Title: How I Spent My Spring Break
1How I Spent My Spring Break
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4Ireland Are Grand Slam Champions! Finally, after
61 years of pain, let the party start A late drop
goal from Ronan O'Gara steered Ireland to a
tension-filled 17-15 win over Wales and the
nation's first Grand Slam since 1948.
5The Bacteria
6PHYLUM 1 PROTEOBACTERIA
7Purple Phototrophic Bacteria
Liquid cultures showing colors due to various
carotenoid pigments
8Internal membranes of purple phototrophic
bacteria. (flat sheets-top picture and spherical
vesicles-bottom picture)
9Purple Phototrophic Bacteria
- Anoxygenic photosynthesis
- Bacteriochlorophyll
- Habitat bottom waters of some lakes
- Examples
- Rhodospirillum
- Purple Sulfur Bacteria
10The Nitrifying Bacteria
- Examples
- Nitrosomonas, Nitrobacter
- Chemolithotrophs
- Widespread in soil and water (useful in sewage
treatment)
11Sulfur-Oxidizing Bacteria
- Example
- Thiobacillus
- Beggiatoa
- Chemolithotroph (obtain Energy from oxidizing
sulfur compounds)
Thiobacillus
Beggiatoa (note sulfur granules)
12Pseudomonas and the Pseudomonads
13Pseudomonas
- Gram negative rods with polar flagella
- Metabolically versatile as a group, nutritionally
adept. - Opportunistic pathogens
- Burns, wounds, UTI, abscesses, septicemia
- Often carry plasmids with genes for antibiotic
resistance
14Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria
- Free living
- Azotobacter, Azomonas
- Symbiotic with plant roots
- Rhizobium
Legume roots showing Root Nodules
15Neisseria
- Gram negative cocci
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Neisseria mengitidis
N. gonorrhoeae diplococci in pus smear
16Gonorrhea diagnosis
17http//www.staysafe.co.nz/index.html
STD Web Site
18Enteric Bacteria
- Family Enterobacteriaceae
- Facultative anaerobes
- Gram negative rods
- Extremely well studied, very common pathogens
19Family Enterobacteriaceae
- Escherichia
- Shigella
- Salmonella
- Proteus
- Enterobacter
- Klebsiella
- Yersinia
- Serratia
20Family Enterobacteriaceae
- Escherichia
- Some strains produce enterotoxins (EEC) and cause
diarrhea - Fimbriae to aid adherence
- Food-borne disease, UTI, etc, etc, etc.
- Indicator of fecal contamination
21Escherichia coli
- pathogenic strains frequent agents of infantile
diarrhea greatest cause of mortality among
babies - causes 70 of travelers diarrhea
- causes 50-80 UTI
- indicator of fecal contamination in water
22Escherichia coli O157H7
The Ready-To-Eat Spinach outbreak of 06
23E. coli O157H7
- E. coli O157H7 is one of hundreds of strains of
the bacterium Escherichia coli. Although most
strains are harmless, this strain produces a
powerful toxin that can cause severe illness. E.
coli O157H7 has been found in the intestines of
healthy cattle, deer, goats, and sheep.
24Escherichia coli O157H7
- Escherichia coli O157H7 is a leading cause of
foodborne illness. Based on a 1999 estimate,
73,000 cases of infection and 61 deaths occur in
the United States each year. - Infection with E. coli often leads to bloody
diarrhea, and occasionally to kidney failure. - People can become infected with E.coli O157H7 in
a variety of ways. - Though most illness has been associated with
eating undercooked, contaminated ground beef,
people have also become ill from eating
contaminated bean sprouts or fresh leafy
vegetables such as lettuce and spinach.
25E. Coli 0157H7 outbreak
2006 Spinach-associated outbreak
1-4 5-9 10-14 15
- September 28, 2006 187 people infected in 26
states (97 hospitalized29 developed HUS)
26Forensic use of DNA patternsDNA Fingerprints
The E. coli outbreak in spinach was investigated
using DNA fingerprinting techniques to trace the
strain of bacteria.
