What is the main entry point for pathogens?
Mucosal Layers
What must pathogens overcome to colonise a host? What is required?
What can mediate adhesion?
o Pili/fimbriae
o Afimbrial adhesins
o Capsules
What allows bacteria to adhere?
What are fimbrial and afimbrial adhesins?
Fimbrial Adhesins
• Complex surface structures made up of repeating protein subunits
Afimbrial Adhesins
• Outer membrane proteins (G-)
What are the features of gram negative Type I/Pap fimbriae?
Type I/Pap pili
• Assembly requires usher/chaperone system
• Pilus = fibre of six strutrual proteins
• Thick rod, thin tip
• UPEC
What does type I pili bind?
mannose (glycoporteins)
What does Pap pili bind?
bind Gal α (1-4)Gal (glycolipids)
How is the biogenesis of type I and Pap pili regulated?
What occurs during pili biogenesis?
What are pilicides?
• Antibiotics, prevent pili construction (interrupt ushers, polygenesis on surface)
What are the features of type IV pili?
What type of pili does EPEC have? What is it essential for?
Type IV
For adherence/colonisation
What are the features of Bordetella pertussis?
o Whooping cough
o Pertussis toxin
o Fimbrial and afimbrial adhesins
o Acellular vaccine less powerful than whole cell (less adjuvants to make response last)
o Vaccine with inactivated toxin, afimbrial adhesins
What type of adhesins does Bordetella pertussis have?
o Fimbrial and afimbrial adhesins
What is FHA?
• Filamentous Haemagglutinin (FHA part of acellular vaccine for Brodetella pertussis)
o 250 kDa
o Adherence
o Binding domains (central RGD motif: mimics β1 integrin), Mimics extracellular matrix protein binding to integrin
What are the features of adhesins in Streptococcus and Staphylococcus?
o Bind extracellur matrix proteins
o Recognise ECM proteins: tissue tropism
o Fibronectin-binding proteins with similar organisation and several repeat regions
What is twitching motility? What organism has it?
o Pseudomonas aeruginosa
o Bacterial crawling
o Pili retract (Type IV)
What is LEE?
What is intimin?
o Outer membrane protein
o Afimbrial adhesin
What is TIR?
o Translocated intimin receptor
o Secreted by T3SS, put in host membrane
o Phosphorylated by host cell kinases
o Binds intimin
What are the functions of EspA, EspB and EspD?
• EspA, EspB, EspD (secreted proteins)
o EspA = pilus like surface organelle (hollow tube)
o EspB and EspD in host cell membrane, form pore
How do A/E lesions change cytoskeletal structure?
What is the structure of actin? At which end does polymerisation occur?
o F-actin: polymerised monomers, two twisted linear protofilaments, dynamic
o Polymerisaition at + end (barbed)
o Depolymerisation at – end (pointed)
o Arp2/3 nucleates actin to begin filament