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Lecture 2. Interactions with host surfaces II: Adhesion. Overview of adhesion Types of bacterial adhesins Specificity of adhesion Consequences of adhesion. Lecture 2. Interactions with host surfaces II: Adhesion. Overview of adhesion Types of bacterial adhesins
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Lecture 2 Interactions with host surfaces II: Adhesion • Overview of adhesion • Types of bacterial adhesins • Specificity of adhesion • Consequences of adhesion
Lecture 2 Interactions with host surfaces II: Adhesion • Overview of adhesion • Types of bacterial adhesins • Specificity of adhesion • Consequences of adhesion
Overview of Bacterial Pathogenesis Sources + Transmission Entry First-line Encounter Adhesion to a surface non-specific host defences (Invasion of tissues) Inflammation Cell & tissue damage specific host defences Multiply + spread Exit
Overview of interactions with host surfaces • Nonspecific adhesion • Specific adhesion • overall, surface interactions • entrapment in mucin > 50 nm 10 – 20 nm < 2 nm < 1.0 nm Hydrophobic interactions Specific interactions Electrostatic repulsion Van der Walls Weak attractive adhesin receptor Weak long-range attractive easily disrupted Very strong irreversible Repulsion reduced by: (a) high ionic strength (b) small diameter
Nonspecific adhesion • Weakly adhering bacteria - easily removed by physical shear forces or washing • May allow colonisation of surfaces not subject to strong physical/washing forces (e.g. skin, vagina) • Not sufficient to colonise e.g. urinary tract, small intestine, etc
Specific adhesion EPEC adhering to an intestinal epithelial cells Bordetella pertussis on to ciliated tracheal cell
Fimbriae on surface of a human ETEC strain • Strains may express > 1 distinct type of fimbriae, with different receptor specificities CS3 – thin, flexible CS1
Consequences of adhesion 3. Colonize surface and form a biofilm • In contrast to localised ‘colonies’, some pathogens can form a spreading surface layer – a ‘BIOFILM’ • bacteria encased in a polysaccharide slime that aids • attachment and protects bacteria. • ‘Simple’ biofilm: comprises a single species • Staphylococcus epidermidis • biofilm on a catheters
‘Complex’ Biofilms: • Comprise multiple species • Bacterial ‘co-aggregation’ • Some species produce polysaccharides, ‘trapping’ others Example: Dental plaque