1 / 41

MYCOPLASMA and Ureaplasma

MYCOPLASMA and Ureaplasma. Dr. R.K.Kalyan Associate Professor Microbiology Dept. KGMU. MYCOPLASMA. Smallest free-living micro organisms, lack cell wall. Size varies from spherical shape(125-250nm to longer branching filaments 500-1000 nm in size. Many can pass through a bacterial filter.

trose
Download Presentation

MYCOPLASMA and Ureaplasma

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MYCOPLASMA and Ureaplasma Dr. R.K.Kalyan Associate Professor Microbiology Dept. KGMU

  2. MYCOPLASMA • Smallestfree-living micro organisms, lack cell wall. • Size varies from spherical shape(125-250nm to longer branching filaments 500-1000 nm in size. Many can pass through a bacterial filter. • 1st member of this group – isolated by Nocard & Roux (1898) – caused bovine pleuropneumonia. • Later, many similar isolates were obtained from animals, human beings, plants & environmental sources – called as “pleuropneumonia like organisms”(PPLO).

  3. MYCOPLASMA • Eaton (1944) first isolated the causative agent of the disease in hamsters and cotton rates. • Also known as Eaton agent. • 1956- PPLO replaced by Mycoplasma. • Myco : fungus like branching filaments • Plasma : plasticity • highly pleomorphic – no fixed shape or size - Lack cell wall.

  4. Morphology and Physiology • Small genome size (M. pneumoniae is ~800 Kbp) • Require complex media for growth • Facultative anaerobes • Except M. pneumoniae - strict aerobe • No cell wall means these are resistant to penicillins, cephalosporins and vancomycin, etc. • Grow slowly by binary fission • Doubling time can be as long as 16 hours, extended incubation needed

  5. Morphology and Physiology cont’ • Require complex media for growth, including sterols • Major antigenic determinants are glycolipids and proteins, some cross reaction with human tissues. • Requirements for growth allow one to differentiate between species

  6. Morphology and Physiology cont’ • M. pneumoniae - glucose • M. hominis - arginine • U. urealyticum - urea (buffered media due to growth inhibition by alkaline media) • M. genitalium - difficult to culture

  7. Mycoplasmas of Humans • Parasitic • Established pathogens: M. pneumoniae • Presumed pathogens: M. hominis, U. urealyticum • Non pathogenic: M. orale, M. buccale, M. genitalium, M. fermentans • Saprophytic – present mainly on skin & in mouth.

  8. Pathogenicity • Produce surface infections – adhere to the mucosa of respiratory, gastrointestinal & genitourinary tracts with the help of adhesin. • Two types of diseases: • Atypical Pneumonia • Genital infections

  9. Pathogenicity cont’ • Adherence • P1 pili (M. pneumoniae) • Movement of cilia ceases (ciliostasis) • Clearance mechanism stops resulting in cough • Toxic metabolic products • Peroxide and superoxide • Inhibition of catalase • Immunopathogenesis • Activate macrophages • Stimulate cytokine production • Superantigen (M. pneumoniae) Inflammatory cells migrate to infection and release TNF-a then IL-1 and IL-6

  10. Pathogenicity cont’

  11. Mycoplasmal pneumonia • Also called Primary Atypical Pneumonia/ Walking pneumonia. • Seen in all ages • Incubation period: 1-3 wks • Transmission: airbornedroplets of nasopharyngeal secretions, close contacts (families, military recruits).

  12. Mycoplasmal pneumonia • Gradual onset with fever, malaise, chills, headache & sore throat. • Severe cough with blood tinged sputum (worsens at night) • Complications: bullous myringitis & otitis, meningitis, encephalitis, hemolytic anemia

  13. Diseases Caused by Mycoplasma • Organism Disease • M. pneumoniae Upper respiratory tract disease, tracheobronchitis, atypical pneumonia, (chronic asthma?) • M. hominisPyelonephritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, • postpartum fever • M. genitalium Nongonococcal urethritis • U. urealyticum Nongonococcal urethritis, (pneumonia and chronic lung disease in premature infants?)

  14. Clinical Syndrome - M. pneumoniae • Incubation - 2-3 weeks • Fever, headache and malaise • Persistent, dry, non-productive cough • Respiratory symptoms • Patchy bronchopneumonia • acute pharyngitis may be present • Organisms persist • Slow resolution • Rarely fatal • Note: Muscle pain and GI symptoms usually not present

  15. Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae • Occurs worldwide • No seasonal variation • Proportionally higher in summer and fall • Epidemics occur every 4-8 year • Spread by aerosol route (Confined populations). • Disease of the young (5-20 years), although all ages are at risk

  16. Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae • Microscopy • Difficult to stain • This process can help eliminate other organisms • Culture (definitive diagnosis) • Sputum (usually scant) or throat washings • Special transport medium needed • Must suspect M. pneumoniae • May take 2-3 weeks or longer, 6 hour doubling time with glucose and pH indicator included • Incubation with antisera to look for inhibition.

  17. Laboratory Diagnosis • Specimens – throat swabs, respiratory secretions. • Microscopy – • Highly pleomorphic, varying from small spherical shapes to longer branching filaments. 2. Gram negative, but better stained with Giemsa,Dienes’ stain, crystal-fast violet, orcein or fluorochroming with nucleic acid stain as acredine orange

  18. Laboratory Diagnosis • Isolation of Mycoplasma (Culture) – • Semi solid enriched medium containing 20% horse or human serum, yeast extract & DNA. Penicillium & Thallium acetate are selective agents. (serum – source of cholesterol & other lipids) 2. Incubate aerobically for 7 -12 days with 5–10% CO2at 35-37°C. (temp range 22- 41°C, parasites 35- 37°C, saprophytes – lower temp)

  19. Laboratory Diagnosis 3. Typical “fried egg” appearance of colonies - Central opaque granular area of growth extending into the depth of the medium, surrounded by a flat, translucent peripheral zone. 4. Colonies best seen with a hand lens after staining with Diene’s method. 5. Produce beta hemolytic colonies, can agglutinate guinea pig erythrocytes.

