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Я-Proteobacteria

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-Proteobacteria Nikki Antonious Carol Ann Becker Mallory Longfield Meredith Rosenberger Melanie Schwer 3/25/09 B. pertussa * Highly contagious disease caused by ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Я-Proteobacteria


1
ß-Proteobacteria
  • Nikki Antonious
  • Carol Ann Becker
  • Mallory Longfield
  • Meredith Rosenberger
  • Melanie Schwer
  • 3/25/09

2
What is ß-Proteobacteria?
  • Beta bacteria is a class in the phylum
    Proteobacteria which consists of
    chemoheterotrophs and chemoautotrophs which
    gather nutrients from the decomposition of
    organic material.

http//www.eol.org/pages/3325
3
Characteristics
  • Gram-negative bacteria
  • Aerobic, rod- or cocci- shaped
  • Responsible for nitrogen fixation in plants
  • Oxidizing ammonium to produce nitrite for plant
    function
  • Most move using flagella or bacterial gliding

4
Mechanism of Infection
  • Betaproteobacteria
  • Most human pathogens invade epithelial cells
  • Gram-negative cell wall
  • Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in outer membrane
  • O polysaccharides act as antigens
  • Lipid A endotoxin toxic upon entrance of hosts
    bloodstream or GI tract ? fever and shock
  • Outer membrane acts as a barrier to some
    antibiotics (e.g. Penicillin) and digestive
    enzymes

5
Gram Negative Cell Wall
Tortora, Funke, and Case. Microbiology An
Introduction.
6
Schematic
www.life.umd.edu/classroom/bsci424/BSCI223WebSiteF
iles/BetaProteobacteria.htm
7
Thiobacillus
  • Are sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (chemoautotrophic)
  • Important in the sulfur cycle
  • Obtain energy by oxidizing the reduced forms of
    sulfur into sulfate

www.amp.wpcamr.org/archives/date/2006/10
8
Zoogloea
  • Important in the context of aerobic
    sewage-treatment processes (e.g. sludge system)
  • As they grow, they form fluffy, slimy masses that
    are imperative to the proper functioning of such
    systems

www.starcentral.mbl.edu
9
Spirillium
  • Mainly fresh water
  • Motile by polar flagella, rather than axial
    filaments
  • Relatively large microbe

www.lima.ohio-state.edu/.../biodiv/webbact.htm
10
Route of Transmission
  • Spirillum minus
  • Rat-Bite Fever (RBF)
  • acute febrile illness accompanied by a skin rash
  • Sporadic cases have been reported in children
    without histories of direct rodent contact but
    who lived in rat-infested dwellings
  • passed from rodent to human via the rodent's
    urine or mucous secretions

http//www.kcom.edu/faculty/chamberlain/website/le
ctures/lecture/ratfever.htm
11
Sphaerotilus
  • Sheathed bacteria
  • Found in freshwater and in sewage
  • Moves by polar flagella

http//www.environmentalleverage.com/Sphaerotilus_
natans.htm
12
Burkholderia
  • Reclassified from Pseudomonas
  • Motile by a single polar flagellum
  • Best known species is the aerobic, gram-negative
    rod Burkholderia cepacia.

www.web.mst.edu/.../Burkholderia_cepacia.html
13
Clinical Importance
  • Animal, human, and plant pathogens
  • Found in soil and groundwater
  • High mortality rate
  • Potential biological warfare agents
  • Pathogenic species include
  • Burkholderia mallei which causes glanders
  • Burkholderia pseudomallei which causes
    melioidosis and Burkholderia cepacia

14
Burkholderia mallei
  • Glanders
  • Mainly a horse disease but can affect humans
  • Illness includes localized, pus-forming cutaneous
    infections, pulmonary infections, bloodstream
    infections, and chronic suppurative infections of
    the skin
  • Symptoms include fever, muscle aches, chest pain,
    muscle tightness and headache.

