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Download P. Aruginosa Virulence Factors I
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P. aeruginosa • • • • Gram negative bacilli Aerobic non-fermenting Chromatid size 5.7 Mb Found in soil, vegetation, water P. aeruginosa and Nosocomial Infections • Found in hospital environment in moist reservoirs: food, cut flowers, sinks, toilets, floor mops, medical equipment, disinfectant solutions. • Common problem in immunocompromised patients, burn victims, resident catheters, cystic fibrosis • Resistant to antibiotics P. Aruginosa Virulence Factors I • Adhesins • Alginate Production • Endotoxin • Neuraminidase • Exotoxin A • Exoenzyme S P. Aruginosa Virulence Factors II • Elastolytic Activity - LasA, LasB • Phospholipase C • Pyocyanin, Pyochelin • Antibiotic Resistance Mycobacteria • • • • • • Non-motile, aerobic gram positive bacilli Acid-fast Slow growth Resistant to detergents Immunostimulatory 74 different species, a third associated with human disease e.g M. tuberculosis, M. leprae Mycobacteria Bacteria reproduce in macrophages ls ce l Phag , T cells tes , y c B Bacteria reach lungs; enter macrophages o Granuloma Dead Phagocytes Lesion begins to form (caseous necrosis) Bacteria cease to grow; lesion calcifies Lesion liquifies Spread to blood, organs Reactivation Death Bacteria coughed up in sputum M. Tuberculosis Diagnosis • Mantoux test – PPD • Positive test – Redness and swelling (erythema) Hardening (induration) • Disadvantages – BCG Vaccination Slow development Anergy M. Leprae • Disease – Leprosy (Hansen’s disease): tuberculoid and lepromatous form. • Virulence factors – unknown • Transmission – Lepromatous leprosy: Highly infectious Tuberculoid leprosy: Low N. gonorrhoea Aerobic, gram negative cocci. Horizontal and vertical transmission Health Problem: High rate of asymptomatics Antigenically variable N. gonorrhoeae Oropharyngeal infection Pharyngitis Anal or genital Infection Local irritation, discharge Systemic spread 1% (arthritis, endocarditis meningitis) Asymptomatic (especially women) N. gonorrhoeae Cervical infection (symptomatic or asymptomatic) Ascending infection of uterine cavity, fallopian tubes (pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, ectopic pregnancy) Blindness N. gonorrhoeae Surface colonization of infant at birth Eye infection Conjunctivitis N. gonorrhoea Virulence Factors • • • • • • Capsule Pilus (PilE, PileS antigenic variation) Opa (Slipped strand mispairing) LOS Iron binding proteins: Tbp1,2,Lbp Protease Stages in interaction of N. gonorrhoeae with cultured mammalian cells Stages in interaction of N. gonorrhoeae with cultured mammalian cells Phase Variation II: Slipped Strand Mispairing