Title: Gram Positive Rods
1Gram Positive Rods
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3Listeria
- Small Gram positive rods or coccobacilli (lt2µm)
- Tolerate wide temperature and pH range
- Small haemolytic colonies on blood agar (ß
haemolysis) - Facultative anaerobes
- Catalase positive, oxidase negative
- Tumbling motility at 25 degrees
- Aesculin hydrolysed
- Do not grow on MacConkey agar
- Environmental
- Outbreaks related to silage
4Listeria spp
- L. monocytogenes meningoencephalitis
- septicaemia
- abortion
- pyogenic infection
- L. ivanovii abortion, systemic infection
- L. innocua non-pathogenic
- L. seeligeri
- L. welshimeri
- L. grayi
5Epidemiology
- Common commensal (tonsils, intestine) and
environmental organisms - grow at temperatures 4 - 45C, pH 6.0 - 9.6
- Incidence relates to management/husbandry,
(silage feeding), seasonal - predisposed by trauma, immunocompromise, hormonal
alterations
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7Diagnosis
- Specimens
- Visceral form liver, kidney or spleen
- Neural form spinal fluid, brain stem
- Abortion placenta, foetal abomasal contents
- Blood smear is not very informative
- Isolation grow aerobically on both blood and
MacConkey agars at 37C for 24-48h - Colonies appear transparent after 24 hours and
greyish in 48 hours. Pathogenic strains show ß
haemolysis - L. Monocytogenes is CAMP ve with Staph aureus
- L. Ivanovii is CAMP ve with Rhodococcus equi
CAMP test
8Listeriosis - Ruminants
- Meningoencephalitis
- Most common form circling disease (small
ruminants) - animal circles in one direction only
- unilateral facial paralysis, difficulty in
swallowing - fever, blindness, headpressing
- paralysis, death in 2 - 3 days
9Listeriosis - Ruminants
- In pregnant animals, may localize in placentomes
- cross-over to amniotic fluid, multiplies
- ingested by fetus, causes fetal death, abortion
- In milking cows, mammary gland can be involved
- subclinical mastitis, contamination of milk
- may survive low temp pasteurization inside MØ
- lengthy survival in nature
- growth at low temperatures
- Entry also by nasal mucosa, conjunctivae
- Direct access to nervous system via dental plates
of trigeminal ganglia
10Pathogenesis
tooth loss cutting naïve/neonatal
pregnancy animal ? ? ?
oral inoculation epithelial invasion
? ? trigeminal nerve
bacteraemia ? ? ? brain stem
neonatal placentitis ?
septicaemia ? meningoencephalitis
abortion circling disease
11Silage and sheep
Listeria encephalitis (bacteria in brain)
A Circling disease in sheep B Cranial nerve
paralysis
12Pathogenic mechanisms
- Facultative intracellular parasites surviving in
macrophages and epithelial cells - Cell uptake induced by bacterial protein
internalin (inlA) - Inside the cell they escape the phagolysosome,
multiply in the cytoplasm and via actin based
motility spread laterally to adjacent cells - They escape epithelium and are taken up by PMN
and macrophages - These cells are killed and the organism may
spread systemically
13Pathogenic mechanisms
- Bacteria polymerize actin, form tails
- hollow mesh forms on surface, left behind as
bacterium moves through cytoplasm, invade
adjacent cells - actin depolymerized as organism moves (turnover)
- Major virulence factor mediating intracellular
survival is a cholesterol binding cytolysin
called listeriolysin (LLO) - Shares 40-50 aa similarity to other thiol
activated toxins - Mediates escape from phagocytic vesicle
14LLO
- Cholesterol-directed pore-forming cytolysin (gt22
members) - Bind to cholesterol-containing membranes
- Insertion
- Oligomerization (20-80 mers)
- Pore (20-30 nM) formation
15Epidemiology of Human Listeriosis
enteric Listeria in animals ? contamination of
carcase, milk or food crops ? Ingestion (pate,
soft cheese, coleslaw) ? colonisation of tonsils
and intestine ? ? immunocompetent immunocompr
omised (neonate, elderly, pregnancy)
? ? asymptomatic
septicaemia meningitis
abortion
16Consequences of human L. monocytogenes infection
17Associated Foods
- Milk products raw pasteurised
- Cheeses
- Meat and poultry products Raw, cooked ready to
eat meat and poultry (sporadic and epidemic) - Seafood fresh, frozen and processed seafood
18Consequences of human L. monocytogenes infection
- Entry via GI tract, 20 h incubation period
- usually asymptomatic/mild, influenza-like
symptoms in adult humans, transient
gastroenteritis - more serious infection immunocompromised
- CNS infections (encephalitis, meningitis), fatal
bacteremia - puerperal sepsis
- crosses placenta ? in utero fetal infection
- stillbirths, preterm labor
- infant born with systemic infection
19Cutaneous listeriosis (in vets)
- 17 cases, all with lesions on fore or upper arms,
or hands - 16 farmers, veterinarians
- 1 butcher
- Most developed lesions 1-4 days after attending
congenitally infected bovines
20Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
- Gram positive rods (1-2.5µm)
- Commensal widespread in animals, infects man
- Grows 4-37C
- Catalase negative, oxidase negative
- Facultative anaerobic, non-motile
- Opaque, pin-point, non-haemolytic colonies
- infection disease mainly in pigs sheep,
turkeys, others - Smooth (S) and rough (R) forms associated with
different diseases - Acute septicaemia in pigs, turkeys, sub-acute
skin lesions in pigs S - Chronic arthritis in sheep, endocarditis in pigs
- R
21Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
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23Pathogenesis
commensal tonsils, RES, bone marrow, many organs
mainly R or R/S depression of host
defences multiplication of virulent strains
(reversion to S?) entry via tonsils or
cuts/abrasions invades neutrophils ? ?
