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Microbial Pathogenesis and HostParasite Relationships

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Title: Microbial Pathogenesis and HostParasite Relationships


1
Microbial Pathogenesis and Host-Parasite
Relationships
Medical Microbiology
  • BIOL 533
  • Lecture 1

2
Definitions
  • Microbial pathogenesisprocess of causing disease
  • Colonizationpresence of microbes at site of body
  • Does not imply tissue damage or disease symptoms
  • Does imply invasion of site and multiplication

3
Characteristics of Parasitism
  • Encounter agent meets host
  • Entry agent enters host
  • Spread agent spreads
  • Multiplication agent multiplies
  • Damage agent, host response, or both cause
    damage
  • Outcome agent or host wins, or coexist

4
Encounter
  • In utero
  • Do not normally come in contact with organisms
  • Protection of fetal membranes
  • Do not normally come in contact with organisms
    from mother
  • Normally only present sporadically
  • Exceptions sexual diseases, virus causes, rubella

5
Encounter
  • At moment of birth
  • Come in contact with organisms present in vaginal
    canal and on skin
  • Previously, antibodies passed from mother to
    fetus
  • Defenses are good for a period of time, then they
    wane

6
Encounter
  • Challenge between man and microbe wages many
    times during lifetime
  • Most disappear rapidly
  • Some become part of normal flora
  • Only a few cause disease

7
Later Encounters
  • Exogenous encountered in environment
  • Endogenous encountered in or on body
  • Organisms present on skin can cause disease when
    they go into deeper tissues

8
Later Encounters
  • Example
  • Staphylococcus aureus enters cut and forms boil
  • In this case, encounter took place long before
    disease (at time skin was colonized)
  • Encounter is not always sharply demarcated

9
Normal Flora
  • What constitutes normal flora?
  • Some people possess Streptococcus pyogenes in
    their throat for long periods, but rarely
    contract disease
  • Opportunistic pathogen existence (carrier state)
  • 95 of people never have this bacterium, and when
    they do, they get sick

10
Normal Flora Defined
  • Constitutes normal flora if definition is any
    organism present that is not causing disease
  • Not normal flora if used to mean organisms
    present in majority of population

11
Host-Parasite Interaction
  • Exposure to virulent agents does not always lead
    to disease
  • Typhus and Black Plague epidemics only half of
    population became sick, even though most likely
    exposed

12
Host-Parasite Interaction
  • Response of particular microbe to particular host
  • Depends on factors unique to each interaction
  • Within a single individual
  • Changes with
  • Age
  • Nutritional state
  • Other factors

13
Entry
  • Much of inside of body is connected to the
    outside for example
  • Lumen of intestine
  • Alveoli of lung
  • Tubules of kidney
  • Almost all organs within thorax and abdomen are
    topologically connected to the outside

14
Entry
  • Mechanisms to keep out invaders
  • Sphincters and valves
  • With exception of digestive and genitourinary
    systems, these sites are normally sterile
  • Organism that resides on lumen side of intestine
    or lung alveoli has not penetrated body

15
Entry Defined
  • Ingress of microbes into body cavities contiguous
    with outside

16
Digestive System
  • Enter through eating
  • Numbers of organisms are reduced one million or
    more in stomach
  • Bacillary dysentery can result from only a few
    hundred organisms
  • Not many survive in intestine because of
    digestive enzymes and strong force of peristalsis

17
Digestive System
  • More survive in ileum, but need mechanisms to
    prevent expulsion
  • Surface components serve as adhesins to allow
    adherence to epithelial cells
  • Pili and surface polysaccharides
  • Diseases such as cholera and travelers
    diarrhea are caused without penetrating
    epithelium
  • Toxins that affect epithelial cells

18
Respiratory System
  • Enter through being inhaled
  • Air containing microbes goes through air passages
    (nasal turbinates, oropharynx, larynx)
  • Microbes reaching lower respiratory system face
    powerful epithelium sweeping action
  • Colonization requires adhesion mechanisms