15
Route of Transmission
  • Introduced into horse populations by diseased or
    latently infected animals
  • Transmitted to humans by direct contact with
    infected animals.
  • The bacteria enter the body through the skin and
    through mucosal surfaces of the eyes and nose.
  • Transmission is facilitated if the animals share
    feeding troughs or watering facilities or if they
    nuzzle each other

Burkholderia mallei
http//www.cdc.gov/nczved/dfbmd/disease_listing/gl
anders_gi.html http//www.vet.uga.edu/VPP/gray_boo
k02/fad/gla.php
16
Glanders Treatment
  • Initial intravenous therapy for 2-3 weeks
  • Prevent reactivation by using oral combination
    antibiotic of trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole
    (TMP-SMX) aka Bactrim
  • Mallein Serum injected in uninfected horses
    produces antibodies against P. mallei
  • Allergic reactions due to hypersensitivity

17
Clinical ImportanceBurkholderia pseudomallei
  • Melioidosis (Whitmores Disease)
  • Found in tropical climates
  • Acute or chronic forms
  • Diagnosed from the blood, urine, sputum, or skin
    lesions.
  • Symptoms may include pain in chest, bones, or
    joints cough skin infections, lung nodules and
    pneumonia

18
Route of Transmission
  • Melioidosis
  • Direct contact
  • ingestion
  • Inhalation
  • through open wounds and skin abrasions.
  • Human-to-human and animal-to-human transmission
    is rare but can occur after contact with blood or
    body fluids

Burkholderia pseudomallei colonies on a blood
agar plate.
http//www.cdc.gov/nczved/dfbmd/disease_listing/me
lioidosis_gi.html4 http//pathema.jcvi.org/pathem
a/b_pseudomallei.shtml
19
Mechanism of Infection
  • Causes ulcers in skin and nasal mucosa which can
    lead to septicemia
  • Pili assist in adherence to mucosal epithelial
    surfaces
  • Use phages to infect hosts
  • Virulence factors include exotoxins,
    siderophores, and enzymes (lipases, catalases,
    proteases)
  • Pathogenesis is poorly understood

20
Clinical ImportanceBurkholderia cepacia
  • Opportunistic pathogen
  • Infects hospitalized patients
  • Causes urinary tract and respiratory diseases
  • Causes pneumonia in immunocompromised individuals
  • Cystic fibrosis or chronic granulomatous disease
  • Deteriorates lung function

21
Pneumonia Treatment
  • Intravenous treatment of multiple antibiotics
    using PICC line
  • Vancomycin, tobramycin, meropenem, ciprofloxacin,
    and piperacillin.
  • Inhaled therapy with antibiotics improves lung
    function
  • Oral antibiotics help prevent infection or
    control ongoing infection

22
Pneumonia Treatments for CF
  • Physical Therapy
  • Percussive therapy devices assist to dislodge
    secretions.
  • Aerboic exercise- increases sputum clearance and
    improves cardiovascular and overall health
  • Aerosolized medications
  • Dornase alfa breaks down DNA in sputum
  • Inhaled Albuterol increases airway size
  • Bilevel positive airway pressure ventilators
    prevent low blood oxygen levels during sleep

23
Neisseria
  • Aerobic and gram-negative cocci
  • Inhabit the mucous membranes of mammals
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • N. Meningitidis

http//bioweb.uwlax.edu/bio203/s2008/bingen_sama/
24
Clinical Importance
  • Pathogenic and nonpathogenic species
  • Pathogenic
  • N. gonorrhoeae causes gonorrhoea
  • N. meningitidis causes meningitis and
    meningococcal septicaemia
  • Nonpathogenic
  • N. cinerea, N. mucosa, N. sicca, N. subflava

25
Mechanism of Infection
  • The only host for this bacteria is the human
  • Infection via colonization of mucus membranes
  • Attaches to host cell using fimbriae
  • Immune system activation ? Release of protease ?
    Loss of Ab activity

26
Clinical ImportanceN. gonorrhoeae
  • A. Neisser in 1879
  • High prevalence and low mortality
  • Usually limited to superficial mucosal surfaces
    lined with columnar epithelium
  • The areas most frequently involved are the
    urethra, cervix, rectum, pharynx, and conjunctiva
  • Involves mucous membranes of the urethra
  • Results in an abundant discharge of pus
  • Apparent more in males than in the females

27
(No Transcript)
28
Route of Transmission
  • Gonorrhea is spread through
  • Sexual contact
  • contact with the penis, vagina, mouth, or anus.
  • Mother to child
  • child passes through the birth canal during
    delivery, causing eye infections
  • Ejaculation does not have to occur for gonorrhea
    to be transmitted or acquired.
  • http//www.cdc.gov/std/gonorrhea/stdfact-gonorrhe
    a.htmHow
  • http//www.herpes-coldsores.com/std/gonorrhea.htm
    Transmission