? septicaemia urticarial form arthritis/endoca
rditis fever malaise
persistent anorexia fever
erosive DIC DIC chronic
inflammation haemorrhage lymphadenitis epidermal
lesions fatal ("Diamonds")
24Swine erysipelas (diamond skin disease)
25Actinomycete Group
- Gram positive
- Catalase positive
- Many are acid fast (mycolic acid in cw)
- Slow growing - survive in macrophages
- Pleomorphic (coccobacilli to filamentous). Very
small (lt1µm) - Many saprophytic some opportunist
- Pathogenic genera
- Actinomyces spp.
- Nocardia spp.
- Arcanobacterium spp.
- Dermatophilus spp.
- Corynebacterium spp.
- Eubacterium spp.
- Rhodococcus spp.
26Actinomycete diseases
- Pyogenic
- Granulomatous
- Include abscesses, pyelonephritis,
lymphadenitis, osteomyelitis - Chronic inflammation focal lesions
- Some highly-host adapted
- CMI protective A/bodies mainly non-protective
- In vitro - sensitive to some antibacterials
- In vivo poor response - intracellular location
27Actinomyces
- Actinomyces bovis, Actinomyces viscosus,
Actinomyces suis - (Most) non-acid fast branching rods
- non-motile
- microaerophilic or anaerobic
- Colonies are non-haemolytic, small and white
- Produce pyogenic, granulomatous reactions -
sulphur granules
28Actinomyces bovis
- Normal flora - anaerobic
- Thick yellow pus sulphur granules
- (occ. confused with wooden tongue)
- Causes actinomycosis or Lumpy jaw in cattle
(other tissues). Invasion through wound/rough
feed/damaged mucosa Bone infection
osteomyelitis animal stops eating, loses weight - Soft tissue infection
- Mastitis
29Actinomyces bovis
- Infection endogenous
- Organism lives in the mouth normally
- Pathology the result of tissue trauma, lesions
or prolonged irritation - Treat lesions small, circumscribed surgery,
abscesses drained, packed with gauze and iodine
penicillin
30Sulphur granules
Gram stain, A. bovis
48 hour culture, A. bovis
31Lumpy Jaw
32Actinomyces viscosus
- Mainly dogs (cats, pigs, goats, cattle, horses).
- Fimbriae - adherence to teeth plaque
- Similar lesions to Nocardia (Nocardia rarely
produces granules) - Localised, pyogranulomatous lesions
- Two main conditions - Thoracic lesions (pleural,
pericardial fluid, lung lesions) and
osteomyelitis - Treatment prolonged
- Actinomyces suis mastitis in pigs (sows),
trauma initiates disease
33Nocardia
- Strictly aerobic
- Gram-positive, pleomorphic (filaments, rods,
cocci branching) - Widely distributed soil, water, air, sewage
- 0.5 1.2 µm in size
- Acid fast
- Non-motile
- Non-spore-forming
34Nocardia
- 12 species pathogenic to birds, goats, cats,
dogs, fish, horses, cattle and humans - Nocardia asteroides most frequent nocardial
pathogen subcutaneous infections in dogs - N. brasiliensis pneumonia in horses
- Colonies are vivid white occasionally pigmented
35Nocardia
36Nocardia
- Organism inhaled, in wound or ingested
- Direct or haematogenous spread
- Prevents phagocytosis
- Chronic invasive pyogenic infections (no sulphur
granules) - 3 clinical forms cutaneous, respiratory
(pyothorax) and systemic (pyrexia, cough,
neurological, resembles distemper) - Dogs 3x more common in males, Cats mainly
thoracic infection - Treatment difficult and prolonged not
penicillin
37Dog, Nocardia
Fluid from chest
4 day culture from fluid
38Dermatophilus congolensis
- Facultatively anaerobic
- Gram positive, non acid fast
- filamentous, branching filaments mature they
- fragment and release motile flagellate spores
- Septation of filaments
- zoospores (motile) Beaded, Tram-track the
infectious form - CO2 chemotactic to zoospores zoospores
germinate form filament form new zoospores
repeating the cycle - Pathogenesis
- Commensal/spore entry injury/ wet damage
- Colonisation keratinase production. Aid spread
and growth - Strong host response, neutrophil and lymphocyte
exudation. - EPIDERMIS ONLY
39Dermatophilus congolensis
- Dermatitis cattle, dog, cat, man
- Sheep lumpy wool, strawberry foot
- Horse mud fever, greasy heel, rain scald
- Treatment Pen/Strep. Tetracyclines
- No effective vaccine
Dermatophilus in a horse
Dermatophilus lesions, SHEEP
40Corynebacterium
- Small pleomorphic, Gram-positive rods
- Chinese letters
- Facultatively anaerobic, non-motile
- Catalase positive, oxidase negative
- Pyogenic
- Common commensals
- Colonies are white, small, dry, non-haemolytic
(except C.pseudotuberculosis). - Genus originally created for the important human
