Bacterial Pathogensis
Bacterial Pathogensis
Bacterial Pathogensis
OR
Bacterial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity
Bacterial Pathogenesis
OR
Bacterial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity
Pathogenesis
The word comes from the Greek pathos, "disease", and genesis, creation.
The term pathogenesis means step by step development of a disease.
The chain of events leading to that disease due to a series of changes in the
structure and /or function of a cell/tissue/organ.
Caused by a microbial, chemical or physical agent
Terminologies
Disease
• Any deviation from a condition of good health and well-being
Infectious Disease
• A disease condition caused by the presence or growth of infectious
microorganisms or parasites
Pathogenicity
• The ability of a microbe to cause disease
Virulence
• The degree of pathogenicity in a microorganism
Terminologies
individual to another.
Terminologies
The suffix “-emia”
o A suffix emia meaning “presence of an infectious agent”
o Bacteremia = Presence of infectious bacteria
o Septicemia = Presence of an infectious agent in the bloodstream
• Endemic Disease
– An endemic disease is a disease that is always present in a certain
population or region.
• Epidemic Disease
– Epidemic: An outbreak of disease that attacks many peoples at about the
same time and may spread through one or several communities. e.g.
dengue in KPK
• Pandemic Disease
– When an epidemic spreads throughout the world.
Reservoir of Infection
– The source of an infectious agent
Carrier
– An individual who carries an infectious agent without manifesting
symptoms, yet who can transmit the agent to another individual
Fomites
• Any inanimate object capable of being an intermediate in the indirect
transmission of an infectious agent, such as clothes, utensils, and furniture.
Terminologies
Animal Vectors
– An animal (nonhuman) that can transmit an infectious agent to humans
– Biological animal vectors: The infectious agent must incubate in the animal
host as part of the agent’s developmental cycle; e.g, the transmission of
malaria by infected mosquitoes
Mechanisms of Disease Transmission
– Examples:
Direct Skin Contact
Airborne (Aerosols)
– Examples:
Food & Waterborne Transmission
Fomites
Animal Vectors
Bacterial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity:
How Microorganisms Cause Disease
Portals of Entry
• 1. Mucus Membranes
• 2. Skin
• 3. Parentarel
1. Mucus Membranes
• A. Respiratory Tract
– microbes inhaled into mouth or nose in droplets of moisture or dust
particles
– Easiest and most frequently traveled portal of entry
1. Mucus Membranes
• B. Gastrointestinal Tract
– microbes gain entrance thru
contaminated food & water or fingers
& hands
• These pathogens enter the G.I. Tract at one end and exit at
the other end.
• Trachoma
– Chlamydia trachomatis
2nd Portal of Entry: Skin
• Some microbes can gain entrance through openings in the skin: hair
follicles and sweat glands, wound …etc
3rd Portal of Entry: Parentarel
• Microorganisms are deposited into the tissues below the skin or mucus
membranes
• Punctures and scratches
• injections
• bites
• surgery
Preferred Portal of Entry
• Just because a pathogen enters your body it does not mean it’s going to cause
disease.
• Pathogens - preferred portal of entry
• Streptococcus pneumoniae
– if inhaled can cause pneumonia
– if enters the G.I. Tract, no disease
• Salmonella typhi
– if enters the G.I. Tract can cause Typhoid Fever
– if on skin, no disease
Number of Invading Microbes
Binding Sites
• Adhesins
• Ligands
Some cells use fimbriae to adhere.
• Streptococcus pneumoniae
• Klebsiella pneumoniae
• Haemophilus influenzae
• Bacillus anthracis
• Streptococcus mutans
Avoidance of Phagocytosis
• Toxemia
– Toxins in the bloodstream
• Toxigenicity:
– Capacity of microorganisms to produce toxins.
Two Types of Toxins
• 1. Exotoxins
– Secreted outside the bacterial cell
• 2. Endotoxins
– Part of the outer cell wall of Gram (-) bacteria.
Exotoxins
are protein toxins, generally quite toxic and secreted by bacterial cells
(some Gram +ve, some Gram -ve)
can be modified by chemicals or heat to produce a toxoid that still is
immunogenic, but no longer toxic so can be used as a vaccine .
A-B (or "two") component protein toxins
o B component binds to specific cell receptors to facilitate the
internalization of A.
o A component is the active (toxic) component
Effect exerted when gram-negative cells die and cell walls undergo lysis,
liberating endotoxin.
All produce the same signs and symptoms:
• 2. Neurotoxins
– interfere with normal nerve impulses.e.g. Botulinum Toxin
• 3. Enterotoxins
– effect cells lining the G.I. Tract. e.g. Cholera toxin or choleragen.
Bacterial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity: How
Microorganisms Cause Disease