Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Obligate Intracellular Pathogen

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Obligate Intracellular Pathogen"— Presentation transcript:

1 Obligate Intracellular Pathogen
Rickettsia Chlamydia

2 D. Rickettsia - Virus-like bacteria Infect cells lining the capillaries (intracellular). Transmitted by insects (arthropods). Defective bacteria - leaky plasma membranes, very small micrometers. Ex. Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, typhus, Q fever. E. Chlamydia - “virus-like” (intracellular) Spread from one human to the next. Very small: micrometers. Defective bacteria - can’t make their own ATP. Complicated reproductive cycle. Diseases: blindness, urethritis, and pneumonia.

3 Rickettsia

4 Chlamydia

5 F. Mycoplasma - Sometimes form long strands that resemble fungi in microscopic appearance. No cell walls - instead contains sterols. Ameboid locomotion - disease: “walking” pneumonia The smallest bacteria micrometers

6 Mycoplasma “fungus-form”

7 Chlamydia & Rickettsia

8 General Characteristics
Obligate intracellular organisms Can not be cultured on agar plates Dependant on a host for survival

9 Rickettsia Intracellular, gram negative organism
Requires host to replicate and survive Cause febrile illness through the bite of an arthropod Patient often presents with a rash Posses a cell wall

10 Rickettsia and Related Organisms
Disease Agent Arthropod Vector Rocky Mountain spotted fever Rickettsia rickettsii Wood tick Rickettsial pox Rickettsia akari House mouse mites Murine typhus Rickettsia typhii Rat flea Epidemic typhus Rickettsia prowazekii Human body louse Scrub typhus Orientia tsutsugamushi Chigger mites Ehrlichiosis Ehrlichia chaffeenis Lone star tick Q fever Coxiella burnetti None- spead by inhalation

11 Family Rickettsiaceae: Genera
Zoonotic infection Human microbial pathogens ~61% zoonotic Rickettsia are arthropod-borne infections Spotted Fever Group Rickettsia rickettsii – Rocky Mountain spotted fever; rodent, tick Typhus Group Rickettsia typhi – Endemic typhus; rodent, flea Rickettsia prowazekii – Epidemic typhus; mammal, louse

12 Rickettsia: Gram Stain and Culture
Gram (-) small, pleomorphic coccobacilli Gram stain poorly, observed by Giemsa stain of infected cell Grow in phagocytic, nonphagocytic cells Lab culture in embryonated eggs or cell tissue culture (similar for virus) Cultivation costly and hazardous; aerosol transmission occurs easily

13 Chlamydia, Rickettsia, Virus

14 Rickettsia: Lab ID Giemsa, or Immunofluorescence assay (IFA) - direct detection MO in tissue Weil-Felix reaction – Nonspecific test Rickettsial antibody agglutinate Proteus vulgaris Presumptive evidence of typhus group infection Not very sensitive or specific, many false positives Agglutination or Complement Fixation (CF) assay - use specific Rickettsial antigen, test for infection and antibody

15 Rickettsia: Virulence Factors
Induced phagocytosis, intracelluular growth – protected from host immune clearance Replicates in endothelial cells – cell damage, vasculitis Recruitment of actin - intracellular spread

16

17 Rickettsia: Infection and Disease
Disease worldwide, USA Arthropod reservoir/vector (tick, mite, louse, flea) Diseases characterized by fever, headache, myalgias, usually rash

18 R. rickettsii: Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF)
USA ~ cases/year Ticks must remain attach for hours Incubation 7 days - headache, chills, fever, aching, nausea Followed by maculopapular rash on extremities (including palms and soles), spread chest, abdomen If untreated Petechial rash, hemorrhages skin and mucous membranes Vascular damage, MO invades blood vessels Death up to 20%, due to kidney or heart failure

19 Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

20 Rickettsia: Typhus Group
Incubation 5-18 days Symptoms - severe headache, chills, fever, maculopapular rash (subcutaneous hemorrhaging as MOs invade blood vessel) Rash begins on upper trunk; spread to whole body except face, palms of hands, soles of feet Lasts ~2 weeks Patient may have prolonged convalescence