27Newer Outbreaks
- Nestle Toll House cookie dough (E. coli) June
2009) http//www.cdc.gov/ecoli/2009/0630.html
(72 cases in 30 states) - Ground beef (E. coli) ( July 2008)
http//www.cdc.gov/ecoli/june2008outbreak/ (49
cases in 7 states) - Pepperoni pizza (E.coli) (Oct-Nov 2007)
http//www.cdc.gov/ecoli/2007/october/103107.html
(21 cases in 10 states)
28Family Enterobacteriaceae
- Shigella
- closely related to E.coli
- causes bacillary dystentery
- Salmonella
- causes diarrhea
- food-borne illnesses
29Salmonella outbreak (Aug 2006 thru May 2007)
- CDC confirms Salmonella in peanut butter
- Over 600 people confirmed infected in 47 states
30Salmonella outbreak (Jan-March 2008)
- Between January 18 and March 5, 2008, state
health departments identified 50 ill persons in
16 states infected with Salmonella (Litchfield
strain ) with the same genetic fingerprint
Cantaloupe from Honduras is the likely source of
the illness.
31Salmonella contamination of drinking water March
2008
- Salmonella Cases Top 200 in Colorado MONDAY, MAR.
24, 2008 By AP - Contaminated Colo. water system flushed Tue Mar
25, 720 PM ET - ALAMOSA, Colo. - Crews started pumping chlorine
through this city's water system Tuesday to rid
it of salmonella bacteria that has sickened
nearly 250 people
32A recent Salmonella in peanut butter
outbreak(Late 2008 through 2009)
33Proteus
- Swarming motility
- Frequent cause of UTI
34Enterobacteriaceae
- Enterobacter
- Widely found in water, soil, and intestinal
tracts - E. aerogenes
- Klebsiella
- Klebsiella pneumoniae (pneumonia, septicemia)
large capsule
35Enterobacteriaceae
- Yersinia
- Y. pestis
- plague
36Serratia
- Serratia marcescens
- Red pigment
- Soil, water, intestinal tract
37Vibrio
- Curved Gram negative rods
- Vibrio cholerae
- Potent enterotoxin? profuse watery diarrhea.
Sudden loss of fluid and electrolytes may cause
shock, circulatory collapse, and death
38Vibrio
- Vibrio parahaemolyticus
- halophile
- acute gastroenteritis
- ingestion of bacteria in raw or undercooked
seafood, usually oysters
39Rickettsias
- Obligate intracellular parasites
- Rickettsia rickettsii
- Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Fever headache ? rash ? vomiting and diarrhea
- Ehrlichia species
- Ehrlichiosis (begins with flu-like symptoms and
may progress to fatality or long-term
neurological, resp. or renal complications)
40Spiral shaped bacteria
- Campylobacter
- (diarrhea)
- Helicobacter pylori
- Gastric ulcer (carcinoma)
- Magnetospirillum megnetotactium
Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM).
41Stalked Bacteria
42Gliding Bacteria
Myxobacteria
43Sulfur-Reducing Proteobacteria
- Reduce sulfate or sulfur to hydrogen sulfide
under anaerobic conditions - Desulfovibrio
44PHYLUMS 2 AND 3 GRAM-POSITIVE BACTERIA AND
ACTINOBACTERIA
45Gram Positive Cocci
46Staphylococcus
SEM showing grape-like clusters
47Staphylococcus
- Catalase , halotolerant
- S. epidermidis - nonpathogenic normal flora
(generally) - S. aureus
- Causes a multitude of diseases
- Exotoxins
- Entertoxin?vomiting, nausea, diarrhea
- Most common cause of food poisoning
- TSS toxic shock syndrome
- Highly resistant to antibiotics
48S. aureus diseases
- Ranges from localized to systemic
- localized -abscess, folliculitis, furuncle,
carbuncle, impetigo - systemic osteomyelitis, bacteremia
- toxigenic disease food intoxication, scalded
skin syndrome, toxic shock syndrome
49S. aureus
Skin Lesions
Boil or Furuncle
Carbuncle
50S. aureus
Osteomyelitis
51S. aureus
Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS)
Exfoliative toxin
Epidermal shedding/separation
52Staphylococcus aureus
- Food Poisoning
- Food contaminated by handling with bare hands.