19
Other
  • No term for urinary or genital entry
  • By bypassing epithelial tissue, microbes can
    cause disease without penetrating deep into
    tissues
  • Cholera, whooping cough, infection of urinary
    bladder

20
Penetration into Deeper Tissues
  • Very few organisms can penetrate unbroken skin
    (worms are an exception)
  • Some organisms can penetrate epithelial tissue
    for example
  • S. pneumoniae, Treponema pallidum
  • Normally after some injury to tissue (many times
    caused by a virus)
  • Viruses, by receptors

21
Carried in by Macrophage
  • Alveolar macrophage trap organisms in lung
  • Normally carry upward on ciliary epithelium
  • Some cases, can carry deeper into tissues
  • Some organisms can live, grow in macrophage
  • Legionella
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • HIV (via virus-laden macrophage from semen)

22
Penetration by Other Means
  • Insect bites numerous viral and protozoan
    diseases
  • Cuts and wounds dont normally lead to disease
  • Brushing teeth or defecating vigorously causes
    minute abrasions of epithelium
  • Organisms quickly cleared from blood by
    reticuloendothelial system

23
Penetration by Other Means
  • Injury to internal tissue disrupts defense
    mechanisms and serious disease can result for
    example
  • Subacute bacterial endocarditis
  • Devastating before antibiotics
  • Caused by oral streptococci that became implanted
    on heart valves damaged by rheumatic fever

24
Penetration by Other Means
  • Organ transplants or blood transfusions
  • Jakob-Cruetzfeldt disease from transplanted
    corneas
  • Cytomegalovirus from kidneys, probably in donor
    kidney
  • Because immunosuppressive drugs are used, virus
    may be endogenous
  • Hepatitis B, HIV transmitted by blood

25
Disease Causation
  • Why are organisms adapted to various locations?
  • Temperature optima athletes foot yeast cannot
    grow at 37C
  • Oxygen requirements
  • Specialized factors important for causing disease
    (i.e., virulence factors)
  • Virulence degree of pathogenicity

26
Virulence Factor Examples
  • Exotoxins
  • Endotoxins
  • Capsules
  • IgA proteases
  • Adhesins (pili)
  • Motility
  • Invasive properties
  • Ability to acquire iron
  • Serum resistance
  • Ability to survive inside phagocytes

27
Inoculum Size
  • Inoculum size can determine whether organisms
    cause disease
  • Normally, high number needed to cause
    disease/overcome defenses e.g.
  • Baths in contaminated hot tubs (veritable culture
    of bacteriaover one hundred million organisms
    per ml)

28
Inoculum Size
  • Normally harmless organisms can overcome
    defenses e.g.,
  • People get boils all over body
  • If large number of organisms deposited in deeper
    tissues, infection usually results
  • Surgeon preps area to reduce numbers

29
Spread of Disease
  • General spread only if overcome host defenses
  • Sometimes precedes, sometimes follows microbial
    multiplication
  • Precede parasite causes malaria disseminated
    before multiplication
  • Follow S. aureus multiplies locally before being
    disseminated

30
Spread of Disease
  • Types
  • Direct lateral propagation to contiguous tissues
  • Dissemination to distant sites
  • Characteristics
  • Anatomical factors (e.g., ear infections)
  • Active participation by pathogens enzymes

31
Multiplication
  • Factors that affect
  • Microbial nutrition body is very nutritious, but
    it also has antimicrobial substances
  • Body contains very little free iron
  • Physical factors temperature, etc.
  • Narrow temperature optimaprudence of lowering
    fever by take two aspirin and call me in the
    morning

32
Damage
  • General type and intensity depend on specific
    organism and tissue
  • Types
  • Mechanical mostly result of inflammation
  • Cell death depends on
  • Which cells
  • How many infected
  • How fast infection proceeds

33
Damage
  • Types, continued
  • Pharmacological toxins alter metabolism
  • Damage due to host responses
  • Inflammation can lead to destruction of
    neighboring cells
  • Immune response

34
Lecture One
  • Questions?
  • Comments?
  • Assignments...
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