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Enterobacteriaceae (Gram negative rods enteric tract)
1.
Enterobacteriaceae(Gram negative rods enteric tract)
1
2. Key Words
Opportunistic diseasesDiarrhea
Dysentery
Urinary tract infections
Pili
Lactose positive/negative
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
- Vero toxin (Shiga-like)
- Hemolysin
Enterotoxigenic E. coli
- Heat stable toxin
- Heat labile toxin
Enteropathogenic E. coli
Enteroaggregative E. coli
Enteroinvasive E. coli
Shigella
- Bacillary dysentery
- Shiga toxin
Salmonella enteritidis
Salmonellosis
Salmonella cholerae-suis
Salmonella typhi
- Typhoid
- Vi
Yersinia entercolitica
Vibrio cholerae
Choleragen (cholera toxin)
Campylobacter jejuni
Helicobacter pylori
2
3.
Opportunistic diseases-Enterobacteriaceae
–
–
–
–
septicemia,
pneumonia,
meningitis
urinary tract infections
Citrobacter
Enterobacter
Escherichia
Hafnia
Morganella
Providencia
Serratia
3
4. Enterobacteriaceae
• gastrointestinal diseases– Escherichia coli
– Salmonella
– Shigella
– Yersinia entercolitica
4
5.
Reiter's syndrome• Histocompatibility antigen (HLA) B27
– Enterobacteriaceae
*Salmonella
*Shigella
*Yersinia
– Non-Enterobacteriaceae
*Campylobacter
*Chlamydia
5
6.
Enterobacteriaceae• community acquired
• otherwise healthy people
– Klebsiella pneumoniae
* respiratory diseases
* prominent capsule
–urinary tract infection
–fecal contamination
*E. coli
*Proteus
– urease (degrades urea)
– alkaline urine
6
7. E. coli fimbriae
Type 1mannose
P
galactose
– glycolipids
– glycoproteins
7
8. Enterobacteriaceae
• gram negative facultative anaerobic rods– oxidase negative (no cytochrome oxidase)
8
9.
Feces• E. coli
– lactose positive
– not usually identified
– lactose positive sp. common, healthy intestine
• Shigella, Salmonella,Yersinia
– lactose negative
– identified
9
10.
Enterobacteriaceae• other sites
– identified biochemically
10
11. Serotypes
• reference laboratory– antigens
• O (lipopolysaccharide)
• H (flagellar)
• K (capsular)
11
12. Diarrhea (watery feces) and Dysentery (blood in stools)
1213. Caption: E. coli
1314.
Escherichia coli• E. coli and Shigella
– genetically very similar
– separated for historical reasons
– overlap in pathogenesis
14
15.
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli• Usually O157:H7
Flagella
Transmission electron
micrograph
15
16. Transmission – meat products or sewage-contaminated vegetables
• Hemorrhagic– Bloody dysentery
– copious diarrhea
– few leukocytes
– afebrile
• hemolytic-uremic syndrome
– hemolytic anemia
– thrombocytopenia (low platelets)
– kidney failure
16
17.
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli• Vero toxin
– “shiga-like toxin”
• Hemolysins
17
18.
Enterotoxigenic E. coli• diarrhea like cholera
• milder
• travellers diarrhea
18
19. Enterotoxigenic E. coli
• Heat labile toxin– like choleragen
– Adenyl cyclase activated
– cyclic AMP
– secretion water/ions
• Heat stable toxin
– Guanylate cyclase activated
– cyclic GMP
– uptake water/ions
19
20.
Enteropathogenic E. colidestruction of surface microvilli
• fever
Gut lumen
• diarrhea
• vomiting
• nausea
• non-bloody stools (not generally seen as dysentery)
20
21.
Enteroaggregative• Brick-like
bacterial aggregates - cell surfaces
• Mucus biofilm inhibits fluid absorption
• Diarrhea
21
22.
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC )• Dysentery
- resembles shigellosis
Gut lumen
22
23. Treatment -gastrointestinal disease
• fluid replacement• antibiotics
– not used usually unless systemic
–e.g. hemolytic-uremia syndrome
23
24. Shigella
Modified from Fig, Dennis Kunkel24
25. Shigella
• S. flexneri, S. boydii, S. sonnei, S.dysenteriae
– bacillary dysentery
– shigellosis
• bloody feces
• intestinal pain
• pus
25
26. Shigellosis
• within 2-3 days– epithelial cell damage
Gut lumen
26
27. Shiga toxin
• enterotoxic• cytotoxic
• inhibits protein synthesis
– lysing 28S rRNA
27
28. Shigellosis
• man only "reservoir"• mostly young children
– fecal to oral contact
– children to adults
• transmitted by adult food handlers
– unwashed hands
28
29. Treating shigellosis
• manage dehydration• patients respond to antibiotics
– disease duration diminished
29
30.
Salmonella[417
]
Caption: Salmonella typhi -
Gram-negative, enteric, rod prokaryote (dividing); causes typhoid fever.
Magnification*: x5,530
Type: SEM
Keywords: 96430B.TIF bacilli bacillus bacteria bacterial pathogen bacterium division Gram-negative human disease infection prokaryote rod Salmonella
typhi typhoid fever enteric bacterial pathogen intestinal tract infection SEM |
30
31. Salmonella
• 2000 antigenic "types”• genetically single species
– S. enterica
• disease category
– S. enteritidis
– many serotypes
– S. cholerae-suis
– S. typhi
31
32. Salmonellosis
• S. enteritidis– the common salmonella infection
– poultry, eggs
– no human reservoir
– Gastroenteritis
nausea
vomiting
non-bloody stool
self-limiting (2 - 5 days)
32
33. Control of salmonellosis
• Monitoring of food in the US is limited– microbiology is difficult
• Regulation is not optimal
• Chickens are not vaccinated in US
– UK, salmonellosis largely erradicated
33
34. Salmonellosis
Gut lumenuncomplicated cases (the vast majority)
antibiotic therapy not useful
34
35. S. cholerae-suis
• much less common• septicemia
• antibiotic therapy essential
35