Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Protozoa Unicellular organisms. Grouped by how they are motile. - Amoebae - pseudopods - Flagellates – flagella - Ciliates – cilia - Apicomplexans – not.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Protozoa Unicellular organisms. Grouped by how they are motile. - Amoebae - pseudopods - Flagellates – flagella - Ciliates – cilia - Apicomplexans – not."— Presentation transcript:

1 Protozoa Unicellular organisms. Grouped by how they are motile. - Amoebae - pseudopods - Flagellates – flagella - Ciliates – cilia - Apicomplexans – not motile

2 Protozoa May have two life stages: Trophozoite - motile stage that causes symptoms Cyst - dormant stage that protects; usually stage that infects us

3 Entamoeba histolytica Get infected by drinking contaminated water or food Causes amoebic dysentery Organism very invasive – causes ulcers in large intestine and liver abscesses Symptoms: bloody diarrhea, dehydration Diagnose by presence of cysts or trophs in feces

4 Entamoeba histolytica

5 Trophozoite

6 Entamoeba histolytica Cyst

7 Entamoeba histolytica

8 Rare, but if gets in the brain, almost always fatal – Primary Amoebic Meningoencephilitis Get infected by swimming in warm, fresh water – water gets up into the nose Organism very invasive – passes into brain via the olfactory nerve 33 cases in 10 years in U.S. – 5 of those in Arizona Naegleria fowleri

9 Troph in brain tissue Troph in spinal fluid Naegleria fowleri - trophozoites

10 Acanthamoeba Most people exposed to it in their lifetime Causes three kinds of infection: - Keratitis in contact lens wearers - Granulomatous Amoebic Encephalitis in immunocompromised - Disseminated infection in immunocompromised

11 Acanthamoeba Follow directions for lens use, wear, storage Don’t use saline to disinfect lenses Wash hands Remove lenses before water activity

12 Trichomonas vaginalis Flagellate Causes vaginitis, urethritis – often no symptoms “Ping-pong” vaginitis No cyst stage Sexually transmitted

13 Trichomonas vaginalis Trophozoite

14 Trichomonas vaginalis

15 Giardia lamblia Get infected by drinking contaminated water Called “back-packer’s” parasite; also in day care centers; traveler's diarrhea Symptoms – severe cramps and diarrhea proceeded by “sulfur burps” Must boil water – organism survives chlorine and iodine tablets

16 Giardia lamblia TrophozoiteCyst

17 Giardia lamblia SEM of nucleiSEM of sucking disc

18 Giardia lamblia Giardia attached to mouse intestine

19 Trypanosoma Organism needs a vector Multiplies at bite site and gets into the blood and lymph and causes fever, nausea, vomiting, CNS involvement, heart problems

20 Trypanosoma

21 Needs an insect vector T.brucei gambiense and T. brucei rhodesiense cause African Sleeping Sickness – tsetse fly is vector T. cruzi causes Chagas Disease or South American Trypanosomiasis - Reduviid bug or “kissing bug” is vector

22 Trypanosoma - Vectors Tsetse Fly Reduviid Bug “Kissing Bug”

23 Leishmania Causes Leishmaniasis Infected by bite of sand fly Endemic in southern Texas; Found predominantly in Central and South America, Asia, Africa, Europe, and Middle East Diagnosed in soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan – called “Baghdad boil”

24 Leishmania Sand fly Rosettes of Leishmania Flagellate

25 Leishmania Three forms: - Cutaneous – skin ulcers around bite - Mucocutaneous – skin ulcer spreads to mouth, nose and soft palate - Visceral – macrophages spread to liver, spleen, bone marrow and lymph nodes - fatal if not treated

26 Leishmania Mucocutaneous Visceral Cutaneous

27 Motile by cilia Has both a micro and macro nucleus Causes large intestine infection Common in areas of crowding – rest homes, prisons, mental hospitals, day care centers Food and water contamination Balantidium coli

28 Balantidium coli - trophozoite

29 Balantidium coli Trophs in intestinal tissue

30 Balantidium coli - cysts

31 Apicomplexa No protective cyst stage Not motile Definitive host – sexual reproduction Intermediate host – asexual reproduction

32 Plasmodium Causes malaria Several species (P. falciparum is most lethal, P. vivax is most common) Man is intermediate host Anopheles mosquito is the definitive host

33 Plasmodium Figure 12.19 Infected mosquito bites human; sporozoites migrate through bloodstream to liver of human Sporozoites undergo schizogony in liver cell; merozoites are produced Merozoites released into bloodsteam from liver may infect new red blood cells Merozoites are released when red blood cell ruptures; some merozoites infect new red blood cells, and some develop into male and female gametocytes 12 3 4 6 Asexual reproduction Intermediate host Merozoite develops into ring stage in red blood cell Ring stage Merozoites Another mosquito bites infected human and ingests gametocytes 7 5 Ring stage grows and divides, producing merozoites Definitive host In mosquito’s digestive tract, gametocytes unite to form zygote 8 Male gametocyte Female gametocyte Zygote Sexual reproduction Resulting sporozoites migrate to salivary glands of mosquito 9 Sporozoites in salivary gland

34 Plasmodium Oocysts in gut of mosquito hatch into sporozoites Sporozoites migrate to salivary glands and are injected into host when mosquito bites. Sporozoites go to liver and become merozoites through asexual reproduction. These merozoites infect red blood cells.

35 Plasmodium Oocysts in gut of mosquitoSporozoites Anopheles Mosquito Definitive Host

36 Plasmodium Symptoms of malaria caused by destruction of the red blood cells - anemia occurs because merozoites rupture red cells - fever and chills occur because waste products from merozoite reproduction are released into the blood stream when red cells lyse

37 Plasmodium Merozoites in red blood cells

38 Plasmodium

39

40 Eventually the merozoites become male and female gametocytes Mosquito sucks up gametocytes when they bite Gametocytes mate in the gut of the mosquito and produce oocysts that hatch into sporozoites

41 Plasmodium Merozoites in red cellsGametocytes

42 Toxoplasma gondii Causes Toxoplasmosis Infected from cat feces, litter boxes, sand boxes Infected from eating raw meat Infected fetus from mother

43 Definitive Host Cat Intermediate Host Man,mammals, Birds Torch Test Done on babies with severe birth defects

44 Toxoplasma gondii

45 Oocysts from cat or litter box or from rare beef are ingested. Trophozoites are released into GI tract. Migrates into tissue from GI tract.

46 Toxoplasma gondii Cyst with trophozoites in host cellTrophozoites in tissue

47 Toxoplasma gondii Trophozoites from bronchial washing of HIV patient

48 Cryptosporidium parvum Transmitted by food and water Danger to immunocompromised host Resists chlorination – must be filtered from water Thick wall surrounds organism – resists most disinfectants Organism is detected with acid-fast stain

49 Cryptosporidium parvum Acid-fast stain of oocysts in fecesOocyst

50 Cyclospora Infections have occurred from eating imported raspberries (Guatemala) and strawberries (Mexico) Cyclospora presence can be demonstrated with an acid-fast stain Man may be only true host

51 Cyclospora Acid-fast Stain


Download ppt "Protozoa Unicellular organisms. Grouped by how they are motile. - Amoebae - pseudopods - Flagellates – flagella - Ciliates – cilia - Apicomplexans – not."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google