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Microbiology review week 7

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Title: Microbiology review week 7


1
Microbiology review week 7
  • efking_at_u.washington.edu

2
What well cover today
  • Viruses
  • More viruses
  • Did I mention viruses?

3
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4
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

5
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

6
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

7
Poxviridae
  • Linear dsDNA in dumbbell shape surrounded by 2
    envelopes
  • brick shaped virion (pox in a box)
  • Differs from most DNA viruses - replicates in
    cytoplasm
  • Thus carries all enzymes needed for RNA synthesis
  • Produces cell lysis to release virions
  • Evades immunity by cell-cell spread
  • Variola
  • Monkeypox
  • Molluscum contagiosum

8
Variola(not to be confused with Varicella or
vermicelli)
  • Smallpox
  • Humans only reservoir all infections produce
    overt disease
  • Spread via inhalation, close contact
  • Replicates in cells in upper respiratory tract
  • Disseminates via lymphatics
  • Secondary viremia
  • Seeds liver, spleen, BM, dermis
  • Characteristic pustular rash
  • Dx clinical, cell culture
  • Vaccine vaccinia (cowpox avirulent, mostly)
  • Occasional dissemination
  • rare mortality in immunosuppressed

9
Monkeypox
  • Disease looks a lot like smallpox
  • Get from direct contact with animals
  • Cow, sheep, goat, monkey reservoir
  • Mainly in Africa

10
Molluscum contagiosum
  • Nodular to wartlike lesions
  • Spread by direct contact or fomites
  • More common in kids, AIDS pts
  • Humans only reservoir
  • Benign proliferation of epithelium on trunk,
    genitals, proximal extremities

11
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

12
Herpes viruses
  • Transmitted by saliva other stuff - sex, etc.
  • All herpes viruses can develop a latent state
    lytic and latent cycles
  • Cell-mediated immune response
  • ? subgroup cytopathic, lytic infections
  • Multinucleate, giant syncitial cells with
    intranuclear inclusions
  • Cause vesicles (blisters)
  • HSV-1, HSV-2, VZV
  • ? group less cytopathic
  • HHV-6, CMV
  • ? group less cytopathic
  • EBV, HHV-8
  • Can treat most of these with antivirals
    (acyclovir, gancyclovir)

13
HSV-1
  • Primary infection
  • Asymptomatic in 99
  • Gingivostomatosis - swollen gums, vesicles, fever
  • Reactivation - about 1/4 of infected
  • Often reactivates from trigeminal ganglia
  • Cold sores, fever blisters
  • Herpatic keratitis - corneal blindness
  • Encephalitis
  • Disseminated infection in immunocompromised
  • Can cause genital neonatal herpes, but HSV-2
    more commonly does
  • Latency in neurons
  • Dx demonstrate viral Ag or DNA, serology

14
HSV-2
  • Primary infection
  • Often subclinical, can be fever, myalgia
  • Reactivation
  • Genital herpes
  • Painful vesicles on genitals burning, itching,
    dysuria
  • Neonatal herpes -
  • can cross blood-placenta barrier - congenital
    defects
  • Or acquire during delivery
  • Meningitis
  • Disseminated disease in immunocompromised
  • Can cause eye/skin/oral disease, but usually
    HSV-1
  • Latency in neurons
  • Dx cytopathology, demonstrate viral Ag/DNA

15
VZV
  • Primary disease
  • Chicken pox
  • rash starting on face trunk - dewdrops on a
    rose
  • In adults immunocompromised, can have serious
    disease
  • Reactivation
  • Shingles
  • Reactivates from latency in dorsal root ganglia
  • Burning, painful vesicles, restricted to
    dermatome
  • Increasing incidence with age
  • Dx cytology, Ag/DNA detection
  • Live attenuated vaccine

16
HHV-6
  • Roseola
  • High fever followed by rash
  • Febrile seizures
  • Latency in B cells
  • Common in infants

17
CMV
  • Primary infection
  • Most are asymptomatic
  • Mononucleosis
  • Heterophile negative
  • Congenital disease
  • Microcephaly, rash, retardation, deafness
  • Reactivation disease in immunocompromised
  • Disseminated infection
  • In BMT pneumonia
  • In HIV retinitis
  • Latency in monocytes, T-cells, BM stroma
  • Dx cytology - nuclear AND cytoplasmic
    inclusions

