Title: Microbial Diseases of the Skin: Staphylococcus and Streptococcus
1Microbial Diseases of the SkinStaphylococcus
and Streptococcus
2Skin
- Portals of entry
- Hair follicles
- Sweat ducts
- Sebum ducts
- Parenteral route
Figure 21.1
3Staphylococcal Skin Infections
- For clinical purposes coagulase-positive v.
negative - Correlation between coagulase expression and
toxin production - S. epidermidis
- Gram-positive cocci, coagulase-negative
- Up to 90 of normal skin microbiota
- Only pathogenic when skin barrier is broken
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Gram-positive cocci, coagulase-positive
- Most pathogenic of the staphylococci
- Various toxins, depending upon infecting strain
4Staphylococcal Skin Infections
- Common route of entry skin (hair follicles)
- Folliculitis Infection of the hair follicle
(often occurs as pimples) - Eyelash folliculitis Sty
- Folliculitis can progress to an abscess (boil)
- Abscess pus surrounded by inflamed tissue
- Boil can progress to a carbuncle
- Inflammation of tissue under the skin
- Always some risk of bacteria entering the
bloodstream and producing toxins?sepsis
5Staphylococcal Skin Infections
Sites of infection and diseases caused by
Staphylococcus aureus
http//textbookofbacteriology.net
6Streptococcal Skin Infections
- Cause wide range of diseases
- Skin infections are usually localized, but can
reach deeper tissue - Group A streptococci (GAS) Streptococcus
pyogenes - Beta-hemolytic streptococci
- One of the most common human pathogens
- Carriers harbor GAS on skin and
throat tissues
http//phil.cdc.gov
7Streptococcal Skin Infections
- Streptococcus pyogenes M protein
- Escape phagocytosis
- Helps cells adhere to mucous membranes
Figure 21.5
8http//www.gsbs.utmb.edu/microbook/ch013.htm
9Streptococcal Skin InfectionsS. pyogenes
- Impetigo
- Infection of epidermis
- Pustules rupture and crust over
- Erysipelas
- Infection of dermis
- Red, inflamed patches from local tissue
destruction - Sepsis if infection spreads to bloodstream
Figure 21.6, 7
10Streptococcal Skin InfectionsInvasive Group A
Streptococcal Infections
- Invasive GAS (Flesh-eating bacteria)
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Rare
- Destruction of muscle, fat, skin tissue
- Exotoxin A, superantigen
- Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome
- Immune system contributes to damage
- Mortality 40
Figure 21.8
11Microbial Diseases of the Nervous System
Prions
12Infections of the Nervous SystemPrions
- Prions Infectious proteins
- Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
- PrPC, normal cellular prion protein, on cell
surface - PrPSc, scrapie protein, accumulate in brain cells
forming plaques or aggregates
13Prions
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (humans)
- Spongiform encephalopathy
14Prions
PrPSc
PrPc
PrPSc acquired or produced.
PrPSc interacts with PrPC at the cell surface.
PrPC is converted to PrPSc.
2
3
4
1
PrPC expressed at cell surface.
Lysosome
Endosome
5
6
7
8
New PrPSc converts more PrPC to PrPSc. (chain
reaction)
PrPSc is endocytosed.
PrPSc accumulates inside cell
Figure 13.21
15Diseases of the Nervous SystemTransmissible
Spongiform Encephalopathies
- TSEs caused by prions
- Sheep scrapie
- Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (Mad cow
disease) - Chronic wasting disease
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Kuru, Fatal familial
insomnia - Prion infection from ingestion, transplant or
inheritance - Spongiform degeneration of brain
- Rapidly progressive dementia at end-stages
- Chronic, fatal
16Diseases of the Nervous SystemTransmissible
Spongiform Encephalopathies
- Incubation times measured in years/decades
- Slowly progressive
- No inflammation
- Extremely rare
17Microbial Diseases of the Cardiovascular
SystemAnthrax
18The Cardiovascular System
- BloodTransports nutrients to and wastes from
cells throughout our bodies - Problem it can also transport pathogens!
