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Enterobacteriaceae Chapter 31 Introduction “Enteric Bacteria” Gram-negative rods Ubiquitous Cause 30%-35% of all septicemias, more than 70% of UTIs, and many intestinal infections Pathogens: Normal flora – opportunistic infections Animal reservoirs Human carriers Box 31-1 BOX 31-1. Common Medically Important Enterobacteriaceae Citrobacter freundii, Citrobacter koseri Enterobacter aerogenes, Enterobacter cloacae Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae, Klebsiella oxytoca Morganella morganii Proteus mirabilis, Proteus vulgaris Salmonella enterica Serratia marcescens Shigella sonnei, Shigella flexneri Yersinia pestis, Yersinia enterocolitica, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Physiology and Structure Facultative anaerobes Ferment glucose, are catalase positive, and oxidase negative Lactose fermenting strains (e.g. Escherichia, Klebsiella, Enterobacter) Non-lactose fermenting (e.g. Salmonella, Shigella, and Yersinia) Differentiating Similar Strains Antigen detection O polysaccharides Part of LPS Capsular K Flagellar H proteins E. coli O157:H7 Pathogenesis and Immunity Common virulence factors Endotoxin Lipid A portion of LPS causes many of the systemic manifestations of infection Capsule Interferes with antibody binding Capsular antigens are hydrophilic (phagocytic cell surface is hydrophobic) Poor antigenicity Antigenic phase variation Capsular K and flagellar H antigens are under genetic control Can be expressed or not expressed Pathogenesis and Immunity Sequestration of growth factors Iron: Bacteria produce competitive siderophores or iron-chelating compounds, hemolysins Escherichia coli Pathogenesis (Box 31-3) Adhesins: Essential for colonization Prevents the organism from being flushed out of the urinary or gastrointestinal tract Exotoxins Specific target tissue Result in altered cell function or cell death Epidemiology and Clinical Diseases Many infections are endogenous (septicemia and UTI’s) Septicemia-originate from UT or GI infections leading to intraabdominal infection Neonatal meningitis, Intraabdominal infections UTIs-originate in the colon -> contaminate urethra -> ascend into the bladder Production of adhesins ~80% of all community-acquired UTIs Gastroenteritis-caused by five major groups May include: watery diarrhea, abdominal cramps, fever, and vomiting (Table 31-1) Gastroenteritis (ETEC) Estimated 80,000 cases in US travelers annually (650 million worldwide) In small intestine; watery diarrhea, cramps, vomiting, fever Occurs in developing countries usually in children or travelers (traveler’s diarrhea) 1-2 day incubation, 3-4 duration Infectious dose is high so person to person spread does not occur Two classes of enterotoxins: heat-labile (LT-I, LT-II) and heat-stable (STa, STb) LT-I increases secretion of chloride and inhibits absorption of sodium and chloride (the same as cholera toxin) STa causes a hypersecretion of fluids Both contributing to watery diarrhea Disease similar to cholera, but milder Gastroenteritis (ETEC) Imodium mode of action: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki /Loperamide Gastroenteritis (EHEC) 73,000 cases with 60 deaths annually In large intestine; vomiting, abdominal cramps, fever Severity ranges from diarrhea to hemorrhagic colitis (bacterial dysentery) 3-4 day incubation, 4-10 day duration Infectious dose is less than 100 bacteria, O157:H7 serotype is the most common Read text page 329 Shiga toxins (Stx-1, Stx-2) Bind to 28S rRNA and disrupt protein synthesis Tissue destruction leads to the symptoms (bloody diarrhea) Gastroenteritis (EHEC) Spinach Outbreak Information http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/ mmwrhtml/mm55d926a1.htm http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/spin acqa.html#howmany Salmonella Characteristics Similar to E. coli except no lactose fermentation Historically there have been many different species (~2000) All are really one species: Salmonella enterica Salmonella Virulence