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http://www.MetaPathogen.com: Legionella pneumophila cellular organisms Legionella - Bacteria - Proteobacteria - Gammaproteobacteria - Legionellales - Legionellaceae - - Legionella pneumophila ● Brief facts ● Regular phagocytosis vs. Legionella intracellular parasitism ● Legionella life cycles ● References Brief facts ● ● ● Legionellae are Gram-negative aerobic rods, isolated from surface water, mud, or thermally polluted lakes or streams. It is pathogenic for man and it has no known soil or animal sources. Legionella species are widespread in natural and man-made fresh water reservoirs. One of interesting characteristics of these bacteria is the ability to parasitize intracellularly on eukariotic cells. Majority of Legionella species infect free-living ameobae such as Hartmanella sp. and Acanthamoeba castellanii. The species grow best at temperatures from 20°C to 42°C. However, some of Legionella species are able to infect mammalian alveolar macrophages and cause a disease. Legionella pneumophila are Gram-negative aerobic coccobacilii, isolated from surface water, mud, or thermally polluted lakes or streams. It is pathogenic for man and it has no known soil or animal sources. Legionella pneumophila is a main causative agent of Legionnaires' Disease. The species is responsible for more than 98% of the Legionnaires' Disease cases, and about 95% are due to serogroup 1. It has been isolated from numerous environmental sites as well as from human lung tissue, respiratory secretions, and blood. Legionnaires' Disease (LD) is an acute, sometimes fatal, pneumonia-like bacterial infection characterized by high fever, malaise, muscle aches, respiratory disorders and headache. It is named for an outbreak at the 1976 Philadelphia convention of the American Legion. Legionnaires' disease can be very serious and can cause death in up to 5% to 30% of cases. Most cases can be treated successfully with antibiotics. The incubation period is about 7 days (from 2 to 19 days). Sporadic cases occur year around, but most cases of outbreaks happen in the warmer periods of the year. It is impossible to clinically distinguish patients with LD from patients with pneumococcal pneumonia. Culturing bacteria from biological samples, detection of antibodies in blood, detection of Legionella antigens in urine, and specific amplification of Legionella DNA by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) are methods that can be applied to diagnose the disease with various degree of certainty depending on time and reagents' availability, and specific needs. ● Pontiac fever is a milder infection caused by the same type of Legionella bacteria. The symptoms of Pontiac Fever (called after Pontiac in Michigan, where it was first documented) usually last for 2 to 5 days and may also include fever, headaches, and muscle aches (myalgia; however, there is no pneumonia. Symptoms usually go away without treatment. Transmission ● ● ● ● Legionella come from natural fresh water reservoirs, such as lakes, ponds, and puddles, where they parasitize on a broad range of protozoan species as hosts. The availability of the hosts plays a major role in the reproduction and mass release of highly infectious Legionella forms into environments where they can be spread by airborn water caplets and inhaled by people. Legionella thrive in man-made aquatic environments where the water temperature is higher than ambient temperature: whirlpool spas, cooling towers (air-conditioning units from large buildings), water used for drinking and bathing, water fountains, humidifiers, ice machines, and vegetable misters, etc. In fact, most cases of legionellosis can be traced to using such systems. It is a major concern for health professionals and construction and water systems maintenance workers. Legionella bacilii enter the human body through inhalation of contaminated aerosols. They can reach the alveolae in the lungs where they are attacked and engulfed by alveolar macrophages. Instead of being killed the bacilii hijack the phagosomes, convert them into specialized membrane-bound compartments, and start living and multiplying in a manner indistinguishable from that found during growth within amoebae, their usual hosts. Infection of the human macrophages appears to be a dead end in spreading the bacteria because transmission of Legionella pneumophila among humans has not been observed so far. Intracellular parasitism ● ● ● Interest in this bacterium stems from its ability to manipulate host cell vesicular-trafficking pathways and establish a membrane-bound replication vacuole, making it model for intracellular or, more specifically, intravacuolar pathogens. Intracellular lifestyle of these microorganisms allows them to gain the following competitive advantages relative to other microorganisms: (1) evasion of predators in the environment and (2) evasion of host's humoral and cellular immune responses while having easy access to all necessary nutrients. To be successful these pathogens need to solve the following important problems: (1) prevent the newly formed vacuole from merging (fusing) into antimicrobial lysosomal network; (3) manage nutrients's acquisition through the vacuolar membrane; (3) deal with space limitations during proliferative stage. Regular phagocytosis vs. Legionella intracellular parasitism Life cycle of Legionella Life Cycle Stages ● Laboratory in vitro culture in broth ❍ Exponential phase bacteria Replicative (non-infectious)forms of bacteria in exponential growth stage, unflagellated and sodium resistant ❍ Post-exponential (stationary) phase bacteria Infectious forms of bacteria, flagellated and motile; they appear when nutrients become sparse and the pathohens become overcrowded ● Natural life cycle ❍ Intracellular form ■ Non-infectious replicating form Bacteria actively replicating in LCV ■ Differentiating form Bacteria at last rounds of replication when daughter cells acquire virulent traits (flagellae, resistance to environmental stresses, etc.) ❍ Free-swimming form Transmissive virulent form of bacteria that escaped from the previous host and are ready to penetrate next one References PubMed articles ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Isberg RR, O'Connor TJ, Heidtman M. The Legionella pneumophila replication vacuole: making a cosy niche inside host cells. Nat Rev Microbiol. 2009 Jan;7(1):13-24. PMID: 19011659 Diederen BM. Legionella spp. and Legionnaires' disease. J Infect. 2008 Jan;56(1):1-12. PMID: 17980914 Jules M, Buchrieser C. Legionella pneumophila adaptation to intracellular life and the host response: clues from genomics and transcriptomics. FEBS Lett. 2007 Jun 19;581 (15):2829-38. PMID: 17531986 Albert-Weissenberger C, Cazalet C, Buchrieser C. Legionella pneumophila - a human pathogen that co-evolved with fresh water protozoa. Cell Mol Life Sci. 2007 Feb;64 (4):432-48. PMID: 17192810 Brüggemann H, Cazalet C, Buchrieser C. Adaptation of Legionella pneumophila to the host environment: role of protein secretion, effectors and eukaryotic-like proteins. Curr Opin Microbiol. 2006 Feb;9(1):86-94. PMID: 16406773 Molofsky AB, Swanson MS. Differentiate to thrive: lessons from the Legionella pneumophila life cycle. Mol Microbiol. 2004 Jul;53(1):29-40. PMID: 15225301 Major topic "Legionella": free full text articles in PubMed Websites ● Life cycle, growth cycles and developmental cycle of Legionella pneumophila ● Wikipedia: Legionella Last updated 04/07/09 [email protected] ©Nemose 2008 - 2009 All rights reserved