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Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

15. Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity. Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity. Pathogenicity : The ability to cause disease. Virulence : The extent of pathogenicity. Portals of Entry. Mucous membranes Skin Parenteral route. Numbers of Invading Microbes. Dosage Amounts

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Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

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  1. 15 Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

  2. Microbial Mechanisms of Pathogenicity • Pathogenicity: The ability to cause disease. • Virulence: The extent of pathogenicity.

  3. Portals of Entry • Mucous membranes • Skin • Parenteral route

  4. Numbers of Invading Microbes • Dosage Amounts • ID50: Infectious dose for 50% of the test population. • LD50: Lethal dose (of a toxin) for 50% of the test population. • Examples • Botulinum 0.03 ng/kg • Shiga toxin 250 ng/kg • Staphylococcal enterotoxin 1350 ng/kg

  5. Bacillus Anthracis Infectious Dosage

  6. Adherence • Adhesions/ligands bind to receptors on host cells • Glycocalyx • Biofilms • Fimbriae • Pili • Flagella

  7. Enzymes • Bacterial Capsules • Help Prevent Phagocytosis • Increase Virulence • Anchor Bacterial Cells

  8. Penetration into the Host Cell Figure 15.2

  9. Toxins • Toxin: Substances that contribute to pathogenicity. • 2 main types of toxins • Toxigenicity: Ability to produce a toxin. • Toxemia: Presence of toxin in the host's blood. • Toxoid: Inactivated toxin used in a vaccine. • Antitoxin: Antibodies against a specific toxin.

  10. Endotoxins Figure 15.4b

  11. Exotoxin Example: Botulinum Toxin Figure 15.4a

  12. Exotoxins • A-B toxins Figure 15.5

  13. Exotoxins • Membrane-disrupting toxins • Lyse host’s cells by • Making protein channels in the plasma membrane • Disrupting phospholipid bilayer.

  14. Exotoxins • Superantigens • Cause an intense immune response due to release of cytokines from host cells. • Fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, shock, and death.

  15. Exotoxins • Specific for a structure or function in host cell Figure 15.4a

  16. Exotoxins

  17. Endotoxins Figure 15.4b

  18. Endotoxins The fever caused by endotoxin release: Figure 15.6

  19. Cytopathic Effects of Viruses Table 15.4

  20. Portals of Exit • Respiratory tract • Coughing and sneezing • Gastrointestinal tract • Feces and saliva • Genitourinary tract • Urine and vaginal secretions • Skin • Blood • Biting arthropods and needles or syringes

  21. Mechanisms of Pathogenicity Figure 15.9

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