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Pathogenic Escherichia coli

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Commensal bacteria cannot invade or survive in new host niches ... Virulence is multifactorial. Pathogenic E. coli are master cell biologists ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pathogenic Escherichia coli


1
Pathogenic Escherichia coli
2
Escherichia coli Characteristics
  • Discovered in 19th century by Bavarian
    pediatrician Theodor Escherich
  • Gram negative eubacteria
  • Facultative anaerobe
  • Usually motile
  • Universal inhabitant of human (mammalian) colon

3
E. coli Lives in Colon of Healthy People (member
of commensal flora)
Includes E. coli
4
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5
E. coli
Enteroinvasive E. coli
  • agent of bacillary dysentery
  • member normal gut flora

6
Dysenteric Colon
Normal Colon
  • diseased GI tract
  • Fever
  • Severe abdominal pain
  • Bloody discharge with mucous
  • healthy GI tract

7
Bacterial pathogens express traits not present in
non-pathogenic ancestors
  • Commensal bacteria cannot invade or survive in
    new host niches
  • new selective pressures such as nutrient
    deprivation, immune molecules, and cells unique
    to hostile host environments
  • Pathogens express new biochemical pathways and
    whole systems of novel traits that enable access
    to and survival in these unique environments
  • Enteroinvasive E. coli penetrate intestinal
    epithelial cells and spread to adjacent cells
  • complex traits likely encoded by multiple genes

8
Expected E. coli non-pathogen to pathogen
relationship
E .coli
Pathogenic E .coli
Time
9
Invasive E. coli evolved from distinct ancestors
Enteroinvasive E .coli lineages
10
  • Complex new multi-subunit trait essential for
    invasive pathogenic E. coli virulence
  • Virulence traits that damage the host often
    encoded by multiple genes in pathogenicity
    islands

11
Pathogen evolution incompatible with classical
evolution models
  • Classical evolution model new traits evolve
    through modifications to established genes
  • Slow process of individual base changes in
    ancestral genes
  • Pathogens close relationship with commensal
    bacteria suggests virulence traits evolve rapidly
  • How do bacterial pathogens rapidly evolve from
    non-pathogenic organisms?

12
How Can E. coli be both a Commensal and a
Pathogen?
Genome sequences revolutionizing understanding of
bacterial evolution
13
How Can E. coli be both a Commensal and a
Pathogen?
DIFT colored dashes in MG1655 represent genes not
present other E. coli
WHITE dashes represent genes not present in MG1655
E. coli isolates (strains) have different genome
compositions
14
Mechanisms of Horizontal Gene Transfer (HT)
15
  • Bacterial genomes are mosaics of old and new
    genes
  • New genes identified by unique sequence
    characteristics
  • New genes often associated with mobile genetic
    elements

16
  • New genes rarely confir a selective advantage
  • Survival of HT loci in host genome dependent on
    the ability to confer a beneficial trait to the
    host
  • i.e. a gain-of-function mutation (rare)
  • Gain-of-function mutations usually requires
    multiple genes encoding whole systems
  • HT loci comprising operons have best chance for
    success
  • Gain-of-function mutations may permit occupation
    of a new niche
  • HT loci contribute to speciation

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18
Pathogenic E. coli evolved from distinct ancestors
Enteropathogenic E .coli
Enteroinvasive E .coli
Enterotoxigenic E .coli
Enterohaemorrhagic E .coli
Uropathogenic E .coli
19
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20
Pathogenic E. coli Diseases - Generalities
  • Associated with three clinical syndromes
  • diarrhoeal disease
  • urinary tract infections
  • sepsis/meningitis
  • Pathogenic E. coli diseases usually result from
    ingestion of virulent organisms in contaminated
    food and water
  • Signs and symptoms most often include those
    associated with intestinal infections
  • diarrhea
  • abdominal discomfort
  • fever
  • additional complications possible

21
Pathogenic E. coli Virulence Mechanisms
Generalities
  • Virulence systems frequently encoded on mobile
    genetic elements
  • successful combinations reflected in pathotypes
  • Like other mucosal pathogens, pathogenic E. coli
    use multi-step strategy to infect host
  • attachment
  • evasion of host defenses
  • multiplication
  • damage host
  • Pathogenic E. coli often colonize host niches
    not normally inhabited by E. coli

22
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23
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
  • First E. coli pathotype described
  • UK pediatrician John Bray, 1945
  • Causes potentially fatal infant diarrhea in
    developing areas
  • Contract organism by ingestion of contaminated
    water, food or fomites

24
EPEC Colonization and Lesion Development
  • patchy colonization of the small intestine
  • Generates unique histopathology termed
    attaching and effacing lesion
  • destroys microvilli
  • Expresses numerous toxins/effectors that
    manipulate host cell systems to serve the
    pathogen
  • EPEC, like other pathogenic E. coli strains, is
    a master cell biologist

25
EPEC A/E Lesion and Pedestal Formation
26
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27
Type III Secretion Systems Inject Toxins into
Host Cells
28
EPEC LEE Pathogenicity Island
  • encodes EPEC Type III secretion system and
    toxins/effectors
  • toxins/effectors essential for EPEC attachment
    and pedestal formation

29
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30
EPEC is a Master Cell Biologist
  • Toxins/effectors activities
  • promote EPEC adherence
  • disrupt host cytoskeleton
  • disrupt cytokinesis
  • promote cell death (apoptosis)
  • disrupt tight junctions

31
Consequences of EPEC Toxin/effector Actions
  • Diarrhea may result from combination of ion
    imbalance, malabsorption and/or inflammation
  • To date, no diarrheal toxin known identified

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34
Enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
  • First described in 1982
  • Causes bloody diarrhea (haemorrhagic colitis),
    non-bloody diarrhea and haemolytic uremic
    syndrome (HUS)
  • 5 of EHEC infections result in HUS
    predominantly in children lt5 years old and
    elderly
  • 5 of HUS cases are fatal
  • Contract organism by ingesting contaminated food
  • common inhabitant of bovine gut
  • low infectious dose for humans (lt100 organisms)
  • organism may be resistant to stomach acid

35
EHEC Ecology and Transmission
36
EHEC Virulence Factors
  • O157H7 serotype dominant in North America, UK,
    Japan
  • O26 and O111 serogroups more prominent in other
    countries
  • Evolved from LEE containing EPEC serogroup O55
  • Like EPEC, generates A/E lesion
  • Colonizes the large intestine
  • Expanded repertoire of adhesion factors
  • Encodes toxins/effectors in EPEC LEE
  • Additional virulence factors (plasmid and
    chromosomal)
  • RTX toxin similar to haemolysin
  • StcE activates host Complement cascade
  • Stx (Shiga) toxin

37
Stx (Shiga) Toxin
  • Toxin encoded on bacteriophage
  • gt200 E. coli serotypes encode Stx
  • Shiga toxin E. coli (STEC)
  • most do not encode LEE (not virulent)
  • A/B toxin
  • pentameric B subunits bind holotoxin to host
    cell surface
  • A subunit cleaves host ribosomal RNA arresting
    protein synthesis and cell death (apoptosis)
  • Stx produced in colon travels through
    bloodstream to kidney
  • Damages renal endothelium and induces
    inflammation that may lead to acute renal failure
    and death

38
HUS Stx (Shiga) Toxin Activity
39
Review
  • E. coli samples new genes from the environment
    only those that encode a selective advantage are
    maintained
  • Pathogenic E. coli evolved from non-pathogenic
    commensal strains
  • Virulence is multifactorial
  • Pathogenic E. coli are master cell biologists
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