Title: Bacterial Interactions with Host
1Bacterial Interactions with Host
- Medical Microbiology
- SBM 2044
2- When describing the interaction between host and
microbes, analogies to war are common, as in
references to a microbial attack or invasion
repelled by host defense systems. - In reality what drives microbes is not aggression
but survival and reproduction. To succeed, many
microbes have evolved the ability to persist in
the body, only incidentally causing disease
3Pathogenesis
- The pathogenesis of bacterial infection includes
initiation of the infectious process and the
mechanisms that lead to the development of signs
and symptoms of disease. - Infectious process
- Once in the body, bacteria must attach or adhere
to host cells, usually epithelial cells - After establishment, the bacteria multiply and
spread directly through tissues or via the
lymphatic system to the bloodstream. - E.g. S. pneumoniae
4Microbial survival
- To survive, microbes must do the following
- Avoid being washed away (colonize the surfaces of
host cells) - Find a nutritionally compatible niche
- Survive the constitutive and induced defenses
- Transfer to a new host
5MCQ True or False?
- Microorganisms are the worst pathogens if they
produce asymptomatic infection, rather than death
of the host. (T/F ?) - Why?
- False. Because pathogens that normally live in
people enhance the possibility of transmission
from one person to another.
6Surface colonization
- Once the bacteria enter the body of the host,
they must adhere to cells or a tissue surface - avoid being wash away
- compete with resident flora for adherence sites
- Complex interactions
- net surface charge
- surface hydrophobicity
- binding molecules on bacteria (ligands, adhesins)
and host cell receptors
7Overview of interactions with host surfaces
- overall, surface interactions
- entrapment in mucin
gt 50 nm
10 20 nm
lt 2 nm
lt 1.0 nm
Hydrophobic interactions
Specific interactions
Electrostatic repulsion
Van der Walls
Weak attractive
adhesin
receptor
Weak long-range attractive
easily disrupted
Very strong irreversible
Repulsion reduced by (a) high ionic strength (b)
small diameter
8Nonspecific adhesion
- Weakly adhering bacteria - easily removed by
- physical shear forces or washing
- May allow colonisation of surfaces not subject
to - strong physical/washing forces (e.g. skin,
vagina)
- Not sufficient to colonise e.g. urinary tract,
small - intestine, etc
9Specific adhesion
EPEC adhering to an intestinal epithelial cells
Bordetella pertussis on to ciliated tracheal cell
10Specific adhesion
The receptor specific molecule on host surface
The adhesin specific molecule on bacterial cell
surface
Carbohydrate part of a glycolipid or glycoprotein
Usually
A surface protein (often lectins)
Others e.g. LTA in Gram
- Specificity analogous to enzyme-substrate
specificity
11Types of bacterial adhesins
- Individual protein molecules protruding from OM
of - Gram-neg. bacteria, or cell-wall of
Gram-pos. bact.
- protrude for distances ranging from lt 10 - 20
nm, - up to ca.100nm (some Gram-pos. fibrillar
adhesins)
Example
Streptococcus pyogenes M proteins
- Physical reasons why locating adhesins further
away - from bacterial cell-surface facilitate
contacts with - receptors on mammalian cells
12Bacterial Fimbriae
- Specialized, multimeric, adhesive appendages
- protruding several microns - much further
than - individual surface proteins.
OM
IM
13Fimbriae on surface of a human ETEC strain
- Strains may express gt 1 distinct type of
fimbriae, - with different receptor specificities
CS3 thin, flexible
CS1
14Adhesin-Receptor specificity
- First noted in late 1950s
- A particular soluble sugar, but not others,
inhibited - adhesion of E. coli to cells (rbc adhesion
model )
Specific adhesin
Specific receptor
- By mimicking critical part of the specific
receptor, - inhibitor blocked receptor-binding site of
adhesin
- Type I pili First E. coli adhesin identified
- MSHA mannose-sensitive haemagglutination
15Other bacterial species
- Wide variety of adhesins both fimbrial
afimbrial (e.g. invasin that recognises
integrins)
- Some incorporate information on
receptor-specificity - in name
- Staphylococcus aureus Fibronectin-binding
proteins - Sialoprotein-binding protein
- Streptococcus pyogenes Fibronectin-binding
proteins - Collagen-binding protein
- Others first named for various reasons only
- later discovered to act (also) as adhesins.
- Streptococcus pyogenes M proteins
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae Opa proteins
16Consequences of adhesion
1. Organism colonizes surface e.g. normal flora
2. Pathogen colonizes surface and secretes toxins
Examples
Vibrio cholerae Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
- Damage due mainly to action of secreted toxins
- Damage often localized (e.g. cholera), but if
toxin - absorbed efficiently (e.g. diphtheria), may
be - systemic (i.e. throughout body)
17Consequences of adhesion
3. Colonize surface and form a biofilm
- In contrast to localised colonies, some
pathogens - can form a spreading surface layer a
BIOFILM
- bacteria encased in a polysaccharide slime that
aids - attachment and protects bacteria.
