Title: Damage to the Host
1Damage to the Host
Bio 5392 Molecular Microbiology and
Pathogenesis Mondy April 6 Wednesday April 8,
2009
2Bacterial Damage to the Host
- I. Direct Damage to Tissues or Cells
- a) Byproducts of bacterial metabolism
- b) Degradative enzymes released by bacteria
- c) Secreted exotoxins
- II. Indirect damage
- stimulation of inflammatory response
3Bacterial Damage to the Host
- Direct Damage
- a) metabolic byproducts
- - secreted products that have adverse effects on
host cell biology - i) H2S
- ii) acetic acid
- iii) reactive oxygen species
4Bacterial Damage to the Host
- I. Direct Damage
- a) metabolic byproducts
- b) degradative enzymes
- c) secreted toxins
5Degradative enzymes
- allow tissue destruction and cellular damage
- no specificity for cell type (different from
classic toxins)
6Bacterial Damage to the Host
- I. Direct Damage
- a) metabolic byproducts
- b) degradative enzymes
- c) secreted toxins
- II. Indirect damage
- inflammatory response
7Bacterial Toxins
- Practical definition and characteristics of an
exotoxin - comprised of one or more proteins
- secreted, generally acts at remote site
- bind specific receptor on target cells
- results in cellular injury or altered physiology
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9Stages at which bacterial toxins may contribute
to pathogenesis
1. Acquisition (Encounter) 2. Colonization 3
. Invasion 4. Spread 5. Disease 6. Resolution
10Stages at which bacterial toxins may contribute
to pathogenesis
1. Acquisition (Encounter) 2. Colonization 3
. Invasion 4. Spread 5. Disease 6. Resolution
Toxins may result in disease without invasion or
spread
11Bacterial Exotoxins Contribution to Disease
- Inadvertent damage - contribution of toxin to
pathogenesis fitness is not clear (e.g.
staphylococcal enterotoxins cause diarrhea, even
in absence of viable organism) - 2. Selective advantage
- - access to nutrients
- - spread through tissues
- - immune evasion (kill PMN)
- - disease transmission (induce cough, diarrhea)
12Biologic Effects of Bacterial Toxins
- Damage membranes
- Inhibit protein synthesis
- Activate second messenger pathways
- Damage cytoskeleton
- Arrest cell cycle
- Inhibit neurotransmitter release
- Induce inflammation
13Bacterial Exotoxins Physiologic Effects
- Physiological and clinical effects depend on
- Host cell target determined by expression of
toxin receptor - Intracellular target determined by the enzymatic
activity and substrate specificity of the toxin - 3. Ability or inability of the toxin to spread
systemically
-host cell specificity determined by presence of
receptor, and target
14Classification of Bacterial Exotoxins
- 1. Structure
- Enzymatic activity
- Host cell target
15Bacterial Exotoxins Structure
- 1. Single chain, multi-domain toxins
- most pore-forming toxins
- 2. A-B toxins
- - most toxins have A-B structure
- - A domain has enzymatic activity, generally
released into cytosol in absence of B domain - B domain responsible for receptor binding
- A and B domains may be translated as single
peptide (then cleaved) or the two domains may be
comprised of heterologous subunits (usually
transcribed as an operon).
16Single chain, multi-domain pore-forming toxins
a-hemolysin
Perfringolysin O
17Ribbon structure of three classic A-B toxins
-A and B domains are separate, non-covalently
attached proteins
18Common A-B toxins
19Sites of toxin action on host cells
- Extracellular matrix
- not classic toxins, but damage occurs
- degradative enzymes, etc
- Cell membrane
- pore-forming toxins
- Intracellular
- membrane penetrating toxins (e.g. DT)
- toxin trafficked in retrograde direction through
ER
20Insertion of pneumolysin into host cell membrane
Cell, Vol. 121, 247256, April 22, 2005
21Bacterial Exotoxins Mechanisms of Host Cell
Internalization
22Mechanisms of Shiga Toxin Internalization
Golgi
Endoplasmic Reticulum
Nucleus
23Mechanisms of Bacterial Toxin Action
- Pore formation
- ADP-ribosyltransferase activity
- N-glycosylase activity
- Adenyl cyclase activity
- Protease activity
- DNA damage
- Superantigen properties
A-B toxins
- Biological effect depends on target molecule.
- Clinical effect depends on target cell
24Biologic Effects of Bacterial Toxins
- Damage membranes
- Inhibit protein synthesis
- Activate second messenger pathways
- Damage cytoskeleton
- Arrest cell cycle
- Inhibit neurotransmitter release
- Induce inflammation
A-B toxins
25Bacterial Exotoxins Mechanisms of Host Cell
Damage
26ADP-ribosyltransferase activity
Target Protein
-also sometimes known as NAD glycohydrolases
27Bacterial Damage to the Host
- I. Direct Damage
- a) metabolic byproducts
- b) degradative enzymes
- c) secreted toxins
- II. Indirect damage
- inflammatory response
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