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Section 3: Bacteria, Viruses, and Humans

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Presentation on theme: "Section 3: Bacteria, Viruses, and Humans"— Presentation transcript:

1 Section 3: Bacteria, Viruses, and Humans

2 Key Ideas What are three important roles of bacteria and viruses?
What are the steps described in Koch’s postulates? What are two ways that bacteria cause disease? How does antibiotic resistance develop? Why are viral diseases difficult to cure? What are four ways that a disease can emerge?

3 Roles of Bacteria and Viruses
Bacteria play vital roles producing oxygen making nitrogen available decomposing organisms symbiotic relationships. important in a variety of industries food production chemical production Mining environmental cleanup. genetic research.

4 Koch’s Postulates and Disease Transmission
German physician Robert Koch developed a technique for diagnosing the cause of an infection. known as Koch’s postulates. This technique is still used today to identify a disease-causing agent, or pathogen.

5 Koch’s Postulates and Disease Transmission, continued
Step 1 The pathogen must be found in an animal with the disease and not in a healthy animal. Step 2 The pathogen must be isolated from the sick animal and grown in a laboratory culture. Step 3 When the isolated pathogen is injected into a healthy animal, the animal must develop the disease. Step 4 The pathogen should be taken from the second animal, grown in the lab, and shown to be the same as the original pathogen.

6 Koch’s Postulates and Disease Transmission, continued
Diseases that can spread from person to person are considered contagious. Can be spread Directly Through air Water Other objects

7 Bacterial Diseases Bacteria can cause disease by producing toxins and by destroying body tissues. Toxins may be released or stored inside the bacteria until the bacteria die. enzymes break down the host’s tissues into nutrients that the bacteria can use.

8 Bacterial Diseases

9 Antibiotic Resistance
Antibiotics are chemicals that inhibit the growth of or kill microorganisms. Since the introduction of antibiotics, these drugs have reduced illness, suffering, and deaths from bacterial diseases.

10 Antibiotic Resistance, continued
Development of Resistance Antibiotic resistance is the ability of bacteria to tolerate antibiotics. Mutations for antibiotic resistance arise naturally and often in bacteria. Plasmids containing antibiotic-resistance genes can pass between bacteria during conjugation.

11 Antibiotic Resistance, continued
Development of Resistance Antibiotic kill vulnerable bacteria Resistant bacteria survive and reproduce. antibiotic-resistant bacteria become dominant

12 Antibiotic Resistance, continued
Consequences of Resistance Diseases that were once easy to treat with antibiotics are now more difficult to treat Widespread use of antibiotics promotes the spread of antibiotic resistance. As bacteria become resistant, physicians must switch to using different antibiotics. As new antibiotics are used, bacteria will probably develop resistance to those as well.

13 Viral Diseases Viruses cause disease in bacteria, plants, and animals.
Because viruses enter host cells to reproduce, it is difficult to develop a drug that kills the virus without harming the living host. Viruses can be transmitted by any action that brings virus particles into contact with a host cell. Viruses have been shown to cause some types of cancer.

14 Viral Diseases Symptoms of a viral illness can be caused by several factors. Many symptoms of a viral infection, such as aches and fever, result from the body’s response to infection. A vaccine is a weakened form of a pathogen that prepares the immune system to recognize and destroy the pathogen.

15 Viral Diseases

16 Visual Concept: AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome)

17 Emerging Diseases Emerging diseases are:
diseases that are newly recognized diseases that have spread to new areas or to a new host diseases that have reemerged when a disease that was once considered under control begins to spread

18 Emerging Diseases continued
Diseases can spread to new areas or a new host when people come into contact with a pathogen in a different way than in the past. Environmental changes can cause diseases to emerge. Human behavior plays an important role in emerging disease.


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