18
EBV
  • Mononucleosis
  • Heterophile positive
  • Lymphocytosis, hepatosplenomegaly, pharyngitis
  • Encephalitis
  • Lymphoprolifertative disease
  • Infects transforms B cells
  • Burkitts lymphoma
  • Nasopharyngeal cancer
  • Hairy leukoplakia in AIDS pts
  • Disease post transplants
  • Dx Downey cells, heterophile Abs
  • Rx only leukoplakia (acyclovir)

19
HHV-8
  • Kaposis sarcoma
  • Especially in males, immunosuppressed
  • NOT ubiquitous
  • Infects B cells, spindle cells

20
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

21
adenoviruses
  • Direct/oral contact, fomites
  • Many serotypes
  • Upper respiratory illnesses
  • Rhinitis
  • Pharyngitis conjunctivitis
  • Pertussis-like illness
  • Gastroenteritis
  • Keratoconjunctivitis
  • Hemorrhagic cystitis nephritis
  • Pneumo, hepatitis in immunocompromised
  • Lytic, latent and oncogenic infections
  • Dx smudge cells
  • Oral live vaccine in military

22
Polyomavirus
  • Ubiquitious, worldwide
  • Respiratory transmission
  • BK virus
  • Mild/asymptomatic infection in kids
  • Hemorrhagic nephritis in immunosuppressed
  • Latently infects kidney cells
  • JC virus
  • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in
    immunosuppressed
  • Demyelination in CNS - impaired speech,
    paralysis, death
  • Latent in B cells, replicates in oligodendroglia
    in reactivation infection

23
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

24
HPV
  • Spread by direct contact, sex, fomites
  • Lots of serotypes with tropism for various
    anatomic regions
  • Cutaneous warts
  • Genital warts
  • Perinatal transmission - laryngeal papillomas
  • Cervical cancer (HPV16, 18)
  • Integration of DNA in cervical epithelial cells
  • Pathogenesis lytic, persistant latent
    infections
  • E6 - binds p53
  • E7 - binds Rb
  • Dx koliocytes on pap smear, PCR
  • Tx surgical removal

25
Lets start with DNA viruses
  • ds ss
  • Enveloped naked
    naked
  • Resp saliva parenteral resp
    direct B19
  • Pox herpes Hep B adeno
    papilloma
  • polyoma

26
B19
  • Fifths disease
  • Slapped cheeks, lacy rash on arms, fever
  • Rash caused by immune complex deposition
  • Congenital infection - hydrops fetalis
  • Aplasic crisis in chronic hemolytic anemia pts
  • Persistant anemia in immunocompromised
  • Replicates in BM cells - RBC, platelet lineage
  • Causes lytic infection
  • Dx serology, PCR, cord blood IgM
  • Rx immunoglobulin

27
A 19 yo male comes to clinic because he had a
single, large, painless ulceration on his penis.
A rapid serological assay was performed which
involved the suspensiion of antigen derived from
beef heart in serum this was positive, and
followed up with another test utilizing antigen
derived from the suspected antigen. This was
also positive. This patient is most likely
infected with
  • HSV-1
  • H. ducreyi
  • T. pallidum
  • C. trachomatis (LGV strain)
  • HPV

28
A 19 yo male comes to clinic because he had a
single, large, painless ulceration on his penis.
A rapid serological assay was performed which
involved the suspensiion of antigen derived from
beef heart in serum this was positive, and
followed up with another test utilizing antigen
derived from the suspected antigen. This was
also positive. This patient is most likely
infected with
  • HSV-1
  • H. ducreyi
  • T. pallidum
  • C. trachomatis (LGV strain)
  • HPV

29
Reinfection or reactivation with this organism is
common in HIV-infected persons, even with CD4
counts 300
  • Staph aureus
  • HTLV-2
  • VZV
  • HHV-8

30
Reinfection or reactivation with this organism is
common in HIV-infected persons, even with CD4
counts 300
  • Staph aureus
  • HTLV-2
  • VZV
  • HHV-8

31
On to RNA virusesit gets a lot worse from here
on in. -Hoggle in the Labyrinth
32
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34
rotavirus
  • Fecal/oral, fomites, nosocomial
  • Most common in winter
  • 1 cause of infectious diarrhea
  • Segmented genome - gene reassortment
  • Gastroenteritis
  • Vomiting, diarrhea - dehydration
  • Kids adults
  • Causes lytic infection - destroys vili
  • Dx Ag in stool, ELISA
  • Rx supportive, oral rehydration
  • Vaccine recalled due to intussusception