- Simple biofilm comprises a single species
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- biofilm on a catheters
18 Complex Biofilms
- Comprise multiple species
- Some species produce polysaccharides, trapping
others
Example Dental plaque
19Finding a Compatible Niche
- Nutritious plasma contains sugars, vitamins and
minerals - but bacteria grow sparsely on fresh plasma in a
test tube - plasma lack free iron
- Bacteria adapt by
- use polymeric form of iron
- siderophores which are specific for ferric iron
- scavenging intracellular iron i.e. haemolysing
- Specific nutrients only in certain body tissues
- streptococci use sucrose in the mouth
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22Evading the Consitutive/Induced Defenses
- The host possess
- First line defense
- Second line defense
- How do microbial agents overcome these defenses?
23Defending against complement
- Microbes must prevent complement activation
- Masking surface components (i.e. LPS, teichoic
acids) that activate alternative pathway ?
secreting capsules to cover up - Incorporate sialic acid into their capsular
polysaccharides e.g. gonococci - Coating with circulating IgA meningococci
- Binding of C3b with viral envelope glycoprotein
such as in herpes simplex virus - Prevent access of MAC to its target, the
bacterial outer membrane Salmonella and E. coli
with long O-antigen polysaccharide chain
24Avoiding phagocytosis
- Many bacterial pathogens are rapidly killed once
they are ingested by polymorphs or macrophages - But some pathogens are able to multiply within
host cells, by shielding with normal host
components on their surfaces
25Avoiding phagocytosis
- Inhibiting phagocyte recruitment and function
- Bordetella pertussis inhibit neutrophil motility
and chemotaxis toxin production - Group A streptococci produce C5a peptidase
inactivates the chemotactic products
26Avoiding phagocytosis
- Microbial killing of phagocytes
- Leukocidins kill neutrophils and macrophages
pseudomonads, staphylococci, group A
streptococci, clostridia - shigellae kills phagocytic cells
- Escaping ingestion
- capsules
- reduce opsonization e.g. staphylococci protein A
binds to IgG by the wrong end, the Fc region
27How microbes survive inside phagocytes?
- Inhibition of lysosome fusion with phagosomes
- Escapes into the cytoplasm
- shigellae, Listeria monocytogenes and the
rickettsiae cross the membrane of the phagocytic
vesicle and the phagosome to enter cytoplasm,
hence protected from lysozymes - L. monocytogenes secretes a pore-forming toxin,
listeriolysin
28How microbes survive inside phagocytes?
- Resistance to lysosomal enzymes
- Leishmania have resistant cell surfaces and can
withstand acidic environment - Inhibition of the phagocytes oxidative pathway
- Legionella inhibit the hexose-monophosphate shunt
and oxygen consumption in neutrophils, thus
reducing the free radicals respiratory burst - staphylococci produce catalase that breaks down
the H2O2
29Intracellular life
- Obligatory for viruses, but not bacteria.
- Advantages? Protected from antibodies, and from
some antimicrobial drugs - Intracellular microorganisms must be able to
- Penetrate
- Survive host cell defenses
- Transmit to other cells
30- Penetration
- Easy with phagocytes
- For non-phagocytic cells, penetration must be
induced by microbial activities - bind to specific receptors and send signals
- Surviving host cell defenses
- Transmission to other cells
- upon lysis of the host cells, transmission
through blood or body fluids - viruses spread by cell fusing with uninfected
adjacent cells ? formation of syncytia and
multinucleated giant cells - use of host cytoskeleton to spread e.g.
Shigella, L. monocytogenes induce polymerization
of actin at one of their ends
31Subverting the immune responses
- Immunosuppression
- infectious agents may suppress the hosts immune
responses. HIV infects the CD4 T-helper
lymphocytes which lead to the collapse of the
immune system. - tuberculosis was more common during the measles
outbreak - Diversion of lymphocyte function superantigens
- excessive stimulation of immune cells in a
nonproductive way e.g. toxins secreted by
streptococci are superantigens that cause
misdirection of the immune response
32Subverting the immune responses
- Masquerading by changing antigenic coats
- Trypanosomes
- Trypanosoma brucei cause sleeping sickness
- covered with thick protein coat called variable
surface glycoprotein - have several hundred genes that encode various
antigens, but only ONE is expressed at a time - Gonococci
- periodic changes in pilin, protein of its pili
- Influenza viruses
- antigenic changes emerge gradually in a
population of viruses over an epidemic season
33Subverting the immune responses
- Proteolysis of antibodies
- extracellular proteases inactivate secretory IgA
e.g. in gonococci, meningococci and Haemophilus
influenzae - staphylokinase cleaves host plasminogen into
plasmin at the bacterial cell surface - Viral latency
- Herpes infection
- herpes virus pass from one cell to another
through cytoplasmic bridges - viruses do not proliferate within cells
- other pathogens, Helicobacter pylori which
causes gastric ulcers and Mycobacterium
tuberculosis also maintain chronic associations
with the host
34Transmission of infection
- Infectious agents are carried into a new host
through food, aerosols, sexual contact, wound or
soil - Many microbes differentiate into a transit form,
to survive the environment - Chlamydiae elementary body
- Clinical manifestation of disease by
microorganisms often promote transmission e.g. - Vibrio cholerae, E. coli and Shigella cause
diarrhoea intestinal contents secretion - M. tuberculosis induce coughing dispersal via
aerosols