Intro Bacteria
Intro Bacteria
Intro Bacteria
unicellular
stress
ASSIGNMENT:
differentiate
prokaryotic cells
eukaryotic
cells
from
Morphology
Cell arrangement
Growth characteristics
Antigens and Phage susceptibility
Biochemical characteristics
Family
Streptococcus
Streptococcus
S. pyogenes
pyogenes
pyogenes
Plasmids
Extra chromosomal DNA usually present
in multiple colonies
Function:
Code for pathogenesis and antibiotic
resistance factors
Bacterial replication
Cell
envelope
phosphorylation
Outside the cell membrane is a rigid cell wall
which protect it from lysis
Flagella
locomotory organelles
propeller-like action
Pili
surfaces in infection
ID Name
Morphology
Gram Stain
Staph aureus
clusters/tetrads
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. epidermidis
clusters
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. saphrophyticus
clusters
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. haemolyticus
clusters
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. hominis
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. capitis
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. schleiferi
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. warneri
Gram-Positive Cocci
S. lugdenenis
Gram-Positive Cocci
chains
Gram-Positive Cocci
11 S. agalactiae (gr. B)
chains
Gram-Positive Cocci
12 E. faecalis
clusters
Gram-Positive Cocci
13 E. faecium
Gram-Positive Cocci
14 Enterococci (other)
chains
Gram-Positive Cocci
15 S. pneumoniae
Gram-Positive Cocci
16 S. mutans group
Gram-Positive Cocci
17 S. salivarus group
Gram-Positive Cocci
18 S. sanguis group
Gram-Positive Cocci
19 S. mitis group
Gram-Positive Cocci
20 S. angiosus group
chains
Gram-Positive Cocc
ID
Name
Morphology
Gram Stain
21
Abiotrophica defective
Gram-Positive Cocci
22
A. adiacens
Gram-Positive Cocci
23
S. milleri
Gram-Positive Cocci
24
S. bovis
chains
Gram-Positive Cocci
25
N. gonorrhea
diplococci
Gram-Negative Cocci
26
N. meningitides
diplococci
Gram-Negative Cocci
27
Moraxella catarrhalis
Gram-Negative Cocci
28
C. diptheriae
Gram-Positive Bacilli
29
C. jeikenium
Gram-Positive Bacilli
30
C. urealyticum
Gram-Positive Bacilli
31
Lactobacillus sp.
Gram-Positive Bacilli
32
Bacillus anthracis
wide
33
B. cereus
Gram-Positive Bacilli
34
Listeria monocytogenes
Gram-Positive Bacilli
35
Erisipelothrix rhusiopathiae
Gram-Positive Bacilli
36
Arcanobacterium bemolyticum
Gram-Positive Bacilli
37
Escherichia coli
mixed rods
Gram-Negative bacilli
38
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Gram-Negative bacilli
39
Proteus spp.
rods
Gram-Negative bacilli
40
Morganella
Gram-Negative bacilli
ID
Name
Morphology
Gram Stain
41
Providencia
42
Salmonella enterica
long
narrow
43
long
narrow
44
S. dysenteriae (serogroup A)
long
narrow
45
S. flexneri
long
narrow
46
S. sonnei (serogroup D)
long
narrow
47
C. freundii
Gram-Negative bacilli
48
C. koseri
Gram-Negative bacilli
49
Enterobacter cloacae
Gram-Negative bacilli
50
E. aerogenes
Gram-Negative bacilli
51
S. marcecescens
Gram-Negative bacilli
52
Vibrio cholera
Gram-Negative bacilli
53
V. parahaemolyticus
Gram-Negative bacilli
54
V. vulificans
Gram-Negative bacilli
55
Aeromonas hydrophila
Gram-Negative bacilli
56
Plesiomonas shigelloides
Gram-Negative bacilli
57
Actinobacter baumanii
long
narrow
58
A. lowfii
long
narrow
59
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
Gram-Negative bacilli
60
Pseudomonas sp
long
narrow
Gram-Negative bacilli
ID
Name
Morphology
Gram Stain
61
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
long
narrow
62
63
P. fluroescens
P. putida
long
long
narrow
narrow
64
Burkholderia cepacia
Gram-Negative bacilli
65
Alkaligenes
Gram-Negative bacilli
66
Haemophilus
variable
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
67
H. influenzae
variable, small
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
68
H. parainfluenzae
small
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
69
H. duceyi
small
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
70
HACEK group
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
71
Haemophilus aphrophilus
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
72
Actinobacter actinomysetemcomitans
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
73
Cariobacter hominis
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
74
Eikenella corrodens
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
75
Kingella kingii
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
76
Bordatella pertussis
small
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
77
Pasturella multocida
small
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
78
Brucella sp.
