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Pla : The Reaper’s Scythe. Presented by: Tyler Stokka Advisor: Mr. Heeren Overseer: Dr. Colton cbm MSOE. http://images2.fanpop.com/image/photos/12000000/Grim-Reaper-the-grim-reaper-12078702-787-873.jpg. The Black Plague: Taker of Life. 1348-1350 AD 20 Million lives claimed at the time…
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Pla: The Reaper’s Scythe Presented by: Tyler Stokka Advisor: Mr. Heeren Overseer: Dr. Colton cbm MSOE http://images2.fanpop.com/image/photos/12000000/Grim-Reaper-the-grim-reaper-12078702-787-873.jpg
The Black Plague: Taker of Life • 1348-1350 AD • 20 Million lives claimed at the time… • Almost 1/3 of Europe’s Population • Transferred by: Rats and Fleas • That was Just a pandemic of the past, so we’re safe now right??
The Black Plague and You • About 10-15 cases per year in the U.S. • 1,000 to 3,000 cases globally per year • Today’s Medicine: 1 in 7 cases (versus 40-60% in the past) are fatal • It is a likely option for bioterrorism because of how easy it can spread http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_CAoFDpupTaY/SXSc7TPmGnI/AAAAAAAABfo/gw6x3pJCqVc/s400/PLAGUE+FLEA.jpg
Notice the Correlation between the two http://staff.bbhcsd.org/vendelc/world98.gif
Why So Deadly? The Method The Means The body’s usual response to pathogens (clotting) The Pla protein in Yersinia Pestis is utilized for evasion It essentially is like trying to handcuff a criminal who has access to bolt cutters. • Transfers through the rapid diffusion of rats harboring infected fleas These factors allow Yersinia Pestis to wreak havoc and get away with it! http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSsOgi36Ls8V7M4AnpXu3fiI4KAiajVYbD_Sc0hJsOVx-vjdq10BiP-jbY0mw
Yersinapestis • Gram-negative Bacteria • In the Enterobacteriaceae family • 1 of 11 species, 3 of which are threatening to man • Spread by numerous rodents and fleas • Slows and Stops the clotting process in Humans • Similar to more commonly known E. coli http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/15/Yersinia_pestis_fluorescent.jpeg http://jencarey.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/800px-smallpox01.jpg http://vs8.tripod.com/bubon.jpg
Yersinapestis • It being Gram-negative gives it an extra defense • Has two cell walls accompanied by periplasmic space • Extra cell wall acts as armor, preventing damage • This gives it resistance to penicillin and lysozome • Taking danger to a whole knew level http://homepage.ntlworld.com/diamonddove/04a_Gram/Gram.h25.jpg
Special Protein in the Outer Wall • The omptinPla • (Omptin- a type of bacterial protease that cleaves peptides with the help of a water molecule) • Pla is the Key to Yersinapestis’ devastative success • Has the roles of activating plasmin and cleaving anti-plasmin • This promotes fibrinolysis yielding a clot-less fate LPS Binding Motif http://www.simplylefty.com/images/image/Products/Articles/Scissors-figure1.jpg http://img.tfd.com/wn/B4/64AB8-limb.png
Once behind enemy lines… • Body has many defense mechanisms against pathogens (Physical Barriers, T-Cells, B-Cells, lymph system, inflammation, etc…) • One of the most prominent is Coagulation, or “trapping” the pathogen inside of a clot • Some pathogens (such as Y. Pestis) have built up a resistance to body defense • In this case, Pla is able to maneuver around the coagulation response
What goes down Y. Pestis is then granted “unlimited access” to wreak havoc throughout the host! Body of the Host Transfer to host through fleas and various vermin Y. pestis’ serpinPla then activates plasminogen (inactive form of plasmin) which then starts cleaving fibrin. . . Clearing the clot “net”… Body attempts to capture the pathogen YersinaPestiswith coagulation, or in other words, capture it using a “fibrin net” clot.
Pla’sDirty Deeds • Pla does two major things that promote fibrolysis: • Activates plasminogen to it’s active form plasmin cleaves fibrin • Cleaves anti-plasmin which allows plasmin to continue lysing
Alpha 2 Anti-Plasmin • Inhibits Plasmin • Cleaved by Pla • Important for normal coagulation (clotting)
Therefore. . . • Too much plasmin = bleeding disorder • Too much antiplasmin (inhibitor) = clotting disorder www.microbiologyonline.org.uk/themed/sgm/img/slideshows/3.3.2_immune_2.png
Signs of the plague http://www.scifibloggers.com/top-10-diseases-worst-killers-in-history/ http://www.google.com/imgres?num=10&um=1&hl=en&safe=active&rlz=1C1TSNO_enUS463US463&biw=1241&bih=606&tbm=isch&tbnid=6Auai3wuxUDK7M:&imgrefurl=https://sites.google.com/a/apps.edina.k12.mn.us/2011s2-12b-bubonic-plague/home/symptoms&docid=P9w5kYrrRcrIbM&imgurl=http://www.glogster.com/media/5/16/52/28/16522831.jpg&w=367&h=489&ei=30ewT46GBqKC2AWt1OTpCA&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=617&vpy=224&dur=185&hovh=259&hovw=194&tx=83&ty=184&sig=113969962684917488505&sqi=2&page=1&tbnh=119&tbnw=93&start=0&ndsp=22&ved=1t:429,r:11,s:0,i:96 http://sidesinger.wikispaces.com/file/view/plague.jpg/43064813/plague.jpg
Clueless… • Scientists to this day still do not understand how the Bubonic plague killed people so fast • Some believe it can be accredited to: • immunizations weren’t invented yet • climate affected immunity • sanitation was bad.
How do they know?? • X-Ray Crystallography!
On the Shoulders of Giants • These Processes make our research and investigation possible. . . • Wait a sec, who’s we? • . . . • We are SMART Team!! • Students Modeling AResearch Topic • An awesome program provided by MSOE
3 Steps to being SMART • Background Research • J-mol software • Biochemistry • The topic • Develop the Story, Model the Proteins • Presentation
You don’t have to be TOO smart, to DO SMART!
Brief Bibliography • http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/general/articles/BlackDeath.aspx • http://plague.emedtv.com/yersinia-pestis/yersinia-pestis.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gram-negative_bacteria • http://www.maexamhelp.com/id106.htm • http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/july-dec11/blackdeath_10-13.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omptin
Acknowledgments • Dr. Shannon Colton • MSOE/ Center for Biomolecular modeling • SMART Team Program • Overseer: Mr. Heeren • This year’s SMART Team Crew: