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MLAB 2434 – MICROBIOLOGY KERI BROPHY-MARTINEZ. Host-Pathogen Interaction . Host Pathogen Interaction. Origin of Microbial Flora Symbiosis : association of 2 organisms living together Commensalism : organism benefit with no benefit or harm to the host
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MLAB 2434 – MICROBIOLOGYKERI BROPHY-MARTINEZ Host-Pathogen Interaction
Host Pathogen Interaction • Origin of Microbial Flora • Symbiosis: association of 2 organisms living together • Commensalism: organism benefit with no benefit or harm to the host • Parasitism: microbe gains at host expense
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Terms • Pathogen – microbe that can cause disease in a susceptible host • Opportunistic Pathogen – microbe that can cause disease only if a significant change occurs in host resistance or within the organism itself • Opportunistic infections- infections caused by opportunistic pathogens
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Terms • Iatrogenic Infections – resulting from medical treatment or procedures • Hospital-acquired Infections- acquired in the hospital or another health care setting
Host Pathogen Interaction • Characteristics of Normal Flora • Resident flora vs. transient flora • Carriers?
Host Pathogen Interaction • Factors that determine normal flora • Availability of nutrients • Moisture of anatomical site • Presence of bile, lysozyme, fatty acids • pH
Host Pathogen Interaction • Colonization • Persistent survival of a microbe on a surface of the human body. • Dictated by the defenses of the body • Dictated by the microbes ability to survive
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Virulence – relative ability of a microorganism to cause disease, or the degree of pathogenicity
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Infectious Agent Steps • Adherence – most infectious agents must attach to host cells before infection occurs • Proliferation – pathogens must be able to replicate after attachment to host cells (overcome host resistance factors) • Tissue Damage – makes the infection visible; results from toxins or from host inflammatory substances
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Invasion – all pathogens have the ability to penetrate and grow in tissues • Dissemination • Spread of organisms to distant sites • Some pathogens stay at site (C. diphtheriae); others spread (Salmonella ssp.)
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Virulence factors – factors such as capsules, toxins, enzymes, cell wall receptors, pili, etc. that allow pathogens to evade or overcome host defenses & enable them to cause disease
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Virulence factors • Attachment • Fimbriae/pili • Resist phagocytosis • Capsules • Protein A • Leukocidins • Ability to Move • Flagella
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Virulence factors (con’t) • IgA protease • Toxin production • Endotoxin • Exotoxin • Exoenzyme production • Necrotizing enzymes • Coagulase • Kinases • Hyaluronidase • Hemolysins
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Host Resistance Factors: First Line of Defense • Physical barriers – skin, mucous membranes • Cleansing mechanisms • Desquamation (shedding of skin) • Fluids of the eye (IgA and lysozyme) • Respiratory, digestive, urinary, and genital tracts have fluids(mucous) and movements( cilia/ peristalsis) to cleanse the surfaces
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Host Resistance Factors: Second Line of Defense • Inflammatory response • Vasodilation • Increased permeability of capillaries • Arrival of leukocytes • Chemotaxis • Phagocytosis • Immune Responses: innate
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Host Resistance Factors: Third Line of Defense • Adaptive/specific immunity
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Routes of Transmission • Airborne • Coughing, sneezing, talking • Droplet nuclei • Airborne pathogens must be resistant to drying and inactivation by ultraviolet light • Examples: Strep throat, otitis media, diphtheria, rhinoviruses (colds)
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Transmission by Food and Water • Ingestion of contaminated food or water • Sometimes oral-fecal route • Pathogens must be able to survive stomach conditions and compete with normal flora of the gut • Pre-formed toxins (Clostridium botulinum, S. aureus) vs. toxins produced after infection (C. difficile, V. cholerae)
Host-Pathogen Interaction (cont’d) • Close Contact • Passage of organisms by salivary, skin, and genital contact • Examples: Infectious mononucleosis, STDs • Cuts and Bites • Arthropods ( ticks, fleas) • Zoonoses – diseases of animals accidentally transmitted to humans; examples: plague, rabies, tularemia
References • Engelkirk, P., & Duben-Engelkirk, J. (2008). Laboratory Diagnosis of Infectious Diseases: Essentials of Diagnostic Microbiology . Baltimore, MD: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. • http://garrisonfive.blogspot.com/2009/05/home-sweet-home.html • http://www.5thguy.com/billboards.htm • http://www.thefreedictionary.com/vagrant • Mahon, C. R., Lehman, D. C., & Manuselis, G. (2011). Textbook of Diagnostic Microbiology (4th ed.). Maryland Heights, MO: Saunders.