Title: Environmental Health Microbiology ENVR 421
1Environmental Health MicrobiologyENVR 421
2Microbes and the Environment
- Microbes are fundamental and essential to life on
earth - Most microbes in the environment are harmless or
beneficial - A small proportion of microbes are capable of
causing disease in humans and/or other hosts - Some are frank pathogens and almost always have
the potential to cause illness - Others are opportunistic pathogens and only
cause illness in compromised hosts or unusual
conditions of exposure - Yet others are capable of causing illness when
they get into parts of the body by unusual
circumstances that are normally unavailable to
microbes (e.g., into deep tissues via wounds) - Microbes are almost everywhere on the planet and
the more we look the more places we find them
3Routes or Pathways of Exposure for
Environmentally Transmitted Infectious Diseases
- Water
- Wastes
- Food
- Fomites
- Vectors
- many human pathogens have animal reservoirs
zoonoses - Air
- Soil
- Sediment
4Pathogen-Human/Animal-Environmental Relationships
- Many human pathogens are potentially transmitted
by multiple environmental routes - Some pathogens exist in the environment
independent from human hosts - their existence and perpetuation is not dependent
on human or (for some) even animal hosts - Other pathogens depend exclusively on human for
their existence and perpetuation - Viruses smallpox (Variola) virus (eradicated)
poliovirus - Bacteria Shigella spp. Salmonella typhi
- Parasites Ascaris lumbricoides (round worm)
5History of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
Role of Water in Cholera Transmission - London
- Water, wastes and microbes are traditional/histori
cal concerns - Sir John Snow cholera in London and the Broad
Street pump - A key historical event in environmental health,
epidemiology, infectious disease, water hygiene,
environmental engineering and GIS he did it
all! - Developed a population-based approach to track
the spread of cholera in individual London
boroughs source was unknown - Plotted the distribution of reported cases on a
map - In one London borough the source was water
polluted by sewage, which entered the Thames
above the water intake. - In another it was one water pump
- Snow ordered the handle to be removed from the
"Broad Street Pump locally the epidemic
subsided. - Explained the etiology of cholera and the
mechanism of its transmission via contaminated
water.
6Sir John Snow and his Maps of the Water Plants
of London
http//www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow.htmlBROAD
7Sir John Snows 1854 Map of the Broad Street Pump
Outbreak
- Cholera cases, each marked by a hash, were
clustered around the Broad Street Pump and were
associated with drinking water from this pump
8Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
- Infectious disease risks from water, poor
sanitation and hygiene, food and air are still
with us in the developed and developing world - Global Water Supply and Sanitation Assessment
2000 - 2.4 billion people have inadequate sanitation
- 1.1 billion people have inadequate/unsafe water
- 4 billion cases of diarrhea every year
- 2.2 million deaths from diarrheal disease every
year - Most illness and death in children lt5 years old
- Less services in rural than in urban areas
- Urban settlement/slums remain a problem
- In the developing world wastewater treatment is
rare - Water losses in large urban systems is typically
40 - Millennium Development Goals call for halving by
2015 the number of people lacking sustained
access to safe water - a key goal for reducing World poverty
9Global Burden of Infectious Diarrheal Disease and
the Role of Water
- Burden of infectious diarrhea is higher in
developing than in developed countries - Developed 1 illness per person per year
- Undeveloped about 5 illnesses per person per
year - The attributable fraction of diarrheal illness
for different exposure routes or sources may not
be very different in developed versus developing
countries - 1/4th contact
- ¼ water
- ¼ food
- 1/4 other
- Most waterborne disease is caused by microbes
not chemicals
10Classes or Categories of Pathogenic
MicroorganismsThe Microbial World
Viruses smallest (0.02-0.3 µm diameter)
simplest nucleic acid protein coat (
lipoprotein envelope) Bacteria 0.5-2.0 µm
diameter prokaryotes cellular simple internal
organization binary fission. Protozoa most gt2
µm- 2 mm eucaryotic uni-cellular
non-photosynthetic flexible cell membrane no
cell wall wide range of sizes and shapes hardy
cysts Groups flagellates, amoebae, ciliates,
sporozoans (complex life cycle) and
microsporidia. Helminths (Worms) multicellular
animals some are parasites eggs are small
enough (25-150 µm) to pose health risks from
human and animal wastes in water.
