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What are the three things a pathogen must do to successfully cause disease?
Adhere to the host's tissues, invade and acquire nutrients, and evade the immune system long enough to replicate or reproduce
Generally, how do pathogens adhere to the host's tissues?
Pathogens make a variety of adherence structures
Generally, how do pathogens invade tissues and acquire nutrients?
Pathogens make a variety of enzymes and binding proteins.
Generally, how do pathogens evade the immune system long enough to replicate or reproduce?
Pathogens use a variety of methods to confuse or suppress the immune system.
Fimbriae
Adhesion structures that are thin and hair-like, usually dozens or 100s per cell
Pili
Adhesion structures that are longer and thicker than fimbriae, usually only a few on each cell
Fimbriae and pili
Adhesion structures made of protein fibers that have protein on the very end called adhesins
Adhesins
Allow bacteria to attach to specific proteins on specific kinds of cells.
Capsules and Slime Layers
Adhesion structures made of sugars with chemical stickiness
Capsules
Made of densely packed and organized sugars; organization usually makes it appear sharp on microscope images.
Slime Layers
Made of loosely packed and disorganized sugars; lack of organization usually makes it appear fuzzy on microscope images.
What is a biofilm?
A community of microbes that stick to surfaces and secrete a sticky matrix called extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), which provides protection and enhanced adhesion
What is EPS (extracellular polymeric substance)?
A gel-like mixture secreted by biofilm cells that traps bacteria and protects them from immune defenses
Biofilm on teeth
Streptococcus mutans forms a biofilm on tooth enamel that causes dental caries (tooth decay)
How do viruses attach to host cells?
Most viruses use spike proteins to bind to specific host-cell receptors
How can some viruses attach without spikes?
They bind directly to host receptors using their capsomeres
What are invasins?
Microbial proteins that promote tissue invasion or bind nutrients needed for growth
What is the cytopathic effect?
Cell injury or death caused by toxins or infections that releases nutrients into surrounding tissues
What does coagulase do?
An enzyme made by Staphylococcus aureus that enhances coagulation, forming a protective clot to hide from phagocytes
What does streptokinase do?
An enzyme made by Streptococcus that breaks down clots, allowing bacteria to escape and spread
How does hyaluronidase aid tissue invasion?
It destroys hyaluronic acid (the sugar "glue" holding epithelial cells together) so bacteria can spread
How does collagenase aid tissue invasion?
It breaks collagen fibers in connective tissue, damaging skin and mucosal barriers
How do toxins help pathogens invade?
By killing host cells (cytopathic effect) and releasing nutrients such as sugars and amino acids
What are A-B toxins?
Two-part bacterial toxins:A (active) and B (binding) that enter cells and destroy them; example: C. difficile binary toxin
What are the two main strategies pathogens use to evade the immune system?
(1) Hiding from host defenses and (2) Undermining host defenses
What is antigenic masking?
When pathogens coat themselves with host self-antigens, making immune cells unable to recognize them as foreign
Antigenic masking in S. aureus
Staphylococcus aureus binds extracellular-matrix proteins like collagen and fibronectin to avoid recognition by T cells and antibodies
What is antigen mimicry?
Pathogens display surface antigens that mimic host molecules, tricking the immune system into ignoring them
How do capsules and slime layers contribute to antigen mimicry?
They contain sugars similar to those found on human cells, making pathogens harder to distinguish from self
Neisseria meningitidis immune evasion
Builds its capsule from sialic acid (the same sugar found on human cell membranes) helping it blend in
What is antigenic variation?
Rapid mutation or switching between different antigen sets so immune cells can't mount a lasting response (e.g., influenza, SARS-CoV-2)
Trypanosoma brucei antigenic variation
The protozoan that causes sleeping sickness changes its surface antigens repeatedly, forcing the host to restart immune responses
How do some pathogens escape phagocytosis?
They prevent destruction inside macrophages by killing the cell or living safely inside it
Anthrax immune evasion
Bacillus anthracis produces a lethal A-B toxin that kills macrophages after phagocytosis, allowing escape
Q fever immune evasion
Coxiella burnetii survives and replicates inside lysosomes of phagocytes, making it mostly immune to destruction