79
80
Campylobacter
C. jejuni
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
curved
curved rods to spiral
S-shaped or spiral
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
ID
Name
Morphology
Gram Stain
81
C. coli
spiral
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
82
C. fetus
spiral
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
83
Capnocytophaga
84
Francisella tularensis
small
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
85
Helicobacter pylori
spiral
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
86
Legionella pneumophila
stain poorly
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
87
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
88
M. hominis
89
Ureaplasma urealyticum
90
Gram-Negative Bacilli
91
B. fragilis
92
B. distansonis
Gram-Negative Bacilli
93
B. thetaiotaomicron
Gram-Negative Bacilli
94
B. uniformis
Gram-Negative Bacilli
95
Proteus vulgaris
Gram-Negative Bacilli
96
B. ovatus
Gram-Negative Bacilli
97
B. uniformis
Gram-Negative Bacilli
98
Bacteroides sp
99
B ureolyticus
Gram-Negative Bacilli/Coc
Gram-Negative Bacilli
ID
Name
Morphology
Gram Stain
101
Porphyromonas species
Gram-Negative Bacilli
102
Prevotella
Gram-Negative Bacilli
103
Fusobacterium
Gram-Negative Bacilli
104
Clostridium sp
Gram-Positive Bacilli
105
C. perfringens
Gram-Positive Bacilli
106
C. botulinum
spore forming
Gram-Positive Bacilli
107
C. tetani
spore forming
Gram-Positive Bacilli
108
C. septicum
109
C. difficile
form spores
Gram-Positive Bacilli
110
Acinomyces israeli
Gram-Positive Bacilli
111
Propionibacterium acnes
Gram-Positive Bacilli
112
Eubacterium
Gram-Positive Bacilli
113
Lactobacillus sp.
Gram-Positive Bacilli
114
Bifidobacterium
Gram-Positive Bacilli
115
Veillonella
116
Peptostreptococcus
117
Peptococcus
Gram-Positive Bacilli
requirements
pH
Grow best in neutral pH but can still
requirement
Cause
hosts
Viruses and parasites are not part of the
normal flora
epidermidis skin
S. aureus nose and perineum
Micrococci skin (M. luteus)
Diphtheroids skin (axilla)
Alpha hemolytic Steptococci mouth
Gram negative bacilli - skin
skin
Example: dust particles carrying
fungi and bacilli
Aspergillus, Penicillium,
Cladosporium and Mucor are the
major types of fungi under the nails
Gastrointestinal Tract
GIT
Urogenital Flora
Bacteria in the vagina depends on the age, pH
and hormonal levels
Lactobacillus spp predominates in female infants
From 1 month to puberty, diphtheroids, S.
epidermidis, streptococci and E.coli
predominates
during puberty a woman acquires adult flora L.
acidophilus, corynebacteria, peptostreptococci,
staphylococci, sterptococci, bacteroides
After menopause, pH rises and flora returns to
prepubescent females
Conjunctival Flora
Sparse
When
Bacterial Pathogenesis
Pathogenesis
is a multifactorial
process which depends on the
immune status of the host, the
nature of the species or strain
(virulence factors) and the number
of organisms in the initial exposure
Kochs postulate
1. The organism must always be found in humans
with the infectious disease but not found in healthy
ones
2.The organism must be isolated from humans with
the infectious disease and grown in pure culture
3. The organism isolated in pure culture must
initiate disease when reinoculated into susceptible
animals
4. The organism should be re-isolated from the
experimentally infected animals
Adhesion
Infections
Tissue injury
Bacteria
Exotoxin
Effects
Exotoxin
Classes:
Toxin which act extracellularly:
Exotoxin
A-B toxin
consist of two components - one binds to cell
surface and the other passes into the cell
membrane or cytoplasm where it acts
Diphtheria toxin produced by
Endotoxins
Are
Endotoxin versus
Exotoxin
Endotoxin versus
Exotoxin
Definition of terms
Chain of infection
transmission
Contact
transmission
Direct or indirect
Droplet spread
Common
vehicle transmission
Food-borne salmonellosis
Waterborne shigellosis
Airborne
PTB
Vector
transmission
borne transmission