factors Box 31-2 and 31-5 Some bacteria can survive stomach acid Able to enter M cells (peyer’s patches) Cause cell death and spread to surrounding cells. Figure Salmonella Epidemiology Colonize virtually all animal species Salmonella Diseases (Gastroenteritis) Most common form of disease 40,000 cases in the US in 2004 Mostly spread by eating contaminated food (Poultry, eggs, dairy products) Can be fecal-oral in children Infectious dose 106 to 108 Symptoms 6-48hrs after consumption nausea, vomiting, non-bloody diarrhea, fever, abdominal cramps Usually ends without intervention in a week or less Salmonella Diseases (Typhoid Fever) Typhoid Fever Human reservoir (person-to-person spread) Pass through intestinal lining and engulfed by phagocytes Replicate in liver, spleen, bone marrow Cause fever, myalgia, gastroenteritis Asymptomatic colonization (1-5% patients) Story Time - “Typhoid Mary” Salmonella Treatment Preventative - safe food preparation Antibiotics not recommended for enteritis Typhoid Fever - antibiotics Shigella Characteristics Gram - facultative anaerobe, rod DNA hybridization reveals they’re actually biogroups of E. coli. Don’t ferment lactose Intracellular pathogen Shigella Virulence Factors Adhere to, invade, and replicate in M cells (Peyer’s Patches). Spread to macrophages and cause lysis of phagocytic vacuole They then replicate in the cytoplasm Cause apoptosis, and release of IL-1β which attract polymorphonulear leukocytes which destroy intestinal tissue. Shiga toxin—disrupts protein synthesis Remember E. coli O157:H7 Shigella Epidemiology Estimated 450,000 cases in U.S. (2003) 150 million world wide Spread by fecal oral route (yummy). Primarily a pediatric disease 70% occur in children 15 and under. Highest risk in daycares, nurseries, custodial institutions Low infectious dosage (~200 cells) Shigellosis Symptoms appear 1-3 days after ingestion Begin with watery diarrhea. Progress to abdominal cramps and pus in bloody stool. Usually clears up on its own Antibiotics are given to reduce the chance of spread Small percentage of asymptomatic colonization Yersinia Species Y. pestis – causes the plague Highly virulent pathogen causing a systemic disease Y. enterocolitica - causes enterocolitis Yersinia Virulence Factors Found on plasmids Capsule Antiphagocytic proteins Proteins which cause apoptosis in macrophages Proteases which inactivate compliment proteins Fibrinases which break down blood clots Yersinia Epidemiology Humans are accidental hosts Most infections in other animals are fatal (not normal flora) Y. enterocolitica Reservoir rabbits, rodents, pigs, livestock Primarily in colder climates 90% infections associated with ingestion of contaminated meat, milk, water Mostly in children Yersinia entercolitica Symptoms include: diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever Can mimic acute appendicitis Usually lasts 1 to 2 weeks Because of growth at low temperature (4°C) can spread in blood products Yersinia pestis Epidemiology Sylvatic Plague Reservoir is small mammals, livestock etc. Too widespread for animal control Can spread by eating contaminated food Yersinia Pestis Epidemiology Urban plague Reservoir is rats, transmitted by fleas Rare due to good hygiene, and rat control Three great pandemics. Plague History Egypt 541 AD. lasted 200yrs Spread to most of the “old world” Killed a majority of the population 1320s, over 5 year period 25 million died in Europe (30-40% of population) China 1860s spread world wide About 10 cases in the U.S. per year Sylvatic plague Yersinia Diseases Bubonic Plague incubation of no more than 7 days cause bubos (swelling of lymph nodes) in groin and armpit 75% mortality in untreated cases Yersinia Diseases Pneumonic Plague short (2-3 day) incubation fever, malaise, pulmonary signs highly infectious 90% mortality for untreated patients Yersinia Treatment Y. pestis–streptomycin, tetracyclines, chloroamphenicol Enteric infections usually clear on there own Urban plague is controlled by reducing the rodent population