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Download Host-Microbe Relationships and Disease
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1 Host-Microbe Relationships and Disease • Classical ecological definitions – Mutualism: organisms live together, both benefit • E. coli in GI tract; we get Vitamin K, protection from pathogens, it gets warm wet place to live, lots to eat. – Commensalism: one organism benefits, the other is not particularly benefited or harmed; to eat at the same table • Most GI tract microbes; we provide a warm wet place to live with food, we don’t get all that much in return. – Parasitism: one organism benefits at the other’s expense • Disease-causing bacteria; to them, we’re dinner. • Classically, a “parasite” lives in or on host. 2 Terms, terms, and more terms • Contamination: presence of microbes (where they don’t belong). • Infection: multiplication of parasitic organisms in/on host. – Infestation: used to describe larger organisms, e.g. lice. • Disease: malfunction in or damage to the host. – Many kinds of “disease”; here we discuss “infectious disease”. – Disease is a condition of the host, not an infectious microbe. • Pathogen: a parasite capable of causing disease – Not all pathogens are equal as we will see.. • Pathogenicity: ability of pathogen to cause disease 3 Terms, terms, and more terms-2 • Virulence: relative ability to cause disease. – Especially variations in pathogenicity within a specific group – Virulence can be weakened (attenuation) or increased (animal passage); Growing pathogens on agar attenuates them. • Normal microbiota: the microbes normally found on the body. Since people are not “normally” sick, pathogens are not normally consider “normal microbiota”. – The term “flora” is to be avoided as microbes are NOT plants! • Resident microbiota: always found on human tissues. • Transient microbiota: come and go, can include pathogens. Where do they live? • Microbes live where it is “topologically outside” – We are a tube within a tube. We have sacs open to the outside. • Respiratory tract: – nasal passages, sinuses, trachea, lungs. Lungs well protected, other areas more populated. • GI tract: Crowded! – Mouth is full, fewer in esophagus and stomach; toward end of small intestine, numbers increase greatly. – Feces consist largely of bacteria. http://www.radiation-scott.org/deposition/respfig2.gif 4 Where do they live?-2 • Skin: largest organ in the body. – Colonized. Various factors keep the numbers down. • Genito-urinary tract: – Female reproductive tract colonized, especially with Lactobacillus which is helpful and with yeast which is occasionally not helpful. – Lower portion of urethra contains some bacteria, but bladder, ureters, and kidneys normally sterile. • All areas of the body have mechanisms for keeping us from being lunch; to be discussed soon. 5 6 What determines whether we get sick? • Inf Dis: the likelihood of contracting an infectious disease. • N: the numbers of infecting organisms. •V: the virulence of the organism. •HF: host factors, including overall health, nutritional status, genetic background, age, immune status. 7 How dangerous? • Pathogen: causes disease. • Opportunistic pathogen: can cause disease under the right circumstances – Dose in high numbers – Host is in a weakened state, e.g. HIV infection. – Organism gets where it doesn’t belong • E. coli and urinary tract infections. – Lack of microbial antagonism, e.g. superinfection • competition for space, nutrients; bacteriocins. • Saprobe/saprophyte: decompose dead stuff. Whether an organism will cause disease is not always a clear cut thing 8 • Not everything in biology can be neatly classified. There is a gradation from pathogen to opportunist to non-infectious, and what happens depends on the balance of these 3 factors. 9 Types of disease • Inherited diseases: caused by a faulty gene – but susceptibility to microbes can be genetic too. • Congenital: due to damage during development. – but microbes can be involved in this damage. • Degenerative diseases, due to age or lifestyle – but microbes can be involved in some as well. • Nutritional, endocrine, mental, immunological, neoplastic (cancer), idiopathic; same caveat. • Iatrogenic: caused by doctor. – Nosocomial infections: occur in hospital. 10 Types of infectious diseases • Communicable: can be spread from one person to another. – Example: tuberculosis, HIV • Contagious: highly communicable, can easily be spread from one person to another. – Genital herpes, measles. • Non-communicable: are not spread from one host to another. – Examples: your infected appendix bursts – You get tetanus from “rusty nail”