pathogen C. diphtheriae, the cause of diphtheria
in man
41CAMP Test
CAMP-Inhibition Test
1. Staphylococcus aureus 2. C.pseudotuberculosis 3
. C.renale 4. Rhodococcus equi
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43Corynebacterial species of veterinary interest
- C. renale group
- C. renale
- C. pilosum
- C. cystitidis
- All cause cystitis and pyelonephritis in cattle
- Diphtheria group
- C. diphtheriae
- C. ulcerans
- C. pseudotuberculosis
- Various diseases of cats, cattle,
- horses, small ruminants and humans
44Corynebacterium renale group
- C. renale gt C. cystitidis gt C. pilosum
- Opportunist highly adapted
- Causes cystitis, pyelonephritis, balanoposthitis
- Predisposing factors - pregnancy, parturition,
post mating - 90 bulls C. cystitidis - prepuce
45Cow with C. renale infection
Urine, C. renale
C. renale on milk agar
46Corynebacterium renale group
- Virulence factors
- Pili - adherence
- Renalin - cell lysis
- Urease
- Caseinase
- Pathogenesis
- Adhere to urogenital mucosa
- Stress
- Proliferation
- Ascending infection
- Inflammation
- Cystitis/pyelonephritis
47The diphtheria group
- Highly-related (based on DNA hybridisation
studies) - C. diphtheriae diphtheria (humans)
- C. pseudotuberculosis various pyogenic
infections - C. ulcerans nasal congestion (cats), mastitis
(cattle) - Susceptible to infection with ß-corynephages
- C. pseudotuberculosis C. ulcerans zoonotic
pathogens - C. diphtheriae normally only a human pathogen
48Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- Occasionally isolated from infected wounds in
horses (potential environmental reservoir?) - Ironically, horses were the original heroes in
fight against diphtheria
An illustration from the Nov. 17, 1894, issue of
Scientific American, showing doctors drawing
blood from a horse to produce antitoxin for
diphtheria
49Corynebacterium ulcerans
- Significant increase in human infections caused
by C. ulcerans - Same organism isolated from several domestic cats
with bilateral nasal discharge (2002-2003) - Strains isolated from domestic cats were found to
exhibit the predominant types observed among
human clinical isolates, suggesting that C.
ulcerans isolated from cats could be a potential
reservoir for human infection
50Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
- C. pseudotuberculosis (pseudes-tuberculosis)
- Thought to have spread from Europe with expanding
colonial powers - 2 biotypes identified
- ovis non-nitrate reducing, infect sheep/goats
(CLA) - equi nitrate reducing, infects predominantly
horses
51Caseous lymphadenitis (CLA)
- Widespread globally
- Fibrous, encapsulated lesions at various sites
- Devastating visceral form reported in USA
- Significant financial losses to producers/animal
welfare - deaths, carcass condemnations at slaughter
- decreased wool, milk production
- decreased reproductive performance
52Pathogenesis
- C. pseudotuberculosis gains entry to host through
wounds (shearing, fighting, etc.) - Normally transfer of pus (direct contact or
flies) - Pus contains millions of
- bacterial cells
- Aerosol route of disease
- transfer also suggested
- From point of entry,
- drains to local drainage
- lymph node
53Pathogenesis
- Cells are phagocytosed as part of innate immune
response survive and replicate within
macrophages - Focus of infection established within lymph node
- Multiple microscopic foci coalesce to form
pyogranuloma - Lesion encased within fibrous capsule.
Infiltration of immune cells forms caseous
abscess - Classic onion ring appearance
54Pathogenesis
- Trafficking of infected phagocytes to other
tissues allows dissemination of infection - Cutaneous CLA Superficial lymph nodes,
occasionally skin - Visceral CLA (25) lungs, kidneys, brain,
internal lymph nodes - Mediastinal abscesses place pressure on trachea ?
restricted rumination ? chronic wasting
55Pathogenesis
- Virulence factors
- Phospholipase D (PLD)
- Sphingomyelinase, antichemotactic, lethal for
neutrophils, complement depletion, increased
vascular permeability - Mycolic acid (cell wall lipid)
- Toxicity, survival within macrophages
- Serine protease (Cp40)
- Undefined function, possibly survival within
macrophages - Siderophore
- Acquisition of iron from host
56Pathogenesis
- Aerosol transmission?
- Disease spread in absence of external abscesses
- C. Pseudotuberculosis cultured from trachea of
infected sheep - Potential for coughing to aerosolise pus