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Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

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Presentation on theme: "Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity"— Presentation transcript:

1 Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity
15 Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

2 Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity
Pathogenicity: The ability to cause disease. Virulence: The extent of pathogenicity.

3 OVERVIEW

4 OVERVIEW

5 Portals of Entry or How Microbes Enter a Host
Mucous membranes Skin Parenteral route

6 Portals of Entry or How Microbes Enter a Host

7 Portals of Entry or How Microbes Enter a Host

8 Numbers of Invading Microbes
ID50: Infectious dose for 50% of the test population. LD50: Lethal dose (of a toxin) for 50% of the test population.

9 Bacillus Anthracis Portal of Entry ID50 Skin 10-50 endospores
Inhalation 10,000-20,000 endospores Ingestion 250,000-1,000,000 endospores

10 Adherence Adhesions/ligands bind to receptors on host cells
Glycocalyx: Streptococcus mutans Fimbriae: Escherichia coli M protein: Streptococcus pyogenes Opa protein: Neisseria gonorrhoeae Tapered end: Treponema pallidum

11 Adherence

12 How Bacterial Pathogens Penetrate Host Defenses

13 How Bacterial Pathogens Penetrate Host Defenses
Capsule Cell Wall Components – M protein, Opa, mycolic acid

14 Chemicals that Promote Bacterial Invasions
Coagulase: Coagulate blood Kinases: Digest fibrin clots Hyaluronidase: Hydrolyses hyaluronic acid Collagenase: Hydrolyzes collagen IgA proteases: Destroy IgA antibodies Siderophores: Take iron from host iron-binding proteins Antigenic variation: Alter surface proteins Invasins – cause ruffling of membrane and enhance penetration

15 Penetration into the Host Cell
Figure 15.2

16 HOST CELL DAMAGE

17 ROBBING THE HOST CELL OF NUTRIENTS
Takes it from: Hemoglobin, lactoferrin, Transferrin, and Ferritin Siderophore with Iron

18 DIRECT DAMAGE DIRECT DAMAGE OCCURS AS BACTERIAL CELLS
MULTIPLY AND RUPTURE INFECTED CELLS.

19 Toxins Toxin: Substances that contribute to pathogenicity.
Toxigenicity: Ability to produce a toxin. Toxemia: Presence of toxin in the host's blood. Toxoid: Inactivated toxin used in a vaccine. Antitoxin: Antibodies against a specific toxin.

20 DISEASES Table 15.4

21 Present in LPS of outer membrane
Endotoxins Source: Gram – Relation to microbe: Present in LPS of outer membrane Chemistry: Lipid Fever? Yes Neutralized by antitoxin? No LD50: Relatively large Figure 15.4b

22 By-products of growing cell
Exotoxin Source: Mostly Gram + Relation to microbe: By-products of growing cell Chemistry: Protein Fever? No Neutralized by antitoxin? Yes LD50: Small Figure 15.4a

23 Exotoxins A-B toxins Figure 15.5

24 Exotoxins Membrane-disrupting toxins Lyse host’s cells by
Making protein channels in the plasma membrane (e.g., leukocidins, hemolysins). Disrupting phospholipid bilayer.

25 Exotoxins Superantigens
Cause an intense immune response due to release of cytokines from host cells. Fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, shock, and death.

26 Exotoxins Specific for a structure or function in host cell
Figure 15.4a

27 Exotoxins Exotoxin Lysogenic conversion Corynebacterium diphtheriae
A-B toxin. Inhibits protein synthesis. + Streptococcus pyogenes Membrane-disrupting. Erythrogenic. Clostridium botulinum A-B toxin. Neurotoxin C. tetani Vibrio cholerae A-B toxin. Enterotoxin Staphylococcus aureus Superantigen.

28 Endotoxins Figure 15.6

29 Cytopathic Effects of Viruses
Table 15.4

30 Pathogenic Properties of Fungi
Fungal waste products may cause symptoms. Chronic infections provoke an allergic response. Tichothecene toxins inhibit protein synthesis. Fusarium Proteases Candida, Trichophyton Capsule prevents phagocytosis. Cryptococcus Ergot toxin Claviceps

31 Pathogenic Properties of Fungi
Aflatoxin Aspergillus Mycotoxins Neurotoxins: Phalloidin, amanitin Amanita

32 Pathogenic Properties of Protozoa
Presence of protozoa. Protozoan waste products may cause symptoms. Avoid host defenses by Growing in phagocytes Antigenic variation

33 Pathogenic Properties of Helminths
Use host tissue. Presence of parasite interferes with host function. Parasite's metabolic waste can cause symptoms.

34 Pathogenic Properties of Algae
Paralytic shellfish poisoning Dinoflagellates Domoic acid intoxication Diatoms Figure 27.15

35 Figure 15.9 (5 of 5)

36 Portals of Exit Respiratory tract Coughing and sneezing
Gastrointestinal tract Feces and saliva Genitourinary tract Urine and vaginal secretions Skin Blood Biting arthropods and needles or syringes


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