  20. Fried egg colonies Dr Ekta,Microbiology, GMCA

  21. Except for M. pneumoniae colonies which have a • granular appearance, described as being mulberry shaped

  22. Identification of Isolates • Growth Inhibition Test– inhibition of growth around discs impregnated with specific antisera. • Immunofluorescence on colonies transferred to glass slides. • Molecular diagnosis • PCR-based tests are being developed and these are expected to be the diagnostic test of choice in the future. • These should have good sensitivity and be specific

  23. Identification of Isolates • Serological diagnosis • Specific tests – IF, HAI 2. Non specific serological tests – cold agglutination tests (Abs agglutinate human group O red cells at low temperature, 4C). 1:32 titer or above is significant.

  24. Ureaplasma urealyticum • Strains of mycoplasma isolated from the urogenital tract of human beings & animals. • Form very tiny colonies - hence called T strain or T form of mycoplasmas. • Hydrolyzes urea

  25. Genital Infections • Caused by M. hominis & U. urealyticum • Transmitted by sexual contact • Men - Nonspecific urethritis, proctitis, balanoposthitis & Reiter’s syndrome • Women – acute salpingitis, PID, cervicitis, vaginitis • Also associated with infertility, abortion, postpartum fever, chorioamnionitis & low birth weight infants

  26. Mycoplasma & HIV infection • Severe & prolonged infections in HIV infected & other immunodeficient individuals

  27. Mycoplasma as cell culture contaminants • Contaminates continuous cell cultures maintained in laboratories • Interferes with the growth of viruses in these cultures. • Mistaken for viruses. • Eradication from infected cells is difficult.

  28. Treatment and PreventionM. pneumoniae • Treatment • Tetracycline in adults (doxycycline) or erythromycin (children) • Newer fluoroquinolones (in adults) • Resistant to cell wall synthesis inhibitors. • Prevention • Avoid close contact • Isolation is not practical due to length of illness • No vaccine, although attempted

  29. Treatment • Tetracycline, Erythromycin & Clarithromycin – drug of choice • Resistant to antibiotics which interfere with bacterial cell wall synthesis. • Newer macrolides & quinolones being used now.

  30. M. hominis, M. genitalium and U. urealyticum • Treatment • Tetracycline or erythromycin • U. urealyticum is resistant to tetracycline • M. hominis is resistant to erythromycin and sometimes to tetracyclin, Clindamycin for these resistant strains • Prevention • Abstinence or barrier protection • No vaccine

  31. POINTS TO BE REMEMBER • Cold agglutination test • Cell culture contamination • Ureaplasma hydrolysis of urea • Primary atypical/ walking pneumonia • Genital infections • Mycoplasma • No cell wall • Pleomorphism • Fried egg colonies • Diene’s stain

  32. Dienes stain • Azure II • Methylene blue • Maltose • Na2co3 • Benzoic acid • DW

  33. Standard solid media PPLO agar base without crystal violet ph 7.8 +Yeast extract +Horse serum +Sodium deoxy ribonucleate +Thallous acetate solution +K2HPO4, Penicillin solution

  34. Liquid medium • PPLO agar base without crystal violet ph 7.8+Yeast extract +Horse serum +Sodium deoxyribonucleate +Thallous acetate solution+K2HPO4, Penicilin solution + Glucose serum + Phenol red +Methylene blue. Biphasic medium: 1. solid phase- Standard solid medium 2. Liquid phase- Liquid medium.

  35. MCQ Q.1. Which of the following bacteria was named as Eaton agent • Acholeplasma • Mycoplasmahominis • Mycoplasmapneumoniae • Ureaplasmaurealyticum Q.2. Dienes method is used to examine colonies of • Bordetella • Burkholderia • Mycoplasma • Helicobacter

  36. Q.3.Which of the following bacteria is/are associated with nongonococcalurethritis ? • Mycoplasmahominis • Ureaplasmaurealyticum • Chlamydia trachomatis • All of the above Q.4.Which is the causative agent of primary atypical pneumoniae • Influenza virus • Streptococcus Pneumoniae • Haemophilusinfluenzae • Mycoplasmapneumoniae

  37. Q.5. Which of the following can hydrolyse urea • Mycoplasma • Acholeplasma • Ureaplasma • Escherichia Q.6. Which of the following bacteria is/are also named T strain ? • Mycoplasmapneumoniae • Mycoplasmahominis • Ureaplasmaurealyticum • Acholeplasma

  38. Q.7.Postpartum fever due to Mycoplasmahominis is treated with • Penicillin G • A second generation Cephalosporins • Vancomycin • Tetracyclines Q.8.A distinguishing feature of human mycoplasma species is that they: • Stain well with Giemsa, but not by Gram stain • Contain no bacterial peptidoglycan • Are not immunogenic because they mimic host cell membrane components • Cannot be cultivated in vitro

  39. Q.9. which of the following tests can be used to identify Mycoplasmapneumoniae ? • Haemadsorption test • Tetrazolium reduction test • Inhibition of growth by specific antisera • All of the above Q.10. Which of the following bacteria shows fried egg colonies on culture media ? • Helicobacter • Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Bordetella • Mycoplasma

  40. ANSWERS OF MCQ Q.1- C Q.2- C Q.3- d Q.4- d Q.5- C Q.6- C Q.7- d Q.8- b Q.9- d Q.10- d

  41. ! Thanks for attention !

More Related