35
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36
Flaviviruses
  • One group of the arboviruses (arthropod
    transmitted) - cause encephalitis, fever
  • Yellow fever
  • Mosquito transmission
  • Severe systemic disease - hepatitis,
    coagulopathy, hepatic necrosis
  • Dx councilman bodies
  • Live virus vaccine
  • Dengue virus
  • mosquito transmission
  • Hemorrhagic fever or breakbone fever
  • Rash, fever, back and bone pain
  • A small develop hemorrhagic shock upon
    rechallenge with another strain

37
Flaviviruses
  • Encephalitis meningitis
  • Mosquito transmission, bird reservoir humans are
    incidental hosts
  • St. Louis - US, summer
  • Japanese B - inactivated vaccine available
  • West Nile - East coast, esp elderly pts
  • Tick transmission
  • Powassan - Canada
  • Russian
  • All enter cell via endocytosis, envelope fuses
    with endosome on acidification replicates in
    cytoplasm
  • Rx supportive

38
Coronaviruses
  • SARS
  • (thats all Im going to say about this you know
    more about it than I do)
  • Common cold, mainly in kids
  • Second most common cause
  • Winter spring
  • Rare pneumonia
  • Transmitted by aerosols, droplets
  • Dx not usually done ELISA
  • Rx supportive

39
Togaviruses
  • One group of the arboviruses (arthropod
    transmitted)
  • Along with bunyaviruses, flaviviruses
  • Two subgroups
  • Rubella - exception as NOT transmitted by bug
  • Alphaviruses
  • WEE, EEE, VEE

40
Rubella
  • Transmitted by respiratory droplet
  • German measles
  • Mild febrile illness with rash, lymphadenopathy
  • If mom is infected when fetus is
  • Cataracts
  • Heart disease
  • Deafness
  • Retardation
  • No cell lysis kid excretes virus for years
  • Live viral vaccine

41
Alphaviruses
  • Transmitted by mosquitoes
  • Enters cells by endocytosis, fuses with endosome
    on acidification, replicates in cytoplasm,
    released by cell lysis
  • Bird reservoir human is incidental host
  • Flu-like syndrome and encephalitis
  • WEE - W. US, Canada
  • VEE - S/Central America, S. US
  • EEE - E. US severe encephalitis
  • Occasional paralysis, seizures, death
  • Dx serology
  • No Rx
  • Killed vaccine

42
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43
Poliovirus
  • Fecal/oral, fomites primarily
  • Peaks in summer, early fall
  • Polio
  • Mild illness - most common asymptomatic or
    febrile
  • Meningitis
  • Paralytic poliomyelitis
  • Anterior horn cells destroyed
  • Increase risk with age
  • Lytic infection
  • Dx PCR, cell culture, Ab assay
  • Vaccines
  • Salk - inactivated
  • Sabin - live oral

44
Cocksackie
  • Fecal/oral
  • A hand, foot and mouth disease
  • B
  • Myocarditis/pericarditis
  • Meningitis/encephalitis
  • Neonatal sepsis
  • Pleurodynia - sudden fever, unilateral pleurisy
  • Juvenille diabetes?
  • Infects GALT- viremia - infects organs
  • Lytic infection
  • Dx PCR of CSF, direct isolation
  • Rx immunoglobulin as last ditch

45
Echoviruses
  • Fecal/oral
  • Diseases a lot like cocksackie
  • Meningitis
  • Rash/fever
  • Neonatal sepsis
  • Mycoarditis
  • Lytic infection
  • Dx PCR
  • Rx plecornaril for meningitis

46
Rhinovirus
  • Aerosols, fomites, hands
  • Fall and spring
  • Common cold
  • Rhinorrhea, sneezing, sore throat, HA
  • Grows best at 33 degrees
  • Replicates in cytoplasm, lyses cells
  • Dx clinical, cell culture
  • Rx none

47
Norwalk
  • Fecal/oral, shellfish, contaminated food
  • Year-round
  • Gastroenteritis
  • Adults kids
  • Diarrhea with vomiting fever (like rotavirus)
  • Replicates in cytoplasm, lyses cells
  • Dx ELISA, cant culture

48
Astrovirus
  • Fecal/oral via contaminated foods
  • Gastroenteritis
  • Kids adults
  • Diarrhea without vomiting
  • Replicates in cytoplasm, lyses cells
  • Dx ELISA, cell culture
  • Rx none

