Title: Microbiology Review
1Microbiology Review
- Ericka King, tutor
- efking_at_u.washington.edu
2Some definitions
- Colonization establishment of a microbial
population in a host - Normal flora bugs that live in healthy people
- Resident there all the time, pretty much
- Transient briefly inhabit after an exposure
- Infection colonization by a pathogen
- Person may get sick or be a
- Carrier colonized but free of disease may
spread
3Primary Pathogens
- Capable of producing disease in a healthy host -
virulent organisms - How identify these? Kochs postulates
- Regularly found in lesions of disease
- Isolated in pure culture (iffy in the real world)
- Take from culture, give it to another animal -gt
can re-isolate from new lesions produced
4Opportunistic pathogens
- Microbe that can produce disease in hosts with
compromised immune systems
5Normal Flora
- Prevent colonization by pathogens
- Competition for housing, resources
- Production of bacteriocins
- Antibiotic-like substances keep pathogens in
check - Source of potential pathogens
- Immunosuppression
- Reservoir for antibiotic resistance genes
6Colonic flora - protectors of the meek
7Places that should be sterile
- Blood
- CSF
- Synovial fluid
- Pleural, peritoneal cavities
- Deep tissues
- Most of GU tract
8Places that are decidedly not sterile
- Skin
- Oral cavity
- Nasopharynx
- Colon
- vagina
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10What do I need to know about the bugs that
comprise the normal flora?
- Right now, not much
- Just keep this all in mind for when we talk about
each one of these bugs - Most are anaerobes
- The colon is replete with friendly flora
11Flora of the vagina
- Lactobacilli
- Produce peroxide -gt kills off other bacteria
- Predominant in healthy females
- Gardnerella vaginalis
- Group B strep
- Colonize during pregnancy
- Stuff from colon
- Anaerobes
- E. coli -gt big agent in UTIs
12Bacterial vaginosis
- Loss of Lactobacillus species -gt abnormal flora
- Overgrowth of
- Gardnerella vaginalis
- Gram variable
- Coccobacilli
- Anaerobes (G-)
- Prevotella
- Porphyromonas
- Bacteroides
- Production of amines -gt exfoliation of epithelial
cells, transudation
13Bacterial Vaginosis
- Prevalence common, especially in WSW
- Risks sexual activity
- Sx abnormal vaginal odor, discharge
- Dx clue cells on vaginal smear, pH gt4.5, fishy
smell on addition of KOH - whiff test - Rx antibiotics, oral and topical (probiotic?)
- Complications infection farther up -
salpingitis, PID, endometritis, premature labor
14Question 1
- The normal bacterial flora of the colon is
comprised primarily of - E. coli
- Gram positive organisms
- Strict anaerobes
- Lactobacilli
- Strict aerobes
15Question 1
- The normal bacterial flora of the colon is
comprised primarily of - E. coli
- Gram positive organisms
- Strict anaerobes
- Lactobacilli
- Strict aerobes
16Question 2
- Which of the following sites would be colonized
by the fewest bacteria in a healthy person? - Stomach
- Colon
- Nasopharynx
- Skin
- vagina
17Question 2
- Which of the following sites would be colonized
by the fewest bacteria in a healthy person? - Stomach
- Colon
- Nasopharynx
- Skin
- Vagina
18Question 3
- Diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis involves
- Culture and ID of causative pathogen
- Demonstration of antibodies in patients serum
- Direct detection of pathogen in vaginal
secretions, using specific antibody - Gram stain and determination of vaginal pH,
presence of amines
19Question 3
- Diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis involves
- Culture and ID of causative pathogen
- Demonstration of antibodies in patients serum
- Direct detection of pathogen in vaginal
secretions, using specific antibody - Gram stain and determination of vaginal pH,
presence of amines
20Host defenses
- Skin - one heck of a barrier
- Mucosa - needs some help
- Normal flora
