Title: Streptococci Lecture 4
1StreptococciLecture 4
- Medical Microbiology
- SBM 2044
2Streptococcus
- 3 types of streptococci classification
- Early studies distinguished 3 broad groups on
blood agar
- Group-specific antigens (Lancefield
classification) by serological reactivity of
extracted cell wall antigens (A ? U) - Species biochemical tests
3 4- GAS diseases changing patterns
- Changes in virulence of prevailing GAS strains ?
- Changes in social conditions less crowding?
- Changes in herd immunity to prevailing virulent
strains?
- Reemergence of severe invasive infections
- Sporadic cases since mid-1980s new virulent
strains?
- Streptococcal toxic shock
- Some cases associated with obviously severe
tissue infections
- Many others shock following mild or
unapparent infections
- Sporadic implies predisposing factors
5Group A Streptococci
Principle sites of infection
Invasive infections
Local spread (e.g.)
Other tissues
Pharyngitis, tonsillitis, otitis media, sinusitis.
Pharynx
Bacteraemia or septicaemia
Skin pyroderma, erysipelas
Occasionally
Streptococcal Toxic Shock
Extensive necrosis (necrotizing fasciitis)
Deep-seated tissues
- Puerperal fever (childbirth fever) in women
major killer in past
6Streptococcus pyogenes
Tonsillitis
Follicular tonsillitis
7Streptococcus pyogenes
Impetigo
Erysipleas
Cellulitis
8Streptococcus pyogenes
Necrotizing fasciitis
(lt 24 hours post surgery)
9Streptococcus pyogenes
10Streptococcus pyogenes
Scarlet fever
11Group A Streptococci
- Encounter
- Carriers appear asymptomatic
- Person-to-person spread is mediated by
respiratory droplets or by direct contact to skin - Entry
- For pyodermal infections, streptococci need to
gain entry into deeper layers of skin - In pharyngeal infections, to prevent from being
swept away, GAS must lipoteichoic acid (LTA),
protein F and M protein
12Group A Streptococci
- Spread and multiplication
- Most GAS remain localised to the site of initial
infection - In pharynx and tonsils, may result in erythema
and exudate associated with strep throat - Peritonsillar abscess (quinsy) or spread to
adjacent structures (mastoid and middle ear) - Impetigo in skin
- Erysipelas and cellulitis in deeper layers of
skin - GAS may spread laterally in deep tissues, by
secreting enzymes - necrotizing fasciitis and myositis
13Secreted protein Function
Proteases
Hyaluronidase spreading factor
Streptolysins S and O form pores in the host membranes
Deoxyribonucleases (DNase)
Streptokinase bind to human protein plasminogen, and convert this to plasmin plasmin degrades fibrin
14GAS virulence factors Excreted products
Produced by all strains
- Various subtle effects at sub-lytic
concentrations
b-haemolysis
Thiol-activated toxin
(NB Salyers Whitt misleading - neither are
enzymes )
15SLO- and SLS-defective mutants
- murine s.c. model - weight loss at 24h post
infection
Sterile
3 x 108 cfu
3 x 106 cfu
0.5
3 x 107 cfu
3 x 109 cfu
3 x 105 cfu
0.0
- 0.5
- 1.0
Weight gain (grams)
- 1.5
- 2.0
- 2.5
slo?1- sagB?1
sagB?1
WT
slo?1
PBS
16M protein
- Important for cell adherence to keratinocytes
- Prevent opsonization by complement
- bind to fibrinogen and interferes with the
alternative pathway - bind with host complement control proteins and
inhibit opsonins formation - Hypervariable regions of M protein are antigenic,
but there are gt 100 M protein serotypes
17Hyaluronic acid capsule
- Antiphagocytic structure on bacterial surface
- Hyaluronic acid is abundant in human connective
tissue - hence GAS can camouflaged themselves - But capsule may interfere with the adherence of
GAS to epithelial cells - so GAS shed the capsule during the early stages
of infection using hyaluronidase
18Damage
- GAS can evoke an intense inflammatory responses
in tissues - Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins (SPE)
- SPE A, B and C cause rash, a characteristic of
scarlet fever - SPE A and C are bacterial superantigens that
activate a large subset of T cells - Immunologically mediated disease (nonsuppurative
sequelae) - acute rheumatic fever (ARF)
- acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis
19Diagnosis
- Impetigo a cluster of small vesicles on a pink
base that breaks down to honey-coloured crusts - Erysipelas a raised, bright red patch of skin
- More difficult to diagnose streptococcal
pharyngitis - rapid strep tests
- throat cultures (throat swab)
20Treatment and Prevention
- Penicillin 10 day oral therapy
- Erythromycin or other macrolide antibiotics for
individuals allergic to penicillin
21Streptococcus pyogenes
- Strains distinguished by M serotyping
- Devised by Lancefield in 1920s, using panels of
absorbed sera - to hot-HCl extracted antigen, she called M
antigen
- gt 100 distinct M types of GAS distinguished
since then - - called M1, M2, M3, M4,..etc.
