when do endospores form?
when nutrients are depleted or conditions are unfavorable for growth
- can last in soil for hundreds of years
Bacillus anthracis capsule
T or F. Bacillus anthracis disease is more common in wild and domesticated animals, than in humans
T
Three types of anthrax
Toxins of anthrax
- lethal toxin
edema toxin
- A = adenylate cyclase - calmodulin …
lethal toxin
- A = zinc-dependent protease that cleaves MAP-kinase = cytokine release = shock for macrophages
T or F. B. anthracis is resistant to many broad-spectrum antibiotics, including penicillin
F! susceptible
= CDC = ciproflaxin or doxycycline IV until antibiotic sensitivity tests are done
Process of forming an endospore
coonies on BAP look like medusa heads
B. anthracis
- also edges lift with loop like beaten egg white
chest radiograph og someone with inhalation anthrax
shows mediastinal thickening
- lymph nodes swollen in mediastinum = edema
second most common cause of anthrax
systemic anthrax
- lethal if successful spread from lungs to bloodstream
Exposure to anthrax
high density of spores inhaled from infected animal fur, hide, or wool
confirmed case of anthrax
compatible clinical illness plus positive culture or 2 other tests (PCR, immunohistochemistry, serology)
suspected case of anthrax
compatible illness plus one non-culture test OR epidemiological link
Main component of anthrax vaccine
B = protective antigen
Protective antigens of B. anthracis assembly
assemble into heptameric ‘prepores’ when bound to their ligands on the cell surface
Anthrax toxin entry into cells
B. anthracis virulence plasmids
pXO1 and pXO2
Bacillus cereus
T or F. There are three different types of toxins implicated in emetic disease of B. cereus
F! for diarrheal = Hbl, Nhe, CytK
toxins are preformed in food
emetic toxins
Foodborne illness due to B. ereus w rice as th vehicle is most likely associated with
diarrheal-type syndrome
Certhrax