What are bacteria?
Organisms composed of simple, naked DNA chromosomes (sometimes two) without a nuclear membrane (prokaryote)
How big are bacteria?
1-5 um
What are examples of bacteria?
E. Coli, TB, syphilis, typhoid
What are viruses?
How big are viruses?
20-300 nm
What are examples of viruses?
Common cold, polio, rabies, hepatitis
What are fungi?
Digest food outside body by releasing enzymes
What are examples of fungi?
Ringworm, athlete’s foot, histoplasmosis, and aspergillus
What are parasites?
Organisms taking sustenance from a host
What are examples of parasites?
Toxoplasmosis, trichinellosis
What is rickettsia?
A parasite living within the cells of ticks and mites
What are examples of rickettsia diseases?
Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Q fever, murine typhus, sylvatic typhus
Typhus vs typhoid
Typhoid Mary (bacteria) spread via fecal oral route and typhus is a parasite (rickettsia)
What are prions?
Proteins without a nucleus that are infectious
What are prion disease examples?
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow), creutzfeldt-jacob disease
What are the most common insect vectors?
Mosquitos and ticks
What is biological risk?
The possibility of developing illness from exposure to a single biohazard agent (depending on susceptibility)
Chain of infection
RETER
Reservoir
Escape from reservoir
Transmission
Entry into new host
Reinfection
BSL 1 lab requirements
Controlled access
Hand washing sink
Sharp hazards warning policy
Personal protective equipment
Laboratory bench
Autoclave
BSL 1 PPE
lab coats, gloves, eye protection) are worn as needed.
BSL 2 lab requirements
Controlled access
Hand washing sink
Sharp hazards warning policy
Physical containment device (lab hood)
Personal protective equipment
Laboratory bench
Autoclave
What is a biosafety level 1 lab
BSL 2
BSL 2 lab agent examples