- Highly versatile pathogen
- Immunologically-mediated diseases
22Group A Streptococci
Principle sites of infection
Invasive infections
Local spread (e.g.)
Other tissues
Pharyngitis, tonsillitis, otitis media, sinusitis.
Pharynx
Bacteraemia or septicaemia
Skin pyroderma, erysipelas
Occasionally
Streptococcal Toxic Shock
Extensive necrosis (necrotizing fasciitis)
Deep-seated tissues
- Puerperal fever (childbirth fever) in women
major killer in past
23Streptococcus pyogenes
Tonsillitis
Follicular tonsillitis
24Streptococcus pyogenes
Impetigo
Erysipleas
Cellulitis
25Streptococcus pyogenes
Necrotizing fasciitis
(lt 24 hours post surgery)
26Streptococcus pyogenes
27Scarlet fever
Streptococcus pyogenes
28Toxic Shock
- In past probably linked to scarlet fever
- Since mid-1980s associated with new highly
virulent - strains - rapidly fulminating
- some cases in previously healthy young adults,
no obvious - predisposing factors
- Associated with production of superantigenic
toxins, but - other factors also involved
29Acute rheumatic fever (ARF)
- autoimmune disease - triggered only by GAS
pharyngitis
- associated with strong immune response to GAS.
- antibodies and/or T cells X-react with host
antigens? (later)
- Symptoms arise gt 10days after GAS infection
- responsible GAS strain already cleared
- inflammation multiple sites, starting with major
joints (arthritis)
- neurological disorders (Sydenhams chorea)
- rheumatic heart disease (RHD) (ca 50 cases)
- - damage to heart valves, permanent scaring
in survivors
30Acute rheumatic fever (ARF)
- Initial attack rates low (3 in untreated
pharyngitis)
- High recurrence (up to 50) - increasing in
severity
Widespread prescription of penicillin for sore
throats
Remarkably, GAS have not (yet ?) developed
resistance to penicillins
31GAS infections - complications
Post-streptococcal acute glomerulonephritis
(PSGN)
- Common, but rarely life-treating - some GAS
infections - of either pharynx or skin.
- Symptoms arise some 10 days after infection
- reflect kidney dysfunction, probably involving
inflammation - of glomeruli
- Most probably entrapment of GAS antigen-host
antibody - complexes at basement membranes of glomeruli
- might also involve an autoimmune response
32Normal glomerulus
Glomerulonephritis
Mesangial cell
Mesangial cell intrusion
Endothelial cell, has
100 nm pores
PMN
Basement membrane
Inflammation
Too much large immune complex entrapment ?
Small complexes diffuse thro basement membrane
into urine, but the occasional larger
complex cant is normally removed by mesangial
cell
Example Sequel of some
S. pyogenes infections
33Group B streptococci
- Streptococcus agalactiae are aerobic G
diplococci that are ß-haemolytic on blood agar
plates - found in lower GIT and female genital tracts
- GBS is a leading cause of neonatal sepsis and
meningitis - prevent opsonization and phagocytosis with a
polysaccharide capsule
34Enterococci
- Enterococcus faecalis cause UTI, wound
infections, endocarditis, intraabdominal
abscesses and bacteremia. - Normal flora of GIT and GUT
- resistant to bile and high salt concentrations
- nosocomial infections
- resistance to many antibiotics, often
bacteriostatic - bacterial killing must use a combination
treatment of a ß-lactam and an aminoglycoside