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(Gram negative rods enteric tract)
Enterobacteriaceae I (Gram negative rods enteric tract) Lecture 34 Faculty: Dr. Alvin Fox
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Key Words Opportunistic diseases Shigella
Diarrhea Bacillary dysentery Dysentery Shiga toxin Urinary tract infections Salmonella enteritidis Pili Salmonellosis Lactose positive/negative Salmonella cholerae-suis Enterohemorrhagic E. coli Salmonella typhi - Vero toxin (Shiga-like) - Typhoid - Hemolysin Vi Enterotoxigenic E. coli Yersinia entercolitica - Heat stable toxin Vibrio cholerae - Heat labile toxin Choleragen (cholera toxin) Enteropathogenic E. coli Campylobacter jejuni Enteroaggregative E. coli Helicobacter pylori Enteroinvasive E. coli
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Opportunistic diseases -Enterobacteriaceae
septicemia, pneumonia, meningitis urinary tract infections Citrobacter Enterobacter Escherichia Hafnia Morganella Providencia Serratia
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Enterobacteriaceae gastrointestinal diseases Escherichia coli
Salmonella Shigella Yersinia entercolitica
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Reiter's syndrome Histocompatibility antigen (HLA) B27
Enterobacteriaceae Salmonella Shigella Yersinia Non-Enterobacteriaceae Campylobacter Chlamydia
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Enterobacteriaceae community acquired otherwise healthy people
Klebsiella pneumoniae respiratory diseases prominent capsule urinary tract infection fecal contamination E. coli Proteus urease (degrades urea) alkaline urine
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E. coli fimbriae Type 1 mannose P galactose glycolipids glycoproteins
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Enterobacteriaceae gram negative facultative anaerobic rods
– oxidase negative (no cytochrome oxidase)
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Feces E. coli lactose positive not usually identified
lactose positive sp. common, healthy intestine Shigella, Salmonella,Yersinia lactose negative identified
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Enterobacteriaceae other sites identified biochemically
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Serotypes reference laboratory antigens O (lipopolysaccharide)
H (flagellar) K (capsular)
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Diarrhea (watery feces) and Dysentery (blood in stools)
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Caption: E. coli Escherichia coli
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Escherichia coli E. coli and Shigella genetically very similar
separated for historical reasons overlap in pathogenesis
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Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
Usually O157:H7 Transmission electron micrograph Flagella
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Transmission – meat products or sewage-contaminated vegetables
Hemorrhagic Bloody dysentery copious diarrhea few leukocytes afebrile hemolytic-uremic syndrome hemolytic anemia thrombocytopenia (low platelets) kidney failure
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Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
Vero toxin “shiga-like toxin” Hemolysins
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Enterotoxigenic E. coli
diarrhea like cholera milder travellers diarrhea
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Enterotoxigenic E. coli
Heat labile toxin like choleragen Adenyl cyclase activated cyclic AMP secretion water/ions Heat stable toxin Guanylate cyclase activated cyclic GMP uptake water/ions
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Enteropathogenic E. coli
destruction of surface microvilli fever diarrhea vomiting nausea non-bloody stools (not generally seen as dysentery) Gut lumen
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Enteroaggregative Mucus biofilm inhibits fluid absorption Diarrhea
Brick-like bacterial aggregates - cell surfaces Mucus biofilm inhibits fluid absorption Diarrhea
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Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC )
Dysentery - resembles shigellosis Gut lumen
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Treatment -gastrointestinal disease
fluid replacement antibiotics not used usually unless systemic e.g. hemolytic-uremia syndrome
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Shigella Modified from Fig, Dennis Kunkel
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Shigella S. flexneri, S. boydii, S. sonnei, S. dysenteriae
bacillary dysentery shigellosis bloody feces intestinal pain pus
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Shigellosis within 2-3 days epithelial cell damage Gut lumen
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Shiga toxin enterotoxic cytotoxic inhibits protein synthesis
lysing 28S rRNA
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Shigellosis man only "reservoir" mostly young children
fecal to oral contact children to adults transmitted by adult food handlers unwashed hands
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Treating shigellosis manage dehydration
patients respond to antibiotics disease duration diminished
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Salmonella [417] Caption: Salmonella typhi - Gram-negative, enteric, rod prokaryote (dividing); causes typhoid fever. Magnification*: x5,530 Type: SEM Keywords: 96430B.TIF bacilli bacillus bacteria bacterial pathogen bacterium division Gram-negative human disease infection prokaryote rod Salmonella typhi typhoid fever enteric bacterial pathogen intestinal tract infection SEM |
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Salmonella 2000 antigenic "types” genetically single species
S. enterica disease category S. enteritidis many serotypes S. cholerae-suis S. typhi
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Salmonellosis S. enteritidis the common salmonella infection
poultry, eggs no human reservoir Gastroenteritis nausea vomiting non-bloody stool self-limiting (2 - 5 days)
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Control of salmonellosis
Monitoring of food in the US is limited microbiology is difficult Regulation is not optimal Chickens are not vaccinated in US UK, salmonellosis largely erradicated
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Salmonellosis uncomplicated cases (the vast majority)
Gut lumen uncomplicated cases (the vast majority) antibiotic therapy not useful
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S. cholerae-suis much less common septicemia
antibiotic therapy essential
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