Title: Current Diseases
1Current Diseases
- Staphylococcus
- Clostridia
- Food-borne bacteria
- Malaria
- Influenza
- Common cold
- HIV
- HPV
2Staphylococcus G coccus
- S. aureus and S. epidermidis (and 21 others).
- S. aureus much worse, S. epi an opportunist.
- Sturdy, salt tolerant, fac anaerobes clusters
- S. epidermidis common on skin, S. aureus less.
- Diseases of S. aureus
- Invasive skin diseases (rashes, abscesses)
- systemic diseases (bacteremia, organ and bone
infections) - Toxin toxic shock syndrome, scalded skin
syndrome, food poisoning - Diseases spread by fomites and direct contact.
3Characteristics of S. aureus infections
tray.dermatology.uiowa.edu/ DIB/SSSS-002.htm
www.omv.lu.se/.../ rorelse/popup/01d1x.htm
4S. aureus virulence factors Rx
- Capsules, hyaluronidase, staphylokinase,
beta-lactamases (destroy penicillins),
leukocidins - Toxins various, including TSS toxin, exfoliatin,
and enterotoxins (heat stable) - 95 resistant to penicillin, but now many
resistant to methicillin, oxacillin. Treatment
usually clindamycin (oral) or vancomycin (IV). - S.aureus carried by 30-40
- Well adapted to life with humans
- http//www.textbookofbacteriology.net/staph.html
5Clostridium G rods
- Strict anaerobes! Endospore formers. Toxigenic
- Common in soil, sewage animal GI tracts
- Produce neurotoxins, enterotoxins, histolytic
toxins - Four important species C. perfringens, C.
botulinum, C. tetani, and C. difficile. - C. perfringens
- Food poisoning cramps and diarrhea
- From injury myonecrosis to gas gangrene
- Fermentation in tissues, killing of tissues and
spread of cells into anaerobic areas. - Oxygen treatment, debridement, amputation
6More clostridia
- C. difficile normal GI microbiota
- Cause of pseudomembranous colitis, resulting from
overgrowth following broad spectrum antibiotics - Damage to GI wall can lead to serious illness
- Nosocomial infection, easily transmitted
- C.botulinum cause of botulism
- Usually acquired by ingestion intoxication
- Food borne, infant (no honey), wound
- Produces neurotoxin, inhibits acetylcholine
release - Flaccid paralysis Botox deadly poison / beauty
- Mouse bioassay administer antitoxin
7Opposing muscle groups
When biceps contracts, triceps relaxes. When
triceps contracts, biceps relaxes. Excitatory
neurons send signal to contract, inhibitory
neurons send signal to NOT contract.
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/sv/thumb/d/d
d/185px-Muscles_biceps_triceps.jpg
8Function of nerves
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/fr/thumb/e/e
4/200px-Synapse.png
http//www.people.virginia.edu/dp5m/phys_304/figu
res/motor_unit.jpg
9More clostridia-2
- C. tetani cause of tetanus
- Growth in anaerobic wounds, makes tetanus toxin
- Toxin prevents action of inhibitory neurons
- Opposing muscle pairs both contract
- Spastic paralysis, leading to death.
- Recommendation is booster shot every 10 years
- Toxoid vaccine, with diphtheria toxoid
- No natural immunity you would die first.
10Gram negative rods
- Enteric bacteria
- Gram negative, rod shaped, facultative anaerobes,
non-spore forming, oxidase negative
Proteobacteria - Possess endotoxin
- Medically significant but taxonomically similar
- Distinguished with biochemical tests and
serological tests. - Serological tests using specific antibodies (as
found in serum) to distinguish small differences
in surface molecules of bacteria.
11http//www.ratsteachmicro.com/Assets/Enterobacteri
aceae/Enterobact_diagram2.gif
12E. coli friend or foe?
- E. coli cause of 90 of urinary tract infections
- Most strains common to GI tract, not harmful
there. - Strains have fimbriae needed for attachment
- Proanthocyanidins in cranberry juice interfere
- E. coli common cause of diarrhea
- Many strains possess genes (some on plasmids)
that code for additional virulence factors like
exotoxins which cause disease - E. coli O157H7 possesses shiga toxin strain
causes hemolytic uremia syndrome, damages
kidneys. - E coli strains classified as EHEC, EIEC, EPEC,
etc. - Enterohemorrhagic, enteroinvasive, etc.
13Truly pathogenic enterics
- Salmonella species so closely related that they
are really all S. enterica. But medically,
species epithets still used S. typhi and others.
Divided serologically. - Present in eggs, poultry, on animals such as
reptiles - Large dose results in food poisoning diarrhea,
fever, etc. - Cells phagocytized by intestinal lining cells,
kill cells causing symptoms, may pass through
into blood. - S. typhi typhoid fever. Spread through body
- Gall bladder as reservoir Typhoid Mary
- http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/typhoid/
- Importance of clean water and sewage treatment.
14Truly pathogenic enterics-2
- Shigella especially S. sonnei (most common) and
S. dysenteriae (most serious) cause shigellosis. - Food, flies, fingers, feces, fomites very small
infectious dose, personal hygiene important in
prevention. - Infection of intestinal lining damaged, cells
pass directly from cell to cell cramps,
diarrhea, bloody stools. - S. dysenteriae produces shiga toxin which
inhibits protein synthesis, increases damage. - Most serious problem with diarrheal diseases in
general is dehydration.