Figure 23.1
19Microbial diseases of the bloodAnthrax
- Bacillus anthracis, gram-positive,
endospore-forming aerobic rod - Found in specific soil types
- Endospores can last up to 60 years
- Primarily strikes grazing animals
- Ingested with grass?fatal sepsis
- Cattle are routinely vaccinated
- Three forms cutaneous, gastrointestinal,
inhalational
http//textbookofbacteriology.net
20Microbial diseases of the bloodAnthrax
- Severity of infection depends on portal of entry
- Cutaneous anthrax
- Endospores enter through minor cut, dont usually
enter bloodstream - Low-grade fever and malaise
- 20 mortality (without Abx)
- lt1 mortality with Abx
- Gastrointestinal anthrax
- Ingestion of undercooked food contaminated with
endospores - Ulcerative lesions along GI tract
- 50 mortality
Figure 23.7
21Microbial diseases of the bloodAnthrax
- Inhalational anthrax
- Inhalation of endospores
- Up to 60 days before germination
- Initially cough, mild fever, mild chest pain, so
typically no Abx given - 100 mortality
- High probability of
entering bloodstream ?
septic shock
http//www.arches.uga.edu/f150ga/
22Microbial diseases of the bloodAnthrax
- Infection begins when macrophages engulf
endospores - Endospores germinate inside of macrophages
- Bacteria multiply, eventually kill macrophages
- Release of bacteria into bloodstream?
replication and toxin production - Toxins cause edema and target/kill macrophages,
effectively disabling defenses - Capsule doesnt initiate a protective immune
response - Septic shock is often the cause of death
23Microbial Diseases of the Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
24Lower Respiratory System
- Ciliary escalator keeps the lower respiratory
system sterile
Figure 24.2
25Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Acid-fast rod
- Obligate aerobe
- Generation time gt 20 hr
- Transmitted from human to human
- Airborne droplets reach alveoli
- Bacilli are usually phagocytized and killed by
macrophages
Figure 24.9
26Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
Some bacilli may survive inside macrophages
More macrophages are recruited -ineffective at
killing -walled-off lesion (tubercle)
Figure 24.10.1
27Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
Weeks later, many macrophages die -release
bacilli into center of tubercle -bacilli do not
grow well here -may heal (calcified
lesions) -may become dormant infection
Figure 24.10.2
28Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
Air-filled cavity may form in mature
tubercle -active growth of bacilli
Cavity grows and may rupture, releasing bacilli
into bronchiole -disseminated throughout
lungs, blood and lymphatics ?TB infection in
other tissues
Figure 24.10.3
29Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
- Diagnosis Tuberculin skin test screening
- current or previous infection (or
vaccination) - Followed by X-ray or CT, acid-fast staining of
sputum, culturing bacteria
Acid-fast bacillus (AFB) smear (sputum)
Figure 24.11
www.cdc.gov
30Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory
SystemTuberculosis
- Vaccination recommended only for children at high
risk - Treatment of TB Prolonged multiple antibiotic
therapy - Prolonged nature?patients less likely to complete
prescribed regimen?emergence of multi-drug
resistant TB (MDR-TB) - Also XDR-TB (Extensively drug resistant TB)
31Microbial Diseases of the Digestive
SystemDental Caries, Food poisoning and
Helicobacter
32Normal Microbiota of the Digestive System
- gt300 species in mouth
- Large intestine 100 billion bacteria/gram feces
- 40 fecal mass is microbial cell material
- Assist in polysaccharide breakdown, some
synthesize vitamins - Mostly anaerobes and facultative anaerobes
- Bacteriodes, E. coli, Enterobacter, Klebsiella,
Proteus