- pH
- Movement
- Cilia
- Peristalsis
- Fluid flow
- Secreted stuff - IgA, lysozyme
21Host defenses, contd
- Deeper tissues - need active hunters
- Phagocytic cells
- PMNs, macrophages
- Eat bugs that have been opsonized
- Antibodies
- Cytotoxic T cells
- Know what types of defenses employed by each
organ system
22How bacteria sneak by our defenses
- Tricking the phagocytes
- Capsule, slime layer - cant catch me
- Destruction of phagocytes - the trojan horse
- Mess up cell signalling
- Hanging out inside phagocytes
- Escape from alcatraz (phagosome)
- Stay in phagosome, but prevent lysosomal fusion
- Let endosomes fuse, but resist lysosomal enzymes
23Mechanisms of celluar damage
- Bacteria can hurt us directly
- We can hurt ourselves in trying to hurt them
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25Bacterial Toxins
- Exotoxins G and G-
- Cause many diseases - botulism, tetanus, cholera
- Can be
- Pyrogenic - induce cytokine r elease -gt fever,
toxic shock - Tissue invasive -gt let bug tunnel through tissues
26More bacterial toxins
- Enterotoxins
- Act on GI tract - diarrhea, food poisoning
- Endotoxins (G- only)
- Lipid A portion of LPS, from outer membrane
- Released when bacterial cell lyses - not excreted
- Very toxic
27Immune-mediated damage
- Ab-Ag complex deposition
- Ex. Glomerulonephritis
- Autoimmune reactions
- Ex. Rheumatic fever
28A word about vaccines
- Live attenuated
- limited in ability to cause disease - less
virulent mutant, from other species - Especially useful for bugs that require CD8
responses (ex. Enveloped viruses) - Killed
- Subunit - specific epitopes that elicit Ab
response - Toxoid - against a toxin the bug makes
29Question 4
- Ciliated epithelium is an important antibacterial
defense of the - Gastrointestinal tract
- Genital tract
- Conjunctiva
- Urinary tract
30Question 4
- Ciliated epithelium is an important antibacterial
defense of the - Gastrointestinal tract
- Genital tract
- Conjunctiva
- Urinary tract
31Question 5
- Cephalosporins belong to which class of
antibiotics? - ß-lactams
- Tetracyclines
- Cyclosporins
- Anti-folates
- Glycopeptides
32Question 5
- Cephalosporins belong to which class of
antibiotics? - ß-lactams
- Tetracyclines
- Cyclosporins
- Anti-folates
- Glycopeptides
33Are you ready for the bugs?
34Gram Positive Bugs
- Cocci Rods
- Clusters chains worry about it
- later
- Staph ? hemol ? hemol
- Group A S. pneumo
- Group B viridans
35Streptococci
- G cocci in a chain
- aerotolerant anaerobes
- Catalase negative (vs. Staph)
- Differentiate via hemolytic pattern
36Strep pyogenes (group A)
37Strep pyogenes (group A)
- ? hemolytic - lyse RBCs
- Virulence factors
- Antiphagocytic capsule (hyaluronic acid)
- Cell surface
- M protein - inhibits complement activation,
adhesion Abs directed against this - Lipoteichoic acid (cells wall) - attachment
38Strep pyogenes toxins
- Streptolysin O (Oxygen labile)
- Pore forming destroys RBCs, WBCs -gt reason for ?
hemolysis - Antigenic
- Streptolysin S (Oxygen Stable)
- Destroys RBCs, WBCs
- Not antigenic
- Pyrogenic exotoxin
- Not in all strains
- When these strains invade, cause toxic shock,
rash, fever - superantigen
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40Strep pyogenes
- Enzymes
- Hyaluronidase
- Cleaves hyaluronic acid
- Spreading factor
- Streptokinases
- Lysis of blood clots
41Strep pyogenes diseases
- Pharyngitis - sore throat, fever
- Scarlet fever - strains w/pyrogenic exotoxin
diffuse rash on trunk/neck, strawberry tongue - Toxic shock syndrome - also mediated by pyrogenic
exotoxin release
42Strep pyogenes diseases
- Skin infections
- Impetigo (most common in kids, around mouth)
- Cellulitis (skin subQ infection)
- Erysipelas (elderly)
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Enter through break in skin, spread along fascia
deep to subQ - Skin dies, muscle may become infected
