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Bacillus spp

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Title: Bacillus spp


1
Bacillus spp
  • Strictly aerobic, facultatively anaerobic
  • Spore-forming, medium-to-large rods
  • Most motile, many Gram variable
  • Major pathogen is B. anthracis

2
Anthrax in Ancient History
  • Egyptian and Mesopotamian writings from 5000 BC
  • Two of the plagues from Exodus 9 (...murrain of
    beasts.... and ...plague of boils and
    blains....)
  • Virgils treatise on agriculture

3
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Spores deposited in abrasion, insect bite
  • Germinate, vegetative cells multiply and produce
    toxin
  • Vesicle appears, contains serous fluid which
    later becomes hemorrhagic and blue-black
  • Ruptures, leaving round sharp-edged ulcer with
    hemorrhagic necrotic tissue

4
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5
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Ulcer dries, edges separate from surrounding
    skin, sloughs off
  • Lesion develops fully, results in ulceration,
    even with appropriate therapy, started early
  • 5-20 of untreated patients develop septicemia
    and generalized infection

6
Inhalation AnthraxWoolsorters Disease
7
Inhalation AnthraxWoolsorters Disease
  • After inhalation, spores may be dormant for
    months
  • delayed germination can result in prolonged
    incubation periods
  • monkeys exposed to four spore LD50s
  • 15 - 20 survived in lung tissue gt 42 days
  • 2 remained gt 50 days
  • lt 1 (still a substantial number) recovered gt 75
    days
  • prolonged incubation period in Sverdlovsk
    outbreak gt lethal numbers of spores persisted gt
    6 weeks post exposure

8
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9
Gastrointestinal Anthrax
10
AnthraxDomestic, wild animals occurs in most
US states
  • Ruminants (particularly cattle)
  • peracute disease course may be 1 - 2 h
  • rapidly-developing cerebral anoxia, pulmonary
    edema
  • death often reported as due to lightning strike
  • acute disease course 24 - 48 h
  • abrupt onset of fever, anorexia, excitement,
    pharyngeal, lingual edema
  • followed by depression, convulsions main feature
    at death edema

11
Anthrax
  • Horses course acute-to-subacute (survive 96 h)
  • septicemia, enteritis, colic
  • transmission via insect bite similar to human
    cutaneous anthrax
  • local subcutaneous edema affects throat, ventral
    thorax, abdomen
  • Hair from horses dead of anthrax used as binder
    in plaster
  • Spores left in plaster in 19th century detected
    in 20th century

12
Anthrax
  • Omnivores, carnivores
  • natural resistance, more likely to recover
  • subacute-to-chronic
  • usually after ingestion of contaminated meat
  • lingual, pharyngeal edema dyspnea, dysphagia
  • death due to asphyxia
  • Disease in wild carnivores
  • mainly due to consumption of meat from
    anthrax-affected animals shot as food for
    carnivores in game farms

13
PathogenesisBasic principles apply across species
  • Pigs
  • form of cutaneous anthrax (bullnose)
  • lesions acquired through rooting behavior,
    contaminated with spores
  • Carnivores
  • pharyngeal anthrax (exposure to spores in
    infected meat)
  • Ruminants
  • almost exclusively septicemic anthrax
  • initiated by GI exposure to spores
  • little known of specific steps by which spores
    cross pharyngeal, intestinal mucosa

14
PathogenesisCapsule
  • Key aspect of virulence
  • Nontoxic, serves as an impedin impedes
    phagocytosis
  • Vegetative cells released by dead/ dying
    macrophages protected from further phagocytosis
    by capsule
  • Polymer of D-glutamic acid
  • production enhanced by Na bicarbonate
  • Nonencapsulated isolates essentially avirulent
  • basis for active immunization of animals against
    anthrax
  • Capsule gene is plasmid-borne

15
PathogenesisSpores
  • Rare in blood and internal organs
  • Sporulation inhibited by CO2 (in carcasses)
  • Form in well aerated cultures
  • Vegetative phase killed by heat, carcass
    autolysis

16
Pathogenesis
  • Spores engulfed by, germinate in macrophages
  • Vegetative cells escape from phagosome, replicate
    in cytoplasm
  • Infection may remain localized (eg, cutaneous
    anthrax)
  • Local antiphagocytic effects of toxins, capsule
    encourage spread to LN (eg, gastrointestinal
    anthrax)
  • Bacterial multiplication in LN gt toxemia,
    bacteremia (especially in pulmonary anthrax)

17
Pathogenesis
  • Evidence for toxin production
  • antibiotic-mediated termination of late-stage
    bacteremia in guinea pigs did not prevent death
  • toxin isolated from plasma was lethal IV,
    edemagenic ID
  • activities neutralized by antisera
  • Three proteins purified edema factor (EF, or
    Factor I), protective antigen (PA, or Factor 2),
    and lethal factor (LF, of Factor 3)
  • Mimic features of infection

18
Pathogenesis
  • PA interacts with LF or EF, binds to membrane
    receptor
  • LF, EF ranslocated to cytosol
  • PA is major immunogen in vaccines
  • Edema due to adenylate cyclase activity of EF
  • catalyzes production of intracellular cAMP
  • regulated by eukaryotic calcium-binding protein
    calmodulin
  • may increase susceptibility by disrupting
    cytokine response of monocytes and suppressing
    neutrophil function
  • Lethal factor zinc metalloproteinase
  • cleaves kinases, disrupts signal transduction
  • lyses macrophages

19
Toxin Activity Factors I, II, III
20
Therapy of Anthrax
  • Ciprofloxacin, doxycycline, penicillins
  • Therapy must be administered early, continued for
    weeks
  • Point of no return 12 hr antemortem
  • guinea pigs inoculated ID
  • streptomycin Rx before number reached 3 x 108
    CFU/ml course of disease reversed, guinea pigs
    survived
  • Rx administered after 3 x 108 death, in spite
    of greatly reduced number of bacteria

21
Bacillus anthracis in BW/BT
  • Stability of spores, transmission by respiratory
    route
  • High mortality of resulting disease
  • 50 kg spores released upwind of city of 0.5
    million people
  • 220,000 cases of anthrax
  • 95,000 deaths
  • Agricultural bioterrorism
  • Germans (WWI) Allied horses (Argentina, US,
    Romania, France)
  • British (WWII)
  • drilled holes into pelleted dairy cattle feed
  • inserted capillary tubes filled with anthrax
    spores
  • intended to drop from planes (never done)
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