inhibitors
22Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Survival inside phagocytes, continued
- Inhibition of phagocytes oxidative pathway
- Bacillus of Legionnaires disease
- Inhibits hexose-monophosphate shunt and oxygen
consumption in neutrophils - Reduces respiratory burst for killing microbes
- Staphylococciproduces catalase that degrades
hydrogen peroxide necessary for oxidative killing
23Subversion of Phagocytosis
- Survival inside phagocytes, continued
- Antibody effects host counters parasite
- Sometimes help host guard against microbial
survival measures - Antibodies do not prevent entry into cells, but
inhibit subsequent effects - Rickettsia coated with antibody cannot pass
through membrane into cytoplasm - Antibodies against Legionnella prevent inhibition
of phagolysosomal fusion
24Subversion of Immune Response
- Immunosuppression general aspects
- Host becomes susceptible to other infections and
survival probability is lessened
25Subversion of Immune Response
- AIDSinfects T4 inducer-helper lymphocytes
- Depletion of cells leads to collapse of immune
system - Reduction in circulating lymphocytes
- Impaired delayed hypersensitivity
- Defective responses of T cells to Ag
- Reduction in T-cell numbers cytotoxic for tumor
cells and virus infected cells
26Subversion of Immune Response
- B cell function is also impaired
- Reduced production of specific Ig
- Increased chaotic production of nonspecific Ig
27Subversion of Immune Response
- Other immunosuppressive viruses Measles
- Tuberculosis more common after widespread measles
outbreaks - Infected T cells in vitro do not die
- Lose certain functions, including ability to
mount delayed hypersensitivity response
28Subversion of Immune Response
- Infected B cells in vitro
- Stop synthesizing and releasing Ig
- Primary effect on B cells
- Not secondary to action of virus on T cells or
macrophage
29Subversion of Immune Response
- Other immunosuppressive viruses Hepatitis B and
influenza - Impair function of lymphoid cells without causing
major structural damage - Immune suppression as a result of inhibition of
synthesis of lymphokines - Leishmanias (protozoa)
30Subversion of Immune Response
- Leishmanias (protozoa)when grown in macrophage
- Suppress secretion of interleukin-1
- Important for initiating series of inflammatory
and immunological reactions important for the
eradication of the organism - Also explains T cell unresponsiveness
- Suppresses capacity of macrophage to make class I
and class II products of major histocompatibility
locus (MHC) - Potential for marked suppression of cell-mediated
immunity
31Subversion of Immune Response
- Final thoughts
- Infection of lymphocytes is not
immuno-suppressive in nature - Large number of organisms infect lymphoreticular
tissues, but do not cause global disturbances to
host immunity - Bacteria that cause typhoid fever or brucellosis
live in lymph nodes for long period of time - Do not induce noticeable immune suppression
32Subversion of Immune Response
- Frequent changing of antigenic coats (antigenic
variation) - Examples of bacteria, viruses, and protozoa
- Trypanosomes (protozoa)
- Gonococci
- Borrelia (recurrent fever)
- Influenza viruses
33Subversion of Immune Response
- Trypanosoma brucei (causative agent of
sleeping sickness) - Infects blood of interstitial fluids of animals
and man - Exposed to circulating Ab
34Subversion of Immune Response
- Trypanosoma brucei , continued
- Covered with thick protein coat (variable surface
glycoprotein) - Undergoes antigenic shifts during infection
- Have several hundred genes that encode different
antigens, but express only one at a time
35Subversion of Immune Response
- Trypanosoma brucei , continued
- When antibodies against one type are made
- Number of parasites in blood drops
- Soon replaced by new antigenic type
- Can be many successive waves of antigenic changes
in a single host - Protective immunity does not function well
36Subversion of Immune Response
- Gonococcus and its adhesin
- Periodic change in
- Pilin (protein fimbriae attach to cells)
- Major outer membrane proteins
37Subversion of Immune Response
- Antigenic variation among influenza virusesmajor
obstacle to effective vaccine (year after year) - Definitions
- Antigenic driftminor changes that occur every
2 to 3 years - Antigenic shiftmajor changes that occur about
every 10 years
38Subversion of Immune Response
- Antigenic variation, continued
- Mechanism involves two proteins
- Hemagglutinin-binds to cell receptors
- Neuraminidase-changes receptors
39Subversion of Immune Response
- Proteolysis of antibodies
- Make extracellular proteases that inactivate
secretory IgA antibody (major Ab type on human
mucosal surfaces subclasses I and II) - Cleave only subclass I at hinge region to leave
complete by inactive peptide fragments - Examples
- Gonococci, meningococci, Haemophilus influenzae,
and some pathogenic dental streptococci
40Subversion of Immune Response
- Proteolysis of antibodies, continued
- Specificity of IgA1 proteases from different
bacteria - Highly specific for subclass I
- Biochemical and genetic differences that suggest
property evolved independently - Presence in fluids and tissues
- Active form in infected tissues and fluids
41Subversion of Immune Response
- Proteolysis of antibodies, continued
- Possible relationship to pathogenicity
suggested, not proven - Nonpathogeic relatives lack these proteases
- Fabulation (cleavage with Fab fragment attached)
- Ag unavailable for binding with intact antibody
molecules - May serve to protect some organisms against Ab
42Subversion of Immune Response
- Other viral survival strategies general
aspects - Chronic infectionevade host defenses longer
43Subversion of Immune Response
- Herpes infection
- Do not usually enter extracellular fluid, but
pass among cells through cytoplasmic bridges - Can also be latent (reside within nerve cells but
do not multiply) - In these circumstances, not affect by antibodies,
cell-mediated immunity, or interferon - Survive for long periods of time, then later
reactivate (perhaps when defenses are lower)
44Lecture 8
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