- High mortality rate, even with Rx (50)
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44Impetigo
45Strep pyogenesstill more
- Diseases caused by immune reaction
- Rheumatic fever
- Only after pharyngitis, not skin infection
- Molecular mimicry - reaction of Abs to heart
- Initial myocarditis, joint swelling, chorea, rash
- Years later, get valve disease mitralgtaortic
- Glomerulonephritis
- After pharyngitis or skin infection
- Deposition of immune complexes damages kidney
46Keep on truckin with S. pyogenes
- Acquisition
- from normal flora (20 kids, 10 adults
colonized) - Droplet transmission
- Dx
- culture - bacitracin-sensitive
- serology
47Strep agalactiae (group B)
- 3 Bs
- ? hemolytic
- Bacitracin resistant (vs. pyogenes)
- Baby diseases
48Strep agalactiae
- Polysaccharide capsule required for virulence
- Colonize vagina in 25 of pregnant women can
transmit to baby at time of birth - Neonatal diseases
- Early onset (lt7 days)
- Neonatal pneumonia
- 20-30 have meningitis
- Late onset (7 days - 3 months)
- Neonatal meningitis in 90
49Strep agalactiae
- Adult diseases especially in immunocompromised
- Osteomyelitis
- Bacteremia
- UTIs in pregnant women
50Strep pneumoniae
- ? hemolytic
- Pairs/short chains
- Optochin sensitive (vs. viridans)
- Infants 6 mo - 2 years, elderly most susceptible
51Strep pneumo
- Anti-phagocytic capsule (bunches of serotypes)
- Antigenic
- Enzymes
- Pneumolysin epithelial cell cytotoxin
- Inhibits cilia
52Strep pneumo
- Diseases
- Pneumonia - generally lobar
- Meningitis
- Sinusitis
- Otitis media - most common cause in kids
- Acquisition
- Rare person-person spread
- Inhabits throat, nasopharynx
- Dx sputum gram stain/culture
53Enterococci
- ? hemolytic (usually)
- Bacitracin resistant, optochin resistant
- Intrinsic acquired antibiotic resistance
- Scary nosocomial pathogen (vancomycin)
- Normal flora of colon
- Secrete bacteriocins
- Adhesive factors
54Enterococci
- Diseases
- UTIs, especially with catheters
- Abdominal abscess
- Wounds
- Endocarditis
- Bacteremia
- Dx blood agar
55Viridans strep
- ?- and non-hemolytic
- No capsule or toxins -gt low virulence
- Colonize oropharynx, GI
- Subacute bacterial endocarditis
56Gram Positive Bugs
- Cocci Rods
- Clusters chains worry about it
- later
- Staph ? hemol ? hemol
- Group A S. pneumo
- Group B viridans
57Staphylococci
- Gram cocci in clusters
- (If I had a copy of I heard it through the
grapevine, I would play it for you) - Catalase (vs. Step)
- Facultative
58Staph aureus
- ? hemolytic
- Coagulase (vs. other Staph)
- Hangs out in nares (especially health care
workers)
59Staph aureus virulence (selected factors)
- Protein A - binds Fc portion of IgG, protects
from opsonization, phagocytosis - Coagulase - forms blood clot shield
- ? toxin- pore forming lyses blood cells
- Beta lactamase in many strains (70-80)
- Bunches of lipases, proteases that enable spread
through tissue - Exfoliatin causes skin to slough of
- Enterotoxins
- TSST-1 - not in all strains superantigen
60Staph aureus toxin-mediated diseases
- Food poisoning
- Ingestion of pre-formed enterotoxin
- Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea 12-24 hours
- Toxic shock syndrome
- Exotoxin TSST-1 stimulates cytokine release
- Fever, hypotension, rash
- Scalded skin syndrome
- Strain with exfoliatin toxin
- Neonates - causes skin to cleave mid-epidermis
peel
61S. Aureus diseases due to invasion
- Pneumonia - rare cause, but severe
- Empyema - pus in pleural space
- Osteomyelitis - bone seeded from blood or by
trauma, surgery - Acute endocarditis
- Septic arthritis
62S. aureus skin infections
- Folliculitis
- Furuncle - sweat/sebaceous glands
- Carbuncle - subQ invasion, systemic illness
- Impetigo
- Wound infections
- cellulitis
63S. aureus
- Dx
- Coagulase
- Golden colonies
- Rx tricky, lots of resistance
- Methicillin - resistant to ? lactamase-resistant