29
Mechanism of Infection
  • N. gonorrhoeae
  • Main site of infection urethra in male, cervix
    in female
  • LPS damages epithelial cells with cilia that are
    found in the fallopian tubes

30
Pathogenesis of Gonorrhea
gsbs.utmb.edu
31
Gonorrhoea Treatment
  • Single large dose of antibiotics given orally or
    through injection
  • Ampicillin, ciprofloxacin or penicillin
    (developed resistance)
  • Renal transport mechanism that secretes
    penicillin into urine can be blocked for
    effectiveness in treatment.
  • Probenecid
  • Untreated can block fallopian tubes resulting in
    reduced fertility.

32
Clinical ImportanceN. meningitidis
  • Anton Weichselbaum in 1887
  • Causes meningococcal meningitis
  • Low prevalence and high mortality
  • Inflammation the meninges of the brain or spinal
    cord
  • Flu like symptoms which progresses to apnea,
    seizures, disturbances in motor tone, and coma
    may develop.

33
Route of Transmission
  • Direct contact with respiratory secretions
  • saliva, sputum, or nasal mucus of an infected
    person
  • Shaking hands with an infected person or touching
    something they have handled, and then rubbing
    your own nose or mouth.
  • Found in the stool of persons who are infected
  • small children who are not yet toilet trained
  • adults changing the diapers of an infected infant
  • http//www.cdc.gov/meningitis/viral/viral-faqs.htm
    5

34
Mechanism of Infection
  • N. meningitidis
  • bloodstream spread 1 entry can be respiratory
    tract, skin, or intestine
  • Hyperemia
  • Formation of fibrin
  • Inflammatory cells

35
Pathogenesis of Meningitis
www.nature.com/.../v4/n5/images/nrn1103-f1.jpg
  • (1) Mucosal colonization, (2) Bloodstream
    invasion, (3) Multiplication, (4) Bacteremia
    crossing of the bloodbrain barrier, (5) Invasion
    of CNS and meninges, (6) Increased permeability
    of blood-brain barrier, (7) Pleocytosis, (8)
    Edema and increased intracranial pressure,
    (9)Release of proinflammatory compounds from
    infiltrated white blood cells and other host
    cells , Ultimately, (10) Neuronal injury

36
Meningococcal meningitis Treatment
  • Antibiotic treatment ASAP after performing lumbar
    puncture.
  • Pencillin is first choice, if resistant use
    ceftriaxone.
  • Initial empiric antibiotics and addition of
    ampicillin for those with Listeria pathogen.
  • Chemoprophylaxis can interrupt transmission to
    those who are at highest risk of carrying the
    pathogenic strains.
  • Eradicate using rifampin, quinolones,
    ceftriaxone.
  • Recommended vaccine for 4/5 strains A,C, Y and
    W135 for young children.
  • Still developing vaccine for B strain
  • Surgical intervention for complications

37
Bordetella
  • Non-motile
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • cause of pertussis, also known as whooping cough

http//strbio.biochem.nchu.edu.tw/classes/biochem-
II/microbes/cells_pics.htm
38
Clinical Importance Bordetella pertussis
  • Affects the respiratory passages
  • Vaccine-preventable
  • Infects humans
  • Highly contagious
  • Three stages
  • Catarrhal
  • Paroxymal
  • Convalscent

39
Route of Transmission
  • Whooping Cough
  • person to person through tiny drops of fluid from
    an infected person's nose or mouth
  • via respiratory aerosol droplets
  • fomites

http//kidshealth.org/parent/infections/bacterial_
viral/whooping_cough.html
40
Mechanism of Infection
  • Colonizes and grows on only the ciliated mucus
    membranes of the respiratory tract
  • Adhere to cilia of bronchial epithelium via pili
    destroy cells
  • Produces numerous endotoxins
  • Pertussigen interferes with cell surface
    receptors
  • Adenylate cyclase inhibits immune effector cell
    function
  • Tracheal cytotoxin immobilizes cilia
  • Hemagglutin attachment to host epithelial cells

www.ues.ac.uk
41
Pathogenesis
gsbs.utmb.edu/microbook/images/fig31_4.JPG
42
Whooping Cough Treatment
  • Erythromycin administered early to prevent
    coughing stage.
  • Hospitalization may be required for infants
  • Suction to remove secretions from upper nose and
    upper respiratory tract.
  • Lots of fluids to prevent dehydration and
    maintain nutrition.
  • Universal immunization that includes diptheria,
    tetanus, and aceullar pertussis.
  • 5 doses by 7th birthday.