21 R. typhi : Endemic Typhus Fever
Disease worldwide in warm, humid areas (Gulf states, So Cal.; S. America, Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe) Murine typhus - rat primary reservoir, transmitted to human by rat flea Disease occurs sporadically Clinically same, but less severe than epidemic typhus Restricted to chest, abdomen; generally uncomplicated, lasts <3 weeks Low fatality

22 R. prowazekii : Epidemic Typhus Fever
Disease C & S Americas, Africa; less common USA Human, squirrel primary reservoir Transmitted by louse; bites, defecates in wound At risk - people living in crowded, unsanitary conditions; often war, famine, natural disaster Complications - myocarditis, CNS dysfunction Mortality high untreated cases, up to 20% Brill-Zinsser disease - individual may harbor MO, latent infection with occasional relapses

23 Rickettsia: Treatment and Prevention
RMSF Doxycycline drug of choice Avoid ticks, wear protective clothing, use insect repellents, insecticides In infested areas, check and remove ticks immediately Typhus Fever Doxycycline effective Improve personal hygiene and living conditions, reduce lice by insecticides, control rodent population Inactivated vaccine for epidemic typhus

24 Laboratory Diagnosis of Rickettsial Disease
Immunohistochemical detection Serological tests PCR

25

26 Family Chlamydiaceae: Genera
Chlamydia trachomatis – STD, eye infection Chlamydophila pneumoniae – pneumonia Chlamydophilia psittaci – pneunomia (psittacosis); birds, humans Obligate intracellular parasite Cell wall similar G(-) bacilli, lack peptidoglycan Energy parasites, use ATP of host cell

27 Chlamydia Characteristics
Unique growth cycle because they are deficient in independent energy metabolism Replication involves elementary body (EB) and reticulate body (RB) EB’s are infectious and non-metabolically acitve RB’s are noninfectious and metabolically active

28

29 Chlamydia: Life Cycle – Elementary Body (EB)
Circular, infectious form; nm Metabolically inactive Resistant to harsh environments 0 hour - EB binds to host cell, induced phagocytosis Outer membrane of EB prevents lysosome fusion, survives in phagosome 8 hours - EB reorganizes into Reticulate Body (RB)

30 Chlamydia: Life Cycle – Reticulate Body (RB)
Noninfectious form, larger, less dense, nm Metabolically active 8-30 hours Synthesize new materials Multiply by binary division Form inclusion body Reorganize, condense into EB 35-40 hours - cell lyses, releases EB, begins cycle again

31

32 Chlamydia: Lab ID Stain tissue Cell culture Giemsa stain
Direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) ELISA Less sensitive Cell culture More sensitive method Grow MO in tissue culture, stain infected cells DNA amplification test Recently developed Specific, sensitive Now routine test of choice

33 Chlamydia: Virulence Factors
Intracellular replication – protected from host immune defense Prevent fusion of phagolysome – evades phagocytic killing Repeated infections by C. trachoma result in cell pathology Serotypes A-K and L1, L2, L3 - serotype identifies strain’s clinical manifestation

34 Chlamydia pneumoniae Important respiratory pathogen (acute respiratory disease, pneumonia, and pharyngitis) Common (50% of adults have antibodies) College age students most susceptible Implicated in asthma Risk factor for Guillain-Barre’ syndrome

35 Reinfection common Biphasic clinical picture Prolonged sore throat and hoarseness, followed by flu-like lower respiratory symptoms Pneumonia and bronchitis

36 Chlamydia trachomatis
Most commonly sexually transmitted bacterial pathogen in U.S. Only HPV is a more commonly sexually transmitted disease Major cause of sterility in U.S. May be transmitted to newborns during delivery Results in conjunctivitis

37 Other sites of infection
Trachoma – infection of the conjunctiva, resulting in scarring and blindness (Mostly in India and Egypt) Lymphogranuloma venereum Infects lymph nodes

38 Chlamydia psittaci Causes psittacosis (parrot fever)
Identification based on history of close contact with birds and serologic evaluation “parrot” “parrot fever” Naturally infects avian species Mild to severe respiratory infections Human infection by contact infected bird Infection - subclinical to fatal pneumonia Commonly causes atypical pneumonia with fever, chills, dry cough, headache, sore throat, nausea, and vomiting