drugs (ex. dicloxacillin) - Vancomycin resistance emerging
64S. epidermidis
- Coagulase -
- Nosocomial infections
- Catheters, IV lines
- Prosthetic joints
- endocarditis
65S. saprophyticus
- Coagulase -
- Urease
- UTIs in healthy women
66Question 6
- Acute rheumatic fever is a complication of a
throat infection caused by - Strep agalactiae
- Staph warneri
- Enterococci
- Viridans strep
- Strep pyogenes
67Question 6
- Acute rheumatic fever is a complication of a
throat infection caused by - Strep agalactiae
- Staph warneri
- Enterococci
- Viridans strep
- Strep pyogenes
68Question 7
- Newborns that have evidence of pneumonia and
sepsis, with or without meningitis, are most
likely infected with - Group B strep
- Staph epidermidis
- Staph aureus
- Staph saprophyticus
- Strep pneumo
69Question 7
- Newborns that have evidence of pneumonia and
sepsis, with or without meningitis, are most
likely infected with - Group B strep
- Staph epidermidis
- Staph aureus
- Staph saprophyticus
- Strep pneumo
70Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- G bacillus
- Obligate aerobe
- Normal flora of skin, nasopharynx
- Transmitted by respiratory droplet, skin contact
- Diphtheria toxin
- A subunit ADP ribosyl transferase
- inactivates translation factor EF-2
- Inhibits host protein synthesis
- Damages heart, neuronal cells
71C. diphtheriae
- Respiratory diphtheria
- Pharyngitis, malaise, fever
- Pseudomembrane - grayish, adheres to epithelia
- Colonization site
- Complications breathing obstruction, arrhythmia,
myocarditis, coma - Cutaneous diphtheria
- Ulceration, superinfection
72Diphtheric membrane
73C. diphtheriae
- Dx Tinsdales - K-tellurite agar
- Rx
- Antitoxin inactivates circulating toxin give
early, as once internalized cell death is
inevitable - Antibiotics to eradicate infection
- Immunization
- Toxoid vaccine (inactivated)
74Bordatella pertussis
- G- coccobacilli
- Strict aerobe
- Always pathogenic (not normal flora)
75B. Pertussis virulence
- Pertussis toxin 5B1A structure
- Toxic subunit - ADP ribosyl transferase
- Targets Gi, deregulates adenylate cyclase
- Get increase in mucus production
- Adenylate cyclase/hemolysin 1B1A
- Lyses RBCs, messes up phagocytosis
- Tracheal cytotoxin
- Peptidoglycan monomer
- Targets ciliated epithelial cells -gt ciliostasis
- Responsible for cough
76Pertussis or whooping cough
- Incubation 7-10 days
- Catarrhal stage like common cold
- Paroxysmal stage 1-2 weeks
- Spasmotic coughing, vomiting
- Convalescent phase 2-4 weeks
- Gradual decrease in coughing
- Regeneration of respiratory epithelium
- Complications pneumonia, hypoxia, seizures
77B. pertussis
- Dx Bordet-Gengou medium
- Regan-Lowe transport medium
- Rx
- Supportive, antibiotics
- Acellular subunit vaccine
78H. flu
79Haemophilus influenzae
- G- bacillus
- Facultative
- Non-encapsulated strains - normal nasopharyngeal
flora
80H. flu virulence
- Antiphagocytic capsule
- Type b is most virulent
- Endotoxin (LPS)
- Induces immune response, cytokine release
- Impairs ciliary function
81H. flu type b disease
- Meningitis
- Used to be main cause in kids
- Epiglottitis
- Cellulitis
- Septic arthritis
82H. flu
- Dx
- Culture on chocolate agar
- Latex agglutination (capsular antigen)
- Rx
- Antibiotic prophylaxis for contacts
- Vaccine
- Type B polysaccharide conjugated to protein
83Non-invasive H. flu
- Capsule types other than b
- Acapsular strains
- Otitis media
- Sinusitis
- Bronchitis in chronic pulmonary disease patients
84Question 8
- The mechanism of which of the following toxisns
is ADP-ribosylation of EF2? - Pertussis toxin
- Tracheal cytotoxin
- Streptolysin O
- Adenylate cyclase toxin
- Diptheria toxin
85Question 8
- The mechanism of which of the following toxisns
is ADP-ribosylation of EF2? - Pertussis toxin
- Tracheal cytotoxin
- Streptolysin O
- Adenylate cyclase toxin
- Diptheria toxin
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