15Gram negative curved rods
- Vibrio comma shaped
- Like enteric but oxidase positive polar flagella
- Halotolerant to halophilic, grow in estuarine and
marine environments - V. cholerae cause of cholera
- Toxin-mediated severe diarrhea
- Salt, fluid leave intestinal cells, patient dies
of dehydration. - Oral rehydration therapy (ORT) water, salts, and
glucose, now saving lives. - Causes pandemics that spread around the world
- Lack of adequate sewage treatment
16Campylobacter
- Campylobacter jejuni number one cause of
bacterial gastroenteritis zoonotic - More common than Salmonella and Shigella combined
for food borne disease. - Most retail chickens are contaminated improperly
cooked chicken and contaminated milk typical
vehicles. - Low infectious dose
http//www.shef.ac.uk/staff/newsletter/vol23no10/i
mages/campylobacter.gif
17Helicobacter pylori
- Cause of ulcers and gastritis
- 2005 Nobel Prize for Medicine or physiology to
Barry Marshall and J Robin Warren - Unusual because it can live in stomach
- Produces urease enzyme
- Released ammonia neutralizes stomach acid,
irritates stomach lining. - Basis for radioactive urease test.
- Correlated with stomach cancer.
http//s99.middlebury.edu/BI330A/STUDENTS/KASSIS/i
mages/pylori1b.jpg
18Rogues gallery-4
- Sporozoans
- Plasmodium the cause of malaria, several
species - Involves mosquito, liver, red blood cells in a
complex life cycle. - Features a synchronous bursting of RBCs with
fever, delerium, followed by rest and recovery,
then cycle - Number one cause of global mortality and morbidity
Yearly 300-500 million new cases 1 million
deaths.
Intracellular plasmodia
www.sirinet.net/ jgjohnso/plasmodium.html
19Life cycle of Plasmodium
www.sirinet.net/ jgjohnso/plasmodium.html
20In the poorest parts of the world, where
effective window screens are lacking,
insecticide-treated bed nets are arguably the
most cost-effective way to prevent malaria
transmission. One bed net costs just 10 to buy
and deliver to individuals in need. One bed net
can safely last a family for about four years,
thanks to a long-lasting insecticide woven into
the net fabric.
21Orthomyxovirus
- Influenza a serious respiratory disease
- Virus has a segmented genome
- 8 different RNA molecules
- Spikes Hemagglutinin and Neuraminidase
- Major antigens recognized by immune system
- Antigenic drift and shift
- Drift small mutations, making host susceptible
- Requires new vaccine each year
- Shift major mixing of RNAs, whole new virus.
22View of flu
http//www.astrosurf.org/lombry/Bio/virus-influenz
a.jpg http//www-micro.msb.le.ac.uk/3035/3035pic
s/flusection.jpg
23Nature of influenza
- Attack on respiratory tract
- Kills ciliated epithelial cells, allows bacterial
infections. - Release of interferon from cells causes symptoms
- H antigen (hemagglutinin) for attachment
- That it agglutinates RBCs is an artifact
- N antigen neuraminidase
- Cuts of the sugar on the glycoprotein receptor
- Allows new virions to escape from cell without
getting stuck
24Role of H and N spikes and host cell
polysaccharide
25influenza
- Changes in H and N (antigenic shift)
- Mixing of viruses that infect birds, pigs,
produce new strains able to jump to humans. - New antigenic type leaves population unprotected
- Numerous epidemics throughout history
- Flu of 1918-1919 killed 20 million
- Asia watched very carefully bird flu?
- Flu vaccines made from deactivated viruses
- Slow process (vaccine made in eggs), so every
year correct strains are guessed. - Cell culture would be quicker but more
26The Common cold
- Rhinoviruses have many serotypes
- Variants, caused by easy mutation of RNA
- Immune system cant recognize all differences,
but some protection with age. - Multiplies in narrow temperature range,
nose/sinus cooler than body temperature - Other cold viruses
- Coronavirus (best known cousin causes SARS)
- Adenovirus (DNA virus), some serotypes cause GI
infections
27HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus
- Host range
- Main types of cells infected T helper cells and
dendritic cells (including macrophages,
microglia) - Have CD4 and CCR5 glycoproteins on surface
- Infection process
- RNA is copied into cDNA by reverse transcriptase
- cDNA inserts into host chromosome
- New RNA made
- Protein precursor made, then processed assembly
occurs - Virions bud through cell membrane
28Disease process
- Chronic infection
- T cells continually made, continually destroyed
- Eventually, host loses
- AIDS diagnosis
- Acquired Immuno Deficiency Syndrome
- CD4 cell count below 200/µl
- opportunistic infections
- Examples of opportunistic infections
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP pneumonia)
- Kaposis sarcoma Tuberculosis several others
29Prevention and Treatment
- Prevention is easy
- Practice monogamous sex, avoid shared needles
- HIV cannot be spread by casual contact, skeeters
- Drug treatment
- Nucleoside analogs such as AZT
- Protease inhibitors prevent processing of viral
proteins
Nifty animation at http//highered.mcgraw-hill.co
m/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter24/animati
on__hiv_replication.html
30HPV
- Papilloma virus
- Cause of warts, in this case, genital warts
- Virus tricks cell into preparing for cell
division - Protein E7 binds to pRB
- Leads to greater susceptibility to cancer,
particularly cervical cancer (and penile and anal
cancer) - Especially those viral strains that arent good
at causing actual warts - CDC researchers estimated 20 million people in
the US have human papillomavirus type16 (HPV-16)
infections (50 of all cervical cancers)
31Gardasil
- New vaccine
- Protects against HPV types 16, 18, 6, and 11
- These biotypes account for 70 of cases of
cervical cancer and 90 of cases of genital
warts. - Vaccine a recombinant vaccine w/ capsid proteins
- Estimate 3,700 to die of cervical cancer in 2006
- Controversy should it be mandatory?
- Religious right, big Pharmaceutical lobby, etc.