Bacteria grow and produce toxin. - Refrigerate food to prevent growth. Heating
doesnt always destroy toxin. - Symptoms usually start within 1-6 hours after
eating contaminated food (usually gone in a day) - Symptoms include diarrhea, vomiting, nausea,
cramps
53Staphylococcus aureus
- Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS)
- First linked to use of ultra-absorbent tampons
that bound Mg ions and created a favorable
environment for increased colonization and growth
of vaginal S. aureus and increased TSS toxin
production. - Toxin enters bloodstream and causes fever,
vomiting organ damage and potential fatality. - Height of problem 1980-198415,000 affected/yr
with 15 mortality.
54SuperBug ?
- MRSA Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
- A strain of staph that is highly resistant to
broad-spectrum antibiotics. - Once found almost exclusively in hospital
settings the bacteria is now showing up in the
wider community - People can be colonized by the bacteria (skin and
nose primarily) and be healthy but act as
carriers to spread the microbe. - It is thought that perhaps 25-30 of people may
harbor S.aureus.
55MRSA has become a subject for some intensive
public education efforts
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57MRSA-2
- A CDC survey completed recently suggests that in
2005 there were 94,000 cases of MRSA in the US
and that perhaps 19,000 people died. (A higher
rate than AIDS in the US) - 85 of the cases were in hospitals, nursing homes
etc. But many are concerned about the large
number of infections acquired in normal community
environments. - Spread may be by hands (direct contact) or from
contaminated surfaces. - Infections range from an inconsequential skin
lesion to a fatal septicemia or pneumonia
58Streptococcus
59Streptococcus
- Catalse negative, Many pathogen species
- S. mutans - common cause of dental caries
- S. pneumoniae
- S. pyogenes
- strep throat
- flesh-eating bacteria
- Rheumatic fever
60Pharyngitis and Tonsilitis Strep Throat
Note white pus patches on tonsils
61Toxic sequelae to Strep throat
http//www.cnn.com/video//video/health/2008/10/22
/tessman.strep.throat.kare
62Rheumatic fever is a possible sequelae to S.
pyogenes infection. Antibodies against the
bacteria may cross-react with host tissue leading
to damage of heart valves
63Impetigo lesions
Streptococcal skin infections
Erysipelas
64FLESH-EATING BacteriaNecrotizing fasciitis
Streptococcus pyogenes
65Gram Positive endospore formers
66Bacillus anthracis With central endospores
Clostridium perfringens With subterminal
endospores
Clostridium tetani With terminal endospores
67Bacillus
- gram-positive, endospore-forming, motile rods
- versatile in degrading complex macromolecules
- source of antibiotics
- primary habitat is soil
68Bacillus anthracis
- virulence factors capsule exotoxins
- 3 types of anthrax
- Cutaneous spores enter through skin, black
sore- eschar least dangerous - Pulmonary inhalation of spores
- Gastrointestinal ingested spores
- treated with penicillin or tetracycline
- vaccine toxoid 6X over 1.5 years annual
boosters - dead livestock burned/chemically decontaminated
before burial to prevent soil contamination
69Bacillus anthracis
- Biological warfare threat.
- Letter attacks of 2001
- Resulted in only 22 cases of anthrax and five
deaths - Great disruption and concern
- More than 32,000 people who may have come into
contact with the letters were given prophylactic
antibiotics.