49
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influenza
  • Orthomyxovirus types A B
  • Segmented genome
  • Hemagglutinin - mediates attachment, fusion
  • Neuraminidase - mediates virion release
  • M2 - proton channel, promotes uncoating and
    release
  • Transmitted by respiratory droplet in winter
  • Causes the flu - fever, cough
  • Complications
  • Bacterial/viral pneumonia
  • Reyes syndrome
  • Post infectious encephalitis
  • Endocytosis, fusion with endosome on
    acidification, transcription of genome in
    nucleus, release by lysis
  • Dx serology, hemagglutination
  • Rx zanamivir (NA), amantadine (M2, type A only)
  • Killed vaccine

51
Sin Nombre virus
  • Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome
  • High fever, cough, vomiting, pulmonary edema, CV
    collapse
  • Endocytosis, fuses with endosome on
    acidification, replicates in cytoplasm
  • Dx RT-PCR, IgM
  • Rx ribavirin
  • Found in Western US

52
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53
Measles virus
  • Transmitted by respiratory droplet
  • Winter spring
  • Rubeola
  • High fever, photophobia, cough, Kopliks spots
  • Complications
  • Pneumonia, hepatitis
  • Encephalitis
  • Acute
  • Post-infectious
  • Subacute sclerosing - 5-9 years later
  • Persists without lysis in neurons
  • Dx clinical, cytoplasmic inclusions and giant
    cells
  • Rx Ig post exposure
  • Live attenuated vaccine

54
Mumps virus
  • Mumps
  • Parotitis
  • Epididymitis/orchitis
  • Meningitis, encephalitis
  • Pancreatitis
  • Carries own RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
  • Rx none
  • Live vaccine

55
RSV
  • Very contagious by resp droplet, hands, fomites
  • Winter outbreaks
  • Disease
  • Kids febrile rhinitis pharyngitis
  • Adults URI, rhinorrhea - common cold
  • Pathogenesis
  • F protein - fusion
  • G protein - attachment
  • Replicates in cytoplasm
  • Dx fluorescent Ab, Ag detection
  • Rx nebulized ribavirin in premies/immunocompromis
    ed. Maternal Ig not protective

56
Parainfluenza
  • Respiratory droplet
  • 1,2 - autumn 3 - year around
  • Disease
  • Croup (laryngotrachobronchitis) - infants
  • Subglottal edema, tachypnea, tachycardia
  • Cold-like Sx - pharyngitis, bronchiolitis,
    pneumonia
  • Path
  • F - fusion protein
  • HN - attachment
  • Replicates in cytoplasm
  • Dx syncytia, immunofluorescence
  • Rx humidity, steroids, epi

57
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58
Rabies virus
  • Bullet shaped
  • Transmitted by inhalation of aerosol, bite of
    infected animal bat reservoir in NW, cats dogs
  • World-wide, year around
  • Rabies
  • Incubation weeks - months
  • Prodrome 2-10 days - fever, HA, lethargy, pain
    at bite site - virus is in CNS
  • Neurologic phase hydrophobia, encephalitis,
    paralysis, death
  • Endocytosis, fuses w/endosome on acidification,
    replicates in cytoplasm, released by budding
  • Carried to dorsal root - CNS - salivary glands
  • Dx Negri bodies - cytoplasmic inclusions
  • Rx vaccine, human If for post-exposre
  • Inactivated vaccine

59
Filoviruses
  • Ebola marburg
  • Fulminant hemorrhagic fever
  • Flu-like Sx then n/v, diarrhea, rash
  • Bleed from everywhere
  • Death in up to 90, ebolamarburg
  • Fast replication in cytoplasm, cell lysis
  • Causes vascular injury, necrosis
  • Dx Level 4 containment, RT-PCR, ELISA
  • Rx quarantine, Ig, IFN
  • Endemic in Africa

60
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61
arenaviruses
  • Transmited from rodents - people by eating
    contaminated food, fomites, aerosols
  • LCM
  • Lymphocytic choriomeningitis
  • Febrile illness, meningitis
  • Dx level 3 containment, serology
  • No person-person spread
  • Lassa fever
  • Fever, coagulopathy, petechiae, hepatic/splenic
    necrosis no vasculitis or CNS lesions
  • Dx Level 4 containment, urine serology
  • Person - person by bodily fluid contact,
    nosocomial
  • Infects macrophages, replicates in cytoplasm,
    released by budding
  • Rx supportive

62
One last thing
  • Prions
  • Kuru, CJD, others in humans - genetic,
    spontaneous, food-borne (variant CJD)
  • Scrapie, BSE, etc in animals
  • Normal protein (PrPc)
  • Abnormal protein (PrPsc) - insoluble - amyloid
    can induce misfolding of normal one
  • Spongiform encephalooathy
  • Incubates up to 30 years
  • Dementia, ataxia, aphasia, clonus, death
  • Dx brain Bx
  • Rx noneavoid mad cow burgers

