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Pseudomonas aeruginosa. About Pseudomonas aeruginosa. gram-negative aerobe bacteria Commonly found in the environment At any moist location Common cause of nosocomial infections. P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen. Extremely broad host spectrum
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About Pseudomonas aeruginosa • gram-negative aerobe bacteria • Commonly found in the environment • At any moist location • Common cause of nosocomial infections
P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen • Extremely broad host spectrum • Hardly any infections in the normal human host • Severe immunodeficiencies and medical devices predispose the patients to P. aeruginosa infections • Broad spectrum of clinical symptoms • Urinary tract infections • Pulmonary infections • Soft tissue infections • Sepsis • Bone and joint infections • Endocarditis
P. aeruginosa infections • P. aeruginosa infections are of particular concern for Cystic fibrosis patients • Burn patients • Hospitalised patients • Case mortality rate for patients infected with P. aeruginosa approaches 50%
Nosocomial infections • Fourth most common isolated nosocomial pathogen accounting for approx. • 10 % of all hospital acquired infections. • Patient-to-patient spread and direct patient contact with environmental reservoirs • disinfectants, • respiratory equipment, • food, • sinks, taps
Diagnosis of P. aeruginosa • Isolation and lab identification of the pathogen • P. aeruginosa grows well on most laboratory media • Identified on the basis of its: • Gram morphology, • inability to ferment lactose, • a positive oxidase reaction, • its characteristic odor, • its ability to grow at 42° C. • Fluorescence is helpful in early identification of P. aeruginosa colonies and may also help identify its presence in wounds.
Treatment of P. aeruginosa infections • P. aeruginosa is frequently resistant to many commonly used antibiotics. • To archive synergy a combination of e.g. gentamicin and carbenicillin is frequently used. • No vaccines so far
Pathomechanisms • Adhesion • Pili, flagella and fimbriae • Invasion • Extracellular enzymes and toxins (proteases, elastase, phospholipases, rhamnolipids, Exotoxin A) • Dissemination • Leukocidin inhibits neutrophils und leukocytes • LPS (Endotoxin) • Protection • Capsule (Alginate)
Quorum Sensing in P. aeruginosa McKnight et al, 2000
„....It is time to close the book on infectious disease….“ William Stewart, Surgeon in a message to the United State Congress in 1969
Despite even intensified antibiotic therapy, no eradication of chronic P. aeruginosa infections of the cystic fibrosis lung
Cystic fibrosis • Most common life-threatening inherited genetic disorder in the Caucasian population • Mutation in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene • one in every 25 carry the mutated recessive gene and more than 1 in 4000 live births suffer from CF. • Life expectancy: • Until the 1930s: the life expectancy of a baby with CF was only a few months, • in the 1980s, most deaths from CF occurred in children and teenagers. Today with improved treatments, nearly 40 percent of the CF population is aged 18 and older, • for a person with CF the median age of survival is nearly 37 years. • Cystic Fibrosis affects a number of organs in the body, cycles of infection and inflammation lead to a progressive deterioration of lung function.
CF and Transplantation Centre • 360 patients regularyly attend the CF outpatient clinic at the Medical School Hannover, Germany • Informations of more than 500 CF patients in the local CF register • 2000 – 2005: 100 lung transplantation / year at the MHH
Chronic infectious diseases • Slow progressing infections • Functional loss of the affected organ • Highly resistant to host defences and antimicrobial therapy • Recovery is rare • Role in the development of cancer, peptic ulcer and possibly atherosclerosis
Why is traditional antimicrobial therapy ineffective against biofilm bacteria?
Emergence of morphological distinct niche-specific phenotypes From: Rainey R, Travisano M. Nature, 1998; 39: 69-72
SCVs of P. aeruginosa in CF • Slow growing subpopulations (3% of the P. aeruginosa positive sputum specimens) • SCVs exhibit an increased resistance towards a broad spectrum of antimicrobial agents • The recovery of SCV correlates with parameters revealing poor lung function and an inhalative antimicrobial therapy • Fast growing revertants can be isolated from the SCV population
CupA encoded fimbria expression in P. aeruginosa M. Rohde, GBF Braunschweig
Molecular Mechanisms controlling the conversion to a SCV biofilm phenotype
Quorum Sensing in P. aeruginosa McKnight et al, 2000
Hydroxy Alkyl Quinolones HHQ PQS
PQS directly interacts with bacterial DNA in a computed model
PQS enhances iron dependent DNA fragmentation DNA + PQS + Fe(II) DNA + HHQ + Fe(II) DNA + HHQ DNA + Fe(II) DNA + PQS Control DNA DNA
PQS production is linked to the release of DNA PAO1 wild-type PQS non-producing mutant
Autoinductive PQS production cycle PQS Rhl Quorum Sensing PQS pqsA-E transcription Lectin Pyocyanin Cell death DNA Virulence factors Biofilm formation
Phenotypic Diversity is PQS dependent P. aeruginosa WT P. aeruginosa PQS negative Mutante
Establishment of a chronic state of infection Biofilm Formation Bacterial Diversity Chronic Infections Interbacterial Communication
Molecular mechanisms underlying genetic diversity • Horizontal gene transfer • Hypermutation • Adaptive mutations
Tiling Arrays • Microarray hybridisation-based method technique to find mutations in bacterial genomes was used to studymetronidazole resistance in Helicobacter pylori TJ Albert et al. Mutation discovery in bacterial genomes: metronidazole resistance in Helicobacter pylori. Nature Methods 2, 951 - 953 (2005).