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Microbial Interference with Host Defenses

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Title: Microbial Interference with Host Defenses


1
Microbial Interference with Host Defenses
Medical Microbiology
  • BIOL 533
  • Lecture 8

2
Overall Strategies
  • Defense against complement
  • Subversion of phagocytosis
  • Subversion of immune responses

3
General Aspects
  • Pathogen finds itself in hostile territory
  • Host fights back and usuallybut not alwayswins
  • Hosts defenses are interrelated and so are
    organisms countermeasures

4
General 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

5
Defense Against Complement
  • Overall strategies
  • Inhibit complement activation
  • Mask activating substances
  • Capsule
  • IgA antibodies
  • Cover up target of complement membrane attack
    complex

6
Defense Against Complement
  • Overall strategies, continued
  • Appropriate inhibitor to activation to surface
  • Inactivate complement chemotaxin C5a

7
Prevent 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

8
Prevent 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

9
Prevent Complement Activation
  • Cost of having capsule antigenic
  • Elicits activation by primary pathway
  • Defend better against immediate defenses than
    later ones

10
Prevent 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

11
Subversion of Phagocytosis
  • Overall strategies
  • Inhibition of phagocyte recruitment
  • Microbial killing of phagocytes
  • Escape of ingestion

12
Subversion 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)

13
Subversion 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

14
Subversion 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

15
Subversion 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

16
Subversion 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

17
Subversion 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

18
Subversion 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

19
Subversion of Phagocytosis
  • Survival inside phagocytes, continued
  • Inhibition of lysosome and phagosome fusion
  • Examplesbacteria that cause
  • Tuberculosis
  • Psittacosis
  • Legionnaires disease

20
Subversion 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

21
Subversion 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

22
Subversion 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

23
Subversion 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

24
Subversion of Immune Response
  • Immunosuppression general aspects
  • Host becomes susceptible to other infections and
    survival probability is lessened

25
Subversion 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

26
Subversion of Immune Response
  • B cell function is also impaired
  • Reduced production of specific Ig
  • Increased chaotic production of nonspecific Ig

27
Subversion 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

28
Subversion 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

29
Subversion 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)

30
Subversion 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

31
Subversion 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

32
Subversion of Immune Response
  • Frequent changing of antigenic coats (antigenic
    variation)
  • Examples of bacteria, viruses, and protozoa
  • Trypanosomes (protozoa)
  • Gonococci
  • Borrelia (recurrent fever)
  • Influenza viruses

33
Subversion of Immune Response
  • Trypanosoma brucei (causative agent of
    sleeping sickness)
  • Infects blood of interstitial fluids of animals
    and man
  • Exposed to circulating Ab

34
Subversion 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

35
Subversion 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

36
Subversion of Immune Response
  • Gonococcus and its adhesin
  • Periodic change in
  • Pilin (protein fimbriae attach to cells)
  • Major outer membrane proteins

37
Subversion 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

38
Subversion of Immune Response
  • Antigenic variation, continued
  • Mechanism involves two proteins
  • Hemagglutinin-binds to cell receptors
  • Neuraminidase-changes receptors

39
Subversion 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

40
Subversion 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

41
Subversion 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

42
Subversion of Immune Response
  • Other viral survival strategies general
    aspects
  • Chronic infectionevade host defenses longer

43
Subversion 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)

44
Lecture 8
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