43
References
  • Chandrasoma, Parakrama and Clive R. Taylor
    (1991). Concise pathology. Englewod Cliffs
    Prentice Hall.
  • Chamberlain, Neal, R. Lymphoreticular and
    Hematopoetic Infections 2003
  • lthttp//www.kcom.edu/faculty/chamberlain/website/
    lectures/lecture/ratfever.htmgt
  • Department of Health and Human Sciences. Centers
    for Disease Control and Prevention Glanders
    (Burkholderia mallei) 2008
  • lthttp//www.cdc.gov/nczved/dfbmd/disease_listing/
    glanders_gi.htmlgt
  • Department of Health and Human Sciences. Centers
    for Disease Control and Prevention Gonorrhea
    2008
  • lthttp//www.cdc.gov/std/gonorrhea/stdfact-gonorrh
    ea.htmHowgt
  • Department of Health and Human Sciences. Centers
    for Disease Control and Prevention Melioidosis
    2008
  • lthttp//www.cdc.gov/nczved/dfbmd/disease_listing/
    melioidosis_gi.html4gt
  • Department of Health and Human Sciences. Centers
    for Disease Control and Prevention Meningitis
    (Meningococcal Disease) 2008
  • lthttp//www.cdc.gov/meningitis/gt
  • Finger, Horst, Carl Heinz Wirsing von Koenig.
    Bordetella. lthttp//gsbs.utmb.edu/microbook/ch031
    .htmgt.
  • Gilbert, R.O. B.V.Sc. College of Veterinary
    Medicine, Cornell University. Foreign Animal
    Diseases, Glanders
  • lthttp//www.vet.uga.edu/VPP/gray_book02/fad/gla.p
    hpgt
  • Hagebock, Joyce. Serologic responses to the
    mallein test for glanders in solipeds. 1993.
    lthttp//jvdi.org/cgi/reprint/5/1/97.pdfgt
  • lthttp//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cystic_fibrosisAnt
    ibiotics_to_treat_lung_diseasegt

44
References (Contd)
  • Health Central Network. Whooping Cough.
    2001-2009. lthttp//www.healthscout.com/ency/68/699
    /main.htmlTreatmentofWhoopingCoughgt
  • Image. Betaproteobacteria. http//www.eol.org/pa
    ges/3325
  • Kwang, Sik Kim (2003). Pathogenesis of bacterial
    meningitis from bactaeremia to neuronal injury.
    Nature Reviews Neuroscience. (4) 376-385.
  • ltwww.nature.com/.../v4/n5/fig_tab/nrn1103_F1.html
    gt.
  • Medscape. Meningococcal Meningitis Treatment
    and Medication. 2004-2009. lthttp//emedicine.meds
    cape.com/article/1165557-treatmentgt
  • National Health Service. Treating Gonorrhoea.
    2007. lthttp//www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Gonorrhoea/Pag
    es/Treatmentpg.aspx?urlPages/What-is-it.aspxgt
  • Sexually Transmitted Disease Resource.
    Gonorrhea 2008
  • lthttp//www.herpes-coldsores.com/std/gonorrhea.ht
    mTransmissiongt
  • Summer, Elizabeth J., Jason J. Gill, Chris Upton,
    Carlos F. Gonzalez, and Ry Young (2007). Role of
    phages in the pathogenesis of Burkholderia or
    Where are the toxin genes in Burkholderia
    phages? Curr Opin Microbiol. 10(4) 410-417.
    lthttp//www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fc
    gi?artid2064068 gt.
  • Rollins, D M. Pathogenic Microbiology. 2006.
  • lthttp//www.life.umd.edu/classroom/bsci424/BSCI22
    3WebSiteFiles/BetaProteobacteria.htmgt
  • The Institute of Genomic Research. Pathema,
    Bioinformatics Research Center. Burkholderia
    pseudomallei 2006.
  • http//pathema.jcvi.org/pathema/b_pseudomallei.sh
    tml
  • Tortora, Gerard, Berdell, Funke, and Christine
  • Case. Microbiology An Introduction. San
    Francisco Benjamin Cummings, 2005
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