11THE MICROBIAL WORLD SIZES OF MICROBES
12Viruses
- smallest (0.02-0.3 micrometers diameter
- simplest (nucleic acid protein coat (
lipoprotein envelope) - spherical (icosahedral) or rod-shaped (helical)
- no biological activity outside of host cells/or
host organisms - obligate intracellular parasites recruit host
cell to make new viruses, often destroying the
cell - non-enveloped viruses are most persistent in the
environment - protein coat confers stability
- enteric viruses are most important for
environmental health - transmitted by direct and indirect contact,
fecally contaminated water, food, fomites and
air. - respiratory viruses also important
- transmitted by direct and indirect contact, air
and fomites (some by water and food, too).
13ENTERIC VIRUSES 25-100 nm diameter Nucleic
acid protein coat (envelope)
- Nucleic acid
- DNA or RNA
- single or double-stranded
- 1 or several segments
- Capsid (protein coat)
- multiple copies of 1 or more proteins in an
array - Envelope
- lipid bilayer membrane glycoproteins)
- typically acquired from host cell membranes
14Enteroviruses 27-30 nm diameter
single-stranded RNA icosahedral protein coat
(capsid)
15Human Rotavirus 75 nm diameter
double-layered capsid double-stranded,
segmented RNA
16ADENOVIRUSES 80 nm diameter double-stranded
DNA protein coat with attachment fibers
17Procaryotes Bacteria and Others
- Cellular organisms
- Simple internal organization
- Multiply by binary fission
- Diameter 0.5-1.0 micrometer
- Envelope cytoplasmic membrane, cell wall
capsule (polysaccharide) - Some have appendages
- flagella for locomotion
- pili
- attachment to other cells for genetic transfer
- virus receptor site
18Pathogenic Bacteria
- Pathogenic bacteria possess virulence properties
in the form of structures or chemical
constituents that contribute to pathophysiology - Outer cell membrane of Gram negative bacteria
endotoxin (fever producer) - Exotoxins
- Pili for attachment and effacement to cells and
tissues - Invasins to invade cells
- Some bacteria make spores
- highly to physical and chemical agents and
- very persistent in the environment
- Enteric and respiratory bacteria are important in
environmental health
19Escherichia coli cells 0.5 x 1.0
micrometers Typical rod-shaped bacteria fecal
indicator and pathogenic strains
20Procaryotic Cell (left) and Eucaryotic Cell
(right)
21Unicellular Eucaryotes The Protists
- Complex internal organization
- organelles nucleus, mitochondria, etc.
- Wide range of sizes 2 micrometers and larger
22Protozoa
- Important group of protists for environmental
health - Uni-cellular non-photosynthetic flexible cell
membrane no cell wall - Wide range of sizes and shapes 2 micrometers to
2 mm - flagellates
- amoeba
- ciliates
- sporozoans (complex life cycle)
- microsporidia
23Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts 5 ?m
diameterAcid fast stain of fecal preparation
24Giardia lamblia flagellate protozoan
parasite Giardia lamblia cyst 10 x 8 micrometers
25More Protists Fungi
- Fungi (yeasts and molds)
- non-photosynthetic
- immotile
- rigid cell wall
- Molds
- grow as branched, interlacing chains or filaments
(hyphae) called mycelia - Yeasts
- do not form mycelia
- grow as single cells that bud
- sexual reproduction possible
Mitospores (conidia) of Penicillium, one of the
asexual Ascomycota
Yeasts
26More Protists Algae
- Photosynthetic
- Rigid cell wall
- Wide range of sizes and shapes
- 2 micrometers and larger
Nostoc
Anabaena and Aphanocapsa
27Helminths (Worms)
- Multicellular animals
- Some are human and/or animal parasites
- Eggs are small enough to pose environmental
health problems from human and animal excreta in
water, food, soil, etc. - Several major groups
- Nematodes (roundworms) ex. Ascaris
- Trematodes (flukes flatworms) ex. Schistosomes
- Cestodes (tapeworms) pork and beef tapeworms
- Most helminthic disease is not waterborne, but it
is associated with water contact, food, and
exposure to fecal wastes and fecally contaminated
soil.
28Roundworm Ascaris lumbricoides
29Roundworms Hookworms
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32Recommended Readings
- Relevant material in any microbiology text
- Indicators for Waterborne Pathogens, National
Research Council, National Academy of Sciences,
National Academy Press, Washington, DC, 2004. - Chapters 1, 3 and 4
- Water Quality Guidelines, Standards and Health.
2001. L. Fewtrell and J. Bartram, eds., IWA
Publishing, London, for WHO, Geneva. - Chapter 4, 5 and 13
- Assessing microbial safety of drinking water
Improving approaches and methods, 2003. A.
Dufour, M. Snozzi, W. Koster, J. Bartram, E.
Ronchi and L. Fewtrell, eds., IWA Publishing,
London for WHO, Geneva. - Chapters 1, 2 and 8