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Microbiology 11: Staphylococci -> Abscesses and Toxin-Mediated Diseases Key Concepts: - - - - Considered pyogenic (pus) except toxic shock syndrome Cause furuncles and abscess, food poisoning, toxin-induced diseases, osteomyelitis, kidney abscess, endocarditis S. aureus, S. epidermidis, S. saprophyticus (UTIs) Virulence factors -> S. aureus produces peptidoglycan, teichoic acids, protein A, clumping factor and other MSCRAMMs, coagulase, hemolysins, exotoxins, some β-lactamase and penicillinbinding protein 2a Treat with antibiotics, draining, and supportive therapy S. aureus (Gram + cocci) -> most common pyogenic bacteria, anterior nares, produce focal abscess, secrete toxins (illness at distant site) o Toxic shock syndrome (TSS) = from TSS toxin-1 (TSST1) and staph enterotoxin A-T Vaginal muscosal and respiratory infections Act systemically to interfere with normal immune system function o Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS) = exfoliative toxin A-B In neonates w/ upper resp tract infection o Staphylococcal food poisoning (SFP) = ingestion of enterotoxin A-E o Clumping factor (bound coagulase) = binds fibrin, helps protect abscess from phagocytes Distinguished from other species in genus by coagulase test (+) o Grows in grape-like clusters (hardy), carotenoid pigmentation (golden), + mannitol fermentation, - novobiocin resistance S. epidermidis -> found on skin in most, infections in hospitals or with artificial device implants, white colonies, - mannitol fermentation, - novobiocin resistance S. saprophyticus -> causes only UTIs, white colonies, - mannitol ferm, + novobiocin resistance S. lugdunensis -> aggressive endocarditis, white colonies, - mannitol fermentation, - novobiocin resistance ID strains with phage typing (pulsed field gel electrophoresis) = isolate DNA, treat with restriction enzyme, resolve fragments Cases: - - Abrasion of forearm -> abscess, tenderness over lower spine (osteomyelitis), high WBC, Gram + cocci (S. aureus), resistant to penicillin but sensitive to nafcillin o Features typical of S. aureus infection = initial lesion (boil) mild and localized, osteomyelitis, could have led to endocarditis or kidney/brain abscess Toxic shock syndrome -> vomiting, fever, diarrhea, sunburnlike rash, hypotension, high WBCs, reduced platelets o o o o Prolonged hypotension -> gangrenous toes Desquamation of skin (peeling) with resolution S. aureus toxin-mediated disease = initial lesion subcutaneous abscess, minimal inflammatory features IV immunoglobulin treats streptococcal and staphylococcal TSS Staphylococci - - - Encounter o Live on people and inanimate objects Grow at high salt and lipid [] Make lipases and glycerol ester hydrolases (degrade skin lipids) o Colonize anterior nares in 30% of healthly ppl o MSCRAMMs (surface protein) binds to ECM proteins Fibronection-binding proteins (FnbpA/B) on surface of S. aureus Allow invasion of cells and attach to fibronectin on wounds CNAs for collagen binding Clumping factors A/B -> fibrinogen binding (endocarditis) o Spread by contact or aerosols (after birth, 2° to influenza or croup, hospital workers, diabetics, hemodialysis, IV drug abuse) Entry o Deep tissue if damaged skin/mucous membrane o In large numbers can enter spontaneously (poor hygiene, prolonged moisture) Spread and multiplication o Depends on # of organisms, site, speed of body response, immune hx of host Damage o Local infection = abscess (pus) In skin = boils aka furuncles; multiple interconnected = carbuncles Acute inflammatory reaction (neutrophil) -> chemotactic factors made -> staph lyse neutrophils (release lysosomal enzymes damaging surrounding) -> MSCRAMMs and host response make thick-walled fibrin capsule Center necrotic, dead neutrophils/epithelial cells, dead & live bacteria, edema fluid Containment but protected from immune attack -> may be source of toxins for TSST1 or enterotoxins o Diffuse inflammation = cellulitis o Neutrophils important to contain infection Chronic granulomatous disease = children defect in phagocyte fxn, frequent infection with S. aureus, neutrophils unable to make H2O2 to kill o Virulence factors prevent phagocyte ingestion Include soluble enzymes, toxins, cell-envelope constituents o Defense against neutrophils -> - - Surrounded by capsule (common serotype 5 & 8) and slime layer Peptidoglycan in cell wall (activates alternative complement path; interacts with toll-like receptor-2 all for inflamm rxn) Teichoic acid (complement activation and adherence to mucosa) Protein A binds Fc terminus of IgG (incapacitates and reduces opsonization) and free antibodies Secrete catalase converts H2O2 to H2O, coagulase converts fibrinogen to fibrin Pore-forming toxins damage phagocytes and other cells α, γ, δ = hemolysins o β hemolysin = non-pore forming; sphingomyelinase γ-toxin and Panton-Valentine leukocidin = damage neutrophils Hyaluronidase = hydrolyzes CT matrix Virulence enhancers = lipases, proteases, DNases o Substances difficult to treat with antibiotics = β-lactamase (penicillin resistance) and penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP2a) (methicillin resistant) SCC mec DNAs code for PBP2a Usually disease limited by spontaneous drain through skin but if escape from abscess cleared by blood and lymph (unless impaired host) o In deep tissues, colonize previously damaged tissues o Main sites of metastatic abscess = bones, joints, lungs, kidneys Immunocompromised pts frequently have multiple staph metastases Osteomyelitis = “boil of a bone” Damage by Other Species of Staphylococci - - S. epidermidis (coag neg) rarely causes disease -> found in pts with implanted artificial devices o Can cause septicemia and endocarditis o Virulence factors = peptidoglycan and slime layer (stick to plastic devices) S. saprophyticus (coag neg) only UTIs (cystitis in young women) S. lugdunensis (coag neg) causes aggressive endocarditis Staphylococcal Toxin Diseases - Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS) = neonates, extensive sloughing of skin o Exfoliative toxins A and B cause symptoms -> separate skin layers at desmosomes Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS) = fever, skin rash, hypotension, peeling of skin on recovery o Originally from highly absorbent tampons (intro O2 into vagina for toxin production) o O2 essential for toxin production o Exotoxins = toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (all menstrual cases) and staphylococcal enterotoxins (B and C) Toxins = superantigens -> cross-link β-chain of T-cell antigen receptor with MHC Class II on macrophage (mass release of cytokines) TNFα and TNFβ cause capillary leak (hypotension) - - INFγ and Interleukin2 cause rash Food Poisoning = staphylococcal enterotoxins serotypes A – E o Intensive intestinal peristalsis o Exotoxins are heat stable, resist proteases Regulators include accessory gene regulator (Agr) and staphylococcal respiratory response (Srr) Diagnosis - Localized abscess aspirated and gram stained Also culture blood and use coagulase test Treatment - - Drain abscess, antibiotic (semisynthetic penicillins for methicillin-sensitive S. aureus, MSSA) Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) treat with vancomycin and fluroroquinolones Second-line agents = aminoglycosides, macrolides, trimethoprim.sulfamethoxazole, clindamycin, tetracyclines o Clindamycin (inhibits protein synthesis) prevents exotoxin synthesis prior to inhibiting growth Vancomycin-resistant S.aureus (VRSA) acquired from Enterococcus species in coinfection o Can use linezolid, Synercid, and daptomycin For TSS -> IV immunoglobulin (from human volunteers)