Bacterial Pathogenesis I – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question

 

 

 

GRAM +

answer

Staphylococcus

Streptococcus

Enterococcus

Listeria

Bacillus/Clostridia (spores)

Corynebacterium

Mycobacterium (do not stain; acid fast)

Mycoplasma (no cell wall, do not stain)

Actinomyces

question

 

 

 

GRAM -

answer

Enterobacteriaeceae

  Salmonella

  Shigella

  E. coli

  Proteus

  Yersinia, etc

Acinetobacter

Pseudomonas; Burholderia

Legionella

Helico/Campylobacter

Vibrio

Rickettsia/Ehrlichia/Coxiella

    (obligate intracell. parasites)

Neisseria/Haemophilus

Bordetella/Brucella/Bartonella

Francisella/Pasteurella

Bacteroides

question

 

 

 

Spirochetes

answer

Borrelia

Treponema

Leptospira

Do not stain

question

 

 

 

Chlamydia

answer

C. trachomatis

C. pneumoniae

Obligate intracellular parasites

question

 

 

 

Normally Sterile Sites

answer

Blood

 

Internal organs (except stomach, intestines)

 

Bones

Central nervous system/cerebral spinal fluid

 

Lymph

question

 

 

 

Importance of Normal Flora

answer
1.Protect from colonization by pathogens by competition for space and

nutrients and producing substances to inhibit other organisms

2.Help in maturation of immune system (exposure to many antigens-

Natural antibodies)

3.Stimulate development of tissues (eg. Peyer’s patches)
4.Metabolism: Digest substances (cellulose, pectin, xenobiotics),

synthesize substances (Vitamin K, B6, B12, short-chain fatty acids),

remove by-products (H2à CH4)

5.  Modulate response to epithelial cell injury

6.Can contribute to or modulate obesity
7.Alter ratios of bile salts in the intestinal tract
question

 

 

 

Adverse Effects of Normal Flora

 

 

answer
1.Some opportunistic (eg. Clostridium difficile; Staph. epidermidis)

2.Dental caries (Streptococcus spp.)/ periodontal disease (anaerobes); SBE
 
 
 
 
3.Autoimmunity from some natural antibodies
question

 

 

 

Biofilm

answer

Biofilms: a complex community of microbes in a 3

dimensional structure, in which the microbes secrete

carbohydrates to adhere tightly to inanimate objects

and to each other

question

 

 

 

Events that take place in all infections

answer
Encounter: The agent meets the host
Portal of Entry:  The agent enters the host
Spread: The agent spreads from the site of entry (localized vs systemic)
Multiplication: The agent multiplies within the host
Damage: The agent, the host response, or both cause tissue damage
Outcome: The agent or the host is eliminated, or persistent infection occurs

question

 

 

 

Portals of Entry

answer

Respiratory Tract 

Streptococcus pneumoniae

GI 

Salmonella enterica

Mucous Membranes 

Neisseriameningitidis 

Skin 

Staphylococcus aureus


Genitourinary Tract

 Neisseriagonorrhoeae 


Blood  

Arthropod-borne- Yersinia, Rickettsia

Borrelia, Malaria, West Nile Virus

question

 

 

 

Vehicles of Transmission

answer

Fingers

 

Food

 

Feces

 

Flies

 

Fomites

 

Fucking

question

 

 

 

Extracellular Pathogens

answer
Restricted to extracellular environments
Must avoid phagocytosis
Must resist complement-mediated killing
Many produce exotoxins
May be tissue invasive but remain extracellular

e. g.Staphylococcus aureus, Vibriocholerae, Pseudomonas

question

 

 

 

Facultative Intracellular Pathogens

answer
Can grow extracellularly
Can penetrate and grow within a variety of host cells
Specialized facultative intracellular- can grow within nonphagocytic cells but are killed by macrophages
Generalized facultative intracellular-can grow in normal macrophages but usually killed by activated macrophages
e. g. Salmonella, Mycobacteria, Listeria, Shigella
question

 

 

 

Obligate Intracellular Pathogens

answer
Require viable host cells for growth

e. g., Rickettsia, Chlamydia

Some protozoa; ALL VIRUSES

Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New