Opportunistic Pathogen: Pseudomonas aeruginosa Flashcards

1
Q

History of resistance
-drugs

-what type of patients it commonly affects

A
  • Sulphonamide resistance 1920-1930
  • Emerging resistance to antibiotics
  • 1980s emergered as pathogen for Cystic fibrosis patients and burns patients
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2
Q

Identification

  • of bacterial colonies
  • special characteristic
A
  • Gram negative bacillus
  • Motile via polar flagella (at one end)
  • catalase, oxidase positive
  • growth at 42 degrees (can resist fever)
  • many have metallic sheen on blood agar
  • blue/green pigment = antibiotic pyocyanin
  • yellow pigment = siderophore pyoverdine
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3
Q

Why does it have quite a large genome? (4 reasons)

A
  • Codes for just as many proteins as an eukaryote
  • it inherits resistance (antibiotics & antiseptics)
  • Large array of virulence factors
  • Diverse substrates (need different proteins to be able to synthesis them)
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4
Q

E.g. of some methods of antibiotic resistant mechanisms (4)

  • 2 general features
  • 2 features to specific antibiotic classes
A
  • Contains enzymes that can modify aminoglycosides (class of antibiotics)
  • can neutralise cephalosporins
  • Actively pumps out foreign antibodies (has active efflux systems)
  • Has diminished outer membrane permeability (very specific porins that restricts what can get in)

*Inherent chromosomal resistance & horizontal transfer of resistance = need for alternative/supplementary treatments

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5
Q

Conjugation

  • what is it in terms of resistance
  • what happens
A
  • Antibiotic gene resistant cassettes that can code for more than one resistance (e.g. integron ABr gene cassette)
    • can be transferred w/ other species, other generations or other strains
  • occurs through sex pilus
  • bit problem with bacteria
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6
Q

Habitat of P. aeruginosa

A
  • Ubiquitous (tend to pick it up on our skin daily)
  • Soil and water organism
  • Ability to grow using various organic compounds & survive w/ minimal nutrition (i.e. bottled mineral water)
  • habitat facilitates animal/plant contact
  • Model for biofilm production
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7
Q

Biofilm -> what it is

-when it occurs

A
  • Biofilm = gunky layer that tends to be polymicrobial
    • occurs when levels of organims reach a threshold (bacteria know via quorum sensing)
      • bacteria then synthesise biofilm
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8
Q

Disease of P. aeruginosa

-e.g. of what it can cause

A
  • Opportunistic pathogen of plants, nematodes, insects, animals
  • Urinary Tract infections, indwelling catheters
  • can cause severe disease, esp. for immunosuppressed patients
  • can also produce enzymes that are capable of liquefying eye (risk for ppl with contact lenses)
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9
Q

Severe Human diseases

-situations when likely to develop (i.e. what people are more susceptible)

A
  • may rely on predisposition (i.e. illness, genetic, immune suppression)
  • HIV/AIDS
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Dermal Injuries; burns (offer a large portal of entry)
    • ppl burnt by flame get a crusty surface which has to be surgically removed as it is toxic)
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10
Q

Virulence factors of P. aeruginosa

  • Pilus
  • flagellum
  • Alginate/Biofilm
  • extracellular products
A
  • Pilus: can use it for “twitching motility” - can shoot it and pull itself along
  • flagellum: propels it along (can sense nutrient gradient and move towards it)
  • Alginate/biofilm: biofilm = exoproduct -> helps it become inpenetratable to antibiotics
  • Extracellular products produced;
    • proteaases
    • hemolysins
    • exotoxin A
    • exoenzyme S
    • pyocyanin (pigment)
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11
Q

Exotoxin A effect on cell

A
  • affects receptor that pump out collagen to maintain the integrity of skin
  • binds to receptor and translocates to inside of cell
    • affects translation which means no protein synthesis & Cell death
  • prolonged decrease of cells in faascia (fibroblasts and neutrophils)
  • also causes loss of maintenance of extracellular matrix
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12
Q

P. aeruginosa elastase

A
  • degrades elastin and collagen
  • also degrades human immunoglobulins and complement C3 (part of host defence)
  • increases exudation (fluid)
  • damages blood vessels
  • degrades collagen of extracellular matrix
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13
Q

Phospholipase C -> effect on cell

A
  • attacks bond between glyceral and phosphate -> opens phospholipid molecule up to other destructors
    • is first part to membrane breakdown
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14
Q

Key facts of P. aeruginosa

A
  • Large genome
  • Large number of VFs
  • Hosts include animals, plants, insects
  • Ab resistant; intrinsic and acquired
  • opportunistic pathogen of susceptible hosts
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