Describe why adhesion is such an important part of the infection process
crutial for successful establishment of infection by bacterial pathogens & later colonisation of tissue, intracellular multiplication, dessemination to other tissue and/or persistence
List the different bacterial factors that are involved in adhesion
long fibrillary organelles: fimbraie/pili
cell wall associated molecules: capsules, flagella
Explain the term pili (fimbriae) and pili-associated host cell adhesion principles/processes
pili: thin, protein tubes orginiating from cytoplasmic membrane (primarily in virtually all Gram-negative bacteria)
-> constantly losing and reforming w. switch of adhesive tips in order to adhere to different types of cells and evade immune defenses
adherance to receptors of target host cells by adhesive tip structure of shafts
-> depolymerisation and enabling adhesions in bacterial cell well for more intimate contact
-> colonise and resists flushing out by body
Provide examples of bacterial pathogens that use pili for adherence
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Escherichia coli
Vibrio cholerae
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Describe UPEC-associated pili and how this pathogen uses pili to adhere to host urinary epithelium
firm operon encodes type 1 pili
pap operon encodes P-/Pap pili -> interaction w. P-blood group antigen
-> can’t get cleared by bladder easily
-> both heteropolymeric pili
Briefly describe type IV pili and their role in host cell adherence
hydrophobic core -> may provide extreme mechanical strength
allows attachment (of other bacteria) and enables twitching motility (crawling and walking)
-> gliding motility along a solid surface (host cell)
-> dragging motility through extension and retraction of pili
e. g.: N. gonorrhoeae, Neisseria meningitidis, V. colerae, P. aeuruginosa
Briefly describe how bacteria use adhesins to bind to host cells
surface proteins in cell wall of various bacteria binding to specific receptor molecules on host cell surface
-> intimidate adhesion (1 or more) in order to colonise and resist physical removal
Explain what is meant by the term MSCRAMMS and their general structure
microbial surface components recognising adhesive matrix proteins
two adjacent IgG-folded domains
mediation of attachment to components of host ECM (collagen, fibrinogen, fibrinonectin Fn)
collagen binding protein
Protein A (binds IgG)
clumping factor (binds fibrinogen)
peptidoglycan
capsule
fibronectin-binding protein
List the 3 molecular mechanisms used by MSCRAMMS to bind their host cell ligands
molecular binding mechanisms depending on adhesion types
dock lock latch: latch to attach
collagen hug: looping around collagen
tandem beta-zipper: beta-sheets
Describe how capsules are involved in adhesion and biofilm formation
production of capuslar polysaccharide matrix or glycocalyx to form a biofilm on host tissue
reversible attachment
irreversible absorption
cell proliferation and production of ECM
biofilm maturation
biofilm detachment
spread of microbial cells
Provide examples of bacterial pathogens that use flagella for adherence
H7 flagellum in E. coli (mediates binding to intestinal epithelial cells)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa (binding to mucus)
clostridioides difficile (for adherence and colonisation of intestinal epithelium during infection)
Understand how EPEC uses the LEE to facilitate host cell adherence
EPEC - strain example: E. coli O157
utilisation of type 3 secretion system (T3SS) to inject effector protein into intestinal epithelial cells -> formation of pedestal (characteristic lumps at receptos under microscope)
causing acute and chronic pediatric diarrhea
formation of attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions in intestinal epithelium -> mediated by genes at locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) => encode adhesion intimin, T3SS, six effectors and interaction btw. Tir and intimin as anchor for bacterium to host membrane
Describe how H. pylori uses T4SS for adherence
induction of host cells to display more receptors on their surface for H. pylori adhesins
=> drill like, tubal structure into host cell
-> causes chronic gastritis, peptic ulcers and in the long run gastric cancer
Describe the process of cell attachment by B. pertussis
adherance to galactose residues of glycolipids on respiratory tract by filamentous hemagglutinin
pertussis toxin: subunit remains baound to bacterial cell wall, others bind to glycolipids on membrane of epithelial cells of respiratory tract
adhesin pertactin: further enbabling bacterium to adhere
Describe how the adhesin Opa enhances binding of N. gonorrhoeae to host cells
production of adhesin Opa -> enables more intimate contact with host cell after first adhesion
-> multiple alleles for Opa protein adhesins => adhestion to a variety of host cell types possible
Provide additional examples of bacterial pathogens that use adhesins (spirochetes and S. pyogenes)
Borellia burgdorferi
Treponema pallidum
Streptococcus pyogenes
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