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Details

Bordatella
ID Week 1
10
Medical
Graduate
04/13/2010

Additional Medical Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What are structural features of B. pertussis?
Definition

Gram-

Capsulated

Coccobacillus

Term
What are special considerations for culturing Bordatella?
Definition

Special medium: Bordet-Gengou medium

Does not grow on cotton; requires calcium alginate swab.

Term
What are virulence factors of B. pertussis, and how do they work?
Definition

1. Filamentous hemaggultinin (FHA)

-- A surface protein that binds to ciliated cells on respiratory epithelium (specifically, binds to galactose on sulfated glycolipids)

Note: Pertactin and pili/fimbriae also involved in binding


2. Pertussis toxins

-- AB5 toxin (B binds to cell and allows A to pass in): A subunit ADP-riboxylates Gi protein -> cAMP -> abnormal cellular signaling, increased sensitivity to histamine (vasopermeability, lymphocytes in blood)

-- Calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase: leads to high cAMP levels that weaken PMNs (impaired chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and superoxide production)

Note: Calmodulin is specific to host; good strategy.

Note: Pertussis toxins delivered to target cells by type IV secretion

 

3. Tracheal Cytotoxin (TCT): Paralyzes cilia, crippling the muco-ciliary elevator. Ciliated cells are eventually extruded from respiatory lining. TCT comprises fragments of the bacterial peptidoglycan cell wall, which are released during remodeling/division. 

Note: Damaged ciliated cells eventually extruded from respiratory lining, hence TCT is responsible for long-term "whooping" cough after infection clears. Cell extrusion mediated by IL-1.

 

Note: Virulence factors (Fha, pertussis toxins, pertactin, pili) are components of acellular vaccine, DTaP)

Term
Bordatella has intrinsic resistance to what antibiotic?
Definition

Penicillin. I don't know why this is special given that it is Gram-.

Term
What is the reservoir for B. pertussis?
Definition

Human respiratory tract.

Term
Described the regulatory system of B. pertussis.
Definition

Two-component regulatory system: Bvg-S and Bvg-A

1. Sensor protein Bvg-S in cytoplasmic membrane sense environmental cue and autophosphorylates.

2. Phosphate is transferred to a response regulator protein (activator protein), Bvg-A.

3. Bvg-A activates/repressed transcription, allowing for phenotypic switching/ reciprocal expression (no need to express flagella and adhesins at the same time).


Note: Tandem phospho-relay system (repeat phosphorylations) can yield rheostat control instead of simple on/off switch.


Note: Many microbes exploit these phospho-relays to regulate gene expression in response to local cues.

Term
What are examples of AB type toxins?
Definition

AB5

-- Pertussis toxin

-- Cholera toxin

-- E. Coli LT


A(-s-s-)B:

-- Diphtheria

-- Tetanus

-- P. aeruginosa exotoxin A

Term
What is the course of a B. pertussis infection?
Definition

Two phases: Catarrhal and Paroxysmal


Catarrhal Phase (1-2 weeks)

-- Inflammation of mucous membranes, bacterial colonization, worsening cough, fever

-- Highly contagious during this phase


Paroxysmal phase (1-2 months)

-- Severe, persistent cough (whooping in children)

Note: Bacterial infection is cleared at this point. Coughing is due to damaged mucociliary elevator, courtesy of TCT.

Term
How do we treat whooping cough?
Definition

During catarrhal phase we can treat with erythromycin, though host response can clear infection without treatment. During paroxysmal phase, infection has already cleared - whooping will persist.

Note: Vaccination is key!

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