70Cutaneous anthrax showing the eschar
71Clostridium
- Obligate anaerobes (lack an electron transport
system) - Producers of potent extoxins
- C. tetani? tetanus (toxin blocks inhibitory
neurons leading to spastic paralysis)
72- Clostridium perfringens
- gas gangrene
- food poisoning
C. perfringens wound infection
73Clostridium perfringens
- treatment of gangrene
- debridement of diseased tissue
- large doses of cephalosporin or penicillin
- hyperbaric oxygen
Hyperbaric treatment chamber Exposure to
increased oxygen levels inhibits anaerobes and
speeds healing
74Clostridium botulinum
- Botulism food poisoning (an intoxication)
spores are in soil, may contaminate vegetables
improper canning does not kill spores they
germinate in the can producing botulinum toxin - toxin causes paralysis by preventing release of
acetylcholine (flaccid paralysis)
75Clostridium botulinum
- Botox
- In 2005, almost 3.3 million procedures were
performed with FDA-approved BOTOX Cosmetic. - BOTOX Cosmetic works by temporarily reducing the
contractions of the muscles that cause the
persistent frown lines that have develop over
time. - The benefits may last up to 4 months
76Clostridium difficile
- normal resident of colon, in low numbers
- causes antibiotic-associated colitis
- treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics kills
the other bacteria, allowing C. difficile to
overgrow - produces entertoxins that damage intestine
- major cause of diarrhea in hospitals
77C. difficile infection. Lining of the colon
as seen via a sigmoidoscope
Mild
Severe pseudomembranous colitis
78Gram positive rods (non-endospore forming)
- Lactobacillus
- Ferment carbohydrates to lactic acid. The
acidity inhibits many competing bacteria and
creates an ecological niche where they have the
advantage. - Major inhabitant of the vaginal tract
- Used in production of many foods
- L. delbrueckii used in yogurt production
- L. acidophilus used in acidophilus milk production
79Corynbacterium diptheriae
- gram-positive irregular bacilli (pleiomorphic)
- Diptheria (prior to 1935 diptheria was the 1
infectious killer of children in the U.S.) - Produces a potent exotoxin
- pseudomembrane formation can cause asphyxiation
80Diptheria
- 1990s epidemic in former Soviet Union countries.
- Reduced vaccination programs resulted in greatly
reduced herd immunity - Multitude of susceptible persons allowed spread
in the community. - Most cases are in children aged 1-10 in crowded
settings.
81Gram positive filamentous bacteria
- Streptomyces
- Primarily soil organisms
- Produce antibiotics
Arrows point to Streptomyces colonies surrounded
by zones of inhibition
82Cell-Wall-Less Bacteria
- Mycoplasma
- Very small (smallest organisms capable of
independent growth) - They dont stain Gm but are clearly related to
other Gram positives - Require sterols to strengthen their membranes
- M. pneumoniae causes a form of walking
pneumonia
83Acid-Fast Bacteria Mycobacterium
84Mycobacteria
- gram-positive irregular bacilli
- acid-fast staining
- strict aerobes
- produce catalase
- possess mycolic acids a unique type of
peptidoglycan - do not form capsules, flagella or spores
- grow slowly
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium leprae
85Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- produces no exotoxins or enzymes that contribute
to infectiousness - contain complex waxes other substances that
prevent destruction by lysosomes of macrophages - transmitted by airborne respiratory droplets
- only 5-10 infected people develop clinical
disease
86Tuberculosis (statistics-1)
- Tuberculosis (TB) kills about two million people
each year - One-third of the world's population is infected
with TB. Five to 10 percent of people who are
infected with TB become sick with TB at some time
during their life - Each year, more than 8 million people become sick
with TB
87Tuberculosis (statistics-2)
- Between 2000 and 2020, it is estimated that
- Nearly one billion people will be newly infected
with TB. - 200 million people will become sick from TB.
- TB will claim at least 35 million lives.
88Treatment of TB
- 6-24 months of at least 2 drugs from a list of 11
- one pill regimen called Rifater (isoniazid,
rifampin, pyrazinamide) - vaccine based on attenuated bacilli Calmet-Guerin
strain of M. bovis used in other countries (not
U.S.) - Success rate of vaccination 80 in children and
20-50 in adults.