39 Chlamydia trachomatis: Trachoma
“rough” “trachoma” granulations on conjunctiva Serotypes A-C Single, greatest cause blindness developing countries Infections mainly children (reservoir), infected first three months life Transmission eye-to-eye, direct contact (droplet, hand, clothing, fly) Chronic infection, reinfection common Conjunctival scarring, corneal vascularization Scars contract, upper lid turn in so eyelashes cause corneal abrasions Leads to secondary bacterial infections, blindness

40 C. trachomatis: Lymphogranuloma Venereum
Venereal disease, occurs developing, tropical areas Primary stage - painless lesion (vesicle or an ulcer) occurs site of entry in few days, heals with no scarring; but widespread dissemination Secondary stage - occurs 2-6 weeks later, symptoms of regional suppurative lymphadenopathy (buboes), may drain for long time, accompanied by fever and chills. Arthritis, conjunctival, CNS symptoms Tertiary stage - urethrogenital perineal syndrome; structural changes, such as non-destructive elephantiasis of the genitals, rectal stenosis C. trachomatis: Lymphogranuloma Venereum

41 C. trachomatis: Urogenital tract infection - serotypes D-K
Major cause of nongonococcal urethritis; frequently found concomitantly with N. gonorrhoeae In males - urethritis, dysuria, sometimes progresses to epididymitis In females - mucopurulent cervical inflammation, can progress to salpingitis and PID

42 C. trachomatis: Inclusion Conjunctivitis
Newborns and adults Genital tract infection source of eye infection (serotypes D-K) Benign, self-limited conjunctivitis, heals with no scarring Newborns infected during birth process: 1-2 weeks, mucopurulent discharge Lasts 2 weeks, subsides Some develop afebrile, chronic pneumonia In adults – causes an acute follicular conjunctivitis with little discharge

43 Chlamydia: Treatment and Prevention
Genital tract infection and conjunctivitis: Adult - azithromycin or doxycycline, prompt treatment of patients and partners Newborn – erythromycin Public Health education Trachoma: Need prompt treatment, prevent reinfection Systemic tetracycline, erythromycin; long term therapy necessary Improve living, sanitary conditions Difficult to prevent endemic disease in developing countries due to lack of resources, medical care

44 Laboratory Diagnosis If cultured, must be in cells
Direct microscopic examination to find EB’s visualized with fluorescein-conjugated antibodies Enzyme immunoassay Nucleic acid probes with and without amplification (PCR) Serologic tests are method of choice for detection (Four-fold rise in titer)

45 Case Study 9 - Questions 1. Why is penicillin ineffective against Chlamydia? What antibiotic can be used to treat this patient? 2. Describe the growth cycle of Chlamydia. What structural features make the EBs and RBs well suited for their environment? 3. Describe the differences among the three species in the family Chlamydiaceae that cause human disease.

46 Normal Flora: Commensals are regularly found in certain human microbiotopes. The normal human microflora is thus the totality of these commensals. Table 1.7 lists the most important microorganisms of the normal flora with their localizations. Bacteria are the predominant component of the normal flora. They proliferate in varied profusion on the mucosa and most particularly in the gastrointestinal tract, where over 400 different species have been counted to date.

47 The count of bacteria per gram of intestinal content is 101–105 in the duodenum, 103–107 in the small intestine, and 1010–1012 in the colon. Over 99% of the normal mucosal flora are obligate anaerobes, dominated by the Gram-neg. anaerobes. Although life is possible without normal flora(e.g., pathogen-free experimental animals), commensals certainly benefit their hosts. One way they do so is when organisms of the normal flora manage to penetrate into the host through microtraumas, resulting in a continuous stimulation of the immune system. Commensals also compete for living space with overtly pathogenic species, a function known as colonization resistance .On the other hand, a potentially harmful effect of the normal flora is that they can also cause infections in immunocompromised individual.

48


Download ppt "Obligate Intracellular Pathogen"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google