What is Pathogenicity?
capacity of a microbe to cause damage in a host
What is Virulence?
Virulence is the measure of pathogenicity of an organism and refers to the degree of damage caused by the microbe
• Virulence is a continuum
• On one end of the spectrum are organisms that are avirulent (not harmful, ) and on the other are organisms that are highly virulent (e.g. B. anthracis)
What are Virulence Factors?
A product made by the organism that contributes to overall virulence (e.g. toxin). They help bacteria to (1) invade the host, (2) evade host defenses, and (3) cause disease
What are Capsules?
What are Flagella?
What are Pili?
What are Spores?
Small, metabolically inactive forms of bacteria that can survive for years (extremely tough outer coating)
What are Siderophores?
Iron-binding factors that allow some bacteria to compete with host for iron (e.g. Enterobactin)
Name two important indicators of virulence
median infectious dose (ID50)
number of pathogen cells required to cause active infection in 50% of inoculated animals
median lethal dose (LD50)
number of pathogenic cells or amount of toxin required to kill 50% of infected animals
What is the difference between Primary and opportunistic pathogens?
A primary pathogen can cause disease in a host regardless of the host’s resident microbiota or immune system
An opportunistic pathogen, by contrast, can only cause disease in situations that compromise the host’s defenses, such as the body’s protective barriers, immune system, or normal microbiota
• Individuals susceptible to opportunistic infections include:
Very young
Elderly •
Pregnant women •
Chemotherapy patients •
People with immunodeficiency's •
Patients recovering from surgery •
Via a breach of protective barriers (such as a severe wound or burn)
What primary pathogen is called EHEC?
enterohemorrhagic E. coli
What causes the primary pathogen is enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)?
Produces a virulence factor known as Shiga toxin
Toxin inhibits protein synthesis, leading to severe and bloody diarrhea, inflammation, and renal failure, even in patients with healthy immune systems
Name an example for an opportunistic pathogen.
Staphylococcus epidermidis
among the most frequent causes of nosocomial (i.e. hospital acquired) disease
Member of the normal skin microbiota (30% carriage rates) → generally avirulent
However, in hospitals, it can also grow in biofilms that form on catheters, implants, or other devices that are inserted into the body during surgical procedures
Once inside the body, S. epidermidis can cause serious infections such as endocarditis, and it produces virulence factors that promote the persistence of such infection
What does Enterohaemorragic E. coli (EHEC) cause?
Can cause haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) in humans (especially children)
• From cattle
To cause disease, a pathogen must successfully achieve four steps or stages of pathogenesis. Name them.
1. Exposure (contact)
2. Adhesion (colonisation)
3. Invasion
4. Infection
Pathogen must be able to gain entry to the host → travel to the location where it can establish an infection → evade or overcome the host’s immune response → cause damage (i.e., disease) to the host
In many cases, the cycle is completed when the pathogen exits the host and is transmitted to a new host
What is Adhesion?
capability of pathogenic microbes to attach to the cells of the body using adhesion factors
What are the three types of infections?
Local infection is confined to a small area of the body, typically near the portal of entry
• E.g. Urinary tract infections (UTIs) confined to the bladder
Focal infection, a localised pathogen, or the toxins it produces, can spread to a secondary location
•E.g. Dental focus most common, e.g. gum disease or nicking the gum with a sharp tool can lead to a local infection by Streptococcus of the normal oral microbiota → Streptococcus spp. may then gain access to the bloodstream and make their way to other locations in the body, resulting in a secondary infection
systemic infection, when an infection becomes disseminated throughout the body
• Pathogen must overcome host defenses in order to cause systemic infection
• Damage to the host can be direct e.g. via virulence factors such as toxins, or may result from host immune-mediated damage (sepsis)
What is sepsis?
Sepsis occurs when chemicals released into the bloodstream to fight an infection trigger inflammatory responses throughout the body.
What are Pathogenicity islands?
Insertion of ‘foreign’ DNA inserted into bacterial chromosomes
Frequently encode virulence associated traits
e.g. Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1) – encodes Type 3 secretion system (injector) that is key for host cell attachment vs. SPI2 (survival within macrophages)
Provide an example of a secondary bacterial infection.
Sometimes a primary infection, the initial infection caused by one pathogen, can lead to a secondary infection by another pathogen
Antibiotic therapy targeting the primary pathogen can cause collateral damage to the normal microbiota, creating an opening for opportunistic pathogens
E.g. Clostridiales difficile
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