89Directly Observed Therapy (DOT)to assure that
medication is actually taken
90MDR (multiple-drug-resistant) TB
- Most TB patients do not complete their full 6-9
month regimen. The TB bacillus becomes resistant
due to incomplete, erratic or inadequate
treatment. - Often a few months into a cumbersome and lengthy
treatment process, patients feel better and may
stop treatment altogether. - Up to 20 of TB cases are drug-resistant in TB
hot-spots - 4 of TB cases globally are resistant to at least
one drug - MDR-TB could be growing as rapidly as 400,000
cases each year
91MDR (multiple-drug-resistant) TB
92Phylum 4 Cyanobacteria
Anabena
Gloeothece
93Cyanobacteria
- Oxygenic photosynthesis, use chlorophyll a
- Great morphological diversity (some unicellular,
some long filaments) - Capable of nitrogen fixation
Oscillatoria
94Phylum 5 Chlamydia
- obligate intracellular parasites
- small gram-negative cell wall
- C. pneumoniae causes an atypical pneumonia that
is serious in asthma patients - C. psittaci causes ornithosis, a zoonosis
transmitted to humans from bird vectors highly
communicable among all birds pneumonia or
flulike infection with fever, lung congestion - C. trachomatis - STD
-
95PHYLUM 10 GREEN SULFUR BACTERIA
- Obligate anaerobes
- Anoxygenic phototrophs, use bacteriochlorophyll
- Can grow in very low light levels
- Oxidize hydrogen sulfide to sulfur and sulfate
- Example Chlorobium
96PHYLUM 11THE SPIROCHETES
- Gram negative, motile, tightly coiled, typically
slender and flexible. - Widespread in aquatic environments and in animals
- Contain flagella that are not free, but are
within the periplasmic space (endoflagellum)
97spirochetes
- Gram negative human pathogens
- Treponema
- Leptospira
- Borrella
98Treponema pallidum
- human is the natural host
- extremely fastidious sensitive, cannot survive
long outside of the host - causes syphilis
- treatment
- penicillin G
99Leptospira
- tight, regular individual coils with a bend or
hook at one or both ends - L. interrogans causes leptospirosis, a zoonosis
- bacteria shed in urine infection occurs by
contact targets kidneys, liver, brain, eyes - sudden high fever, chills, headache, muscle
aches, conjunctivitis, vomiting - 50-60 cases a year in US
100B. burgdorferi - Lyme disease
- transmitted by ticks
- complex 2-year cycle involving mice deer
- nonfatal, slowly progressive syndrome that mimics
neuromuscular rheumatoid conditions - 70 get bulls eye rash
- fever, headache, stiff neck, dizziness
- if untreated can progress to cardiac
neurological symptoms, polyarthritis - tetracycline, amoxicillin
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103Lyme disease
104PHYLUM 12 DEINOCOCCI
- Deinococcus radiodurans
- Most radiation resistant of all known organisms
- Highly efficient DNA repair mechanisms
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106Archaea
107Features of Archaea
- Prokaryotes (no membrane bound nucleus)
- Lack Peptidoglycan in their cell walls
- Genome is circular DNA
- Histone proteins are present
- Ribosomes are more similar to bacteria than
eukaryotes - Many occupy "extreme' environments. Extremophiles
108Extreme Halophiles
- Require very high salt (not just tolerant)
- Most require at least 9 NaCl
- Most require 12-23 NaCl for optimal growth
- Almost all can grow at 32 NaCl
- Example genera Halobacterium Halococcus
109Extreme Halophiles
Seawater evaporation ponds
Great salt lake
African soda lake high alkalinity, high salinity
SEM of halophiles
110Methanogens
- CH4 (methane producers)
- Strict anaerobes
- Example genus Methanococcus
111Methanogens
112Hyperthermophiles
- Most are obligate anaerobes
- Most require S? as part of their metabolic scheme
- Example Genera Sulfolobus Thermococcus Pyrolobus
- Heat stable biomolecules
- Habitats
113Hyperthermophiles