63
Some lists
  • viruses transmitted by mosquito
  • WEE, EEE, VEE
  • Dengue
  • Yellow fever
  • Flaviviruses - St. Louis, Japanese B, W. Nile
  • Stuff you cant culture
  • Clostriduim tentani
  • M. leprae (except in mouse foot pads)
  • Coxiella
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Pneumocystis carinii
  • Norwalk virus

64
Virus calendar
  • Winter spring summer fall
  • Rota Rhino St. Louis Rhino
  • Measles polio
  • Corona
  • RSV
  • Influenza para 12
  • Para 3
  • Norwalk
  • rabies

65
Which virus must incorporate an RNA-dependent RNA
polymerase in the virion?
  • Polio
  • Measles
  • Retrovirus
  • Parvovirus
  • Herpesvirus

66
Which virus must incorporate an RNA-dependent RNA
polymerase in the virion?
  • Polio
  • Measles (- strand RNA virus)
  • Retrovirus
  • Parvovirus
  • Herpesvirus

67
May cause severe pneumonitis and hepatitis in a
patient with AIDS
  • Tuberculosis
  • HTLV-2
  • Varicella zoster
  • HHV-8

68
May cause severe pneumonitis and hepatitis in a
patient with AIDS
  • Tuberculosis
  • HTLV-2
  • Varicella zoster
  • HHV-8

69
Escape from neutralization because of antigenic
change in the envelope proteins is commonly seen
in both hepatitis C and HIV-1 infection
  • True
  • False

70
Escape from neutralization because of antigenic
change in the envelope proteins is commonly seen
in both hepatitis C and HIV-1 infection
  • True
  • False

71
Fungal jeopardy
72
Fungal jeopardy
73
  • All dermatophytes can digest this human protein

74
  • All dermatophytes can digest this human protein
  • Keratin

75
Fungal jeopardy
76
  • These three drugs are good for treating most
    dermatophyte infections

77
  • These three drugs are good for treating most
    dermatophyte infections
  • Tolnaftate
  • Griseofulvan
  • Terbinafine

78
Fungal jeopardy
79
  • This disease is caused by Malassezia furfur

80
  • This disease is caused by Malassezia furfur
  • Tenia versicolor

81
Fungal jeopardy
82
  • Rose gardeners disease is caused by this organism

83
  • Rose gardeners disease is caused by this
    organism
  • sporothrix schenckii

84
Fungal jeopardy
85
  • This tropical fungus causes verrucous lesions,
    typically after a puncture wound on the foot

86
  • This tropical fungus causes verrucous lesions,
    typically after a puncture wound on the foot
  • chromoblastomycosis

87
Fungal jeopardy
88
  • This disease can be caused by Nocardia and
    Pseudoallescheria boydii in the tropics

89
  • This disease can be caused by Nocardia and
    Pseudoallescheria boydii in the tropics
  • mycetoma

90
Fungal jeopardy
91
  • Fungi that causes sytemic diseases have these
    three things in common

92
  • Fungi that causes sytemic diseases have these
    three things in common
  • Dimorphic
  • Saprophytes
  • Acquired by inhalation

93
Fungal jeopardy
94
  • This fungus causes disease in the Mississippi and
    Ohio river valleys

95
  • This fungus causes disease in the Mississippi and
    Ohio river valleys
  • Histoplasma

96
Fungal jeopardy
97
  • Diagnosed by finding Mariners wheels in culture

98
  • Diagnosed by finding Mariners wheels in culture
  • Paracoccidiodes

99
Fungal jeopardy
100
  • This fungus causes aflatoxin intoxication as well
    as other diseases

101
  • This fungus causes aflatoxin intoxication as well
    as other diseases
  • aspergillus

102
Fungal jeopardy
103
  • Rhinocerebral, pulmonary, and cutaneous diseases
    can be caused by this organism

104
  • Rhinocerebral, pulmonary, and cutaneous diseases
    can be caused by this organism
  • Zygomycosis (rhizopus spp)

105
Fungal jeopardy
106
  • This fungus causes meningitis in AIDS patients,
    and is diagnosed by latex agglutination

107
  • This fungus causes meningitis in AIDS patients,
    and is diagnosed by latex agglutination
  • Cryptococcus neoformans

108
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