33Bacterial Diseases of the Upper Digestive System
Dental Caries
Figure 25.3b
34Dental Plaques CariesPolymicrobial Infections
35Dental plaque diversity
Prescotts Principles of Microbiology
www.gaba.com
36Bacterial Diseases of the Upper Digestive System
Dental Caries
Figure 25.4
37Bacterial Diseases of the Lower Digestive System
- Symptoms usually include diarrhea,
gastroenteritis, dysentery - Often with abdominal cramps, nausea and vomiting
- Dysentery severe diarrhea with blood or mucus
- Treated with fluid and electrolyte replacement
- Infection pathogen enters GI tract and
multiplies - Incubation from 12 hr to 2 wk
- Time for colonization, growth and toxin
production - Typically fever evolves
- Intoxication ingestion of preformed toxin
- Symptoms appear 1-48 hr after ingestion
- No colonization is necessary
38Staphylococcal Food Poisoning
- Staphylococcus aureus one of the most common
causes - Onset of food poisoning symptoms 1-6 hours after
ingestion of contaminated food - Intoxication
- S. aureus is tolerant of high osmotic pressure
and low moisture - Somewhat resistant to heat
- Most competitors are eliminated (cooking, osmotic
pressure) - Multiplies on food, releasing enterotoxin as it
grows - Enterotoxin type A Superantigen exotoxin
- Survives up to 30 minutes of boiling!
- Triggers vomiting reflex cramps and diarrhea
follow - Recovery within 24 hours
39Staphylococcal Food Poisoning
- S. aureus is present on skin, in nasal secretions
- Contaminated hands
- Best prevention strategy adequate refrigeration
Figure 25.6
40Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
- Sources contaminated, undercooked meat raw
vegetables - Pathogenic E. coli strains fimbriae for
attachment and toxins that cause GI disturbance
(gastroenteritis) - Low infective dose lt100 bacteria
- Attach to intestinal mucosa and release toxin
into lumen - Infection
41Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
- Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) produce Shiga
toxin - 50 of feedlot cattle may have enterohemorrhagic
strains in their intestines (asymptomatic) - E. coli O157H7 serotype most common
cause of outbreaks in US - O cell wall antigen
- H flagellar antigen
- Severe cases (6) severe colon inflammation
with bleeding (hemorrhagic colitis) - Can progress to affect kidneys (hemolytic uremic
syndrome)
www.sciencenews.org
42Helicobacter Peptic ulcer disease
- Helicobacter pylori
- Cause of majority (70-95) of peptic ulcer
disease cases - Not identified until 1983
- B. Marshall and Kochs Postulates
- 40 of adults harbor H. pylori
- Only 1-15 develop ulcers
- Neutralizes stomach acids so it can thrive
(urease) - Causes a drop in protective gastric mucus
production
Figure 11.11
43Helicobacter Peptic ulcer disease
Figure 25.13
44Helicobacter Peptic ulcer disease
www.helico.com
- H. pylori increases risk of stomach cancers
- 70-90 of stomach cancers are associated with
chronic H. pylori infections
45Microbial Diseases of the Urinary SystemCystitis
46Normal Microbiota of the Urinary System
- Urinary bladder and upper urinary tract sterile
- gt1,000 bacteria/ml or 100 coliforms/ml of urine
indicates urinary tract infection
47Urinary Organs
Valves to prevent backflow from bladder (shields
kidneys from infections)
Figure 26.1
48Diseases of the Urinary SystemCystitis
Pyelonephritis
- Cystitis infection of the urinary bladder
- Difficult, painful urination (dysuria)
- Presence of white blood cells in urine (pyuria)
- Eight times more common in females vs. males
- Shorter urethra thats closer to anal opening
- Often caused by E. coli
- Antibiotic-sensitivity tests may be required
before treatment - 25 untreated cases lead to pyelonephritis
- Inflammation of one/both kidneys
- If chronic, scar tissue develops, impairs kidney
function - 75 due to E. coli