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The Proteobacteria
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The Proteobacteria
• The largest phylogenetically coherent
bacterial group with more than 500 genera
• Remarkable diverse morphologically,
physiologically, and other ways
• Volume 2 of Bergey’s Manual (2nd edition) is
devoted to this group of bacteria
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The Rickettsia
• Genus Rickettsia
• Very small
• All species are parasitic or mutualistic
– grows in vertebrate erythrocytes, macrophages,
vascular endothelial cells
– live in blood sucking arthropods – vectors or
primary hosts
• Produces only a small amount of ATP
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Rickettsia...
• Genome sequence similar to mitochondria
– arose from endosymbiotic association
• free living, aerobic bacterium became
intracellular parasite of proto-eukaryotic cell
that lacked organelles
• gene reduction occurred and loss of free living
ability
• Lack glycolytic pathway - do not use glucose as
energy source
• Take up and use ATP and other materials from host
cell
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Important Pathogens
•
Rickettsia prowazekii and Rickettsia typhi –
typhus fever
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Rickettsia rickettsii – Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever
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Reproduction
– enters host by phagocytosis
– escapes phagosome
– reproduces in cytoplasm
– host cell bursts
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Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
• Caused by Rickettsia rickettsii
• Transmitted by ticks
– transovarian passage – transmission of
bacteria from generation to generation of ticks
through their eggs
– passage by tick feeding or by defecation of
tick and rubbed into skin
• Rickettsias reproduce in endothelial cells and
macrophages
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Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
• Clinical manifestations
– vasculitis and sudden
onset of headache, high
fever, chills, and skin rash
– can destroy blood vessels
in heart, lungs, or kidneys,
leading to death
• Diagnosis
– observation of signs and symptoms, and serological tests
• Treatment, prevention, and control
– antibiotic therapy and symptomatic/supportive therapy
– tick control and avoidance of ticks
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The Caulobacteraceae
• rods or cocci with an appendage
• life cycle
– prostheca (pl., prosthecae) or stalk
• extension of cell, including plasma membrane,
that is narrower than mature cell
– reproduction by budding
• progeny cell is a bud that first appears as a
small protrusion on parent cell and enlarges to
form mature cell
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Genus Caulobacter
• May be polarly flagellated rods or may possess
prostheca and holdfast
– used to attach to solid substrata with what is known
as the strongest biological adhesion molecule
• Strongest biological adhesive known
– much stronger than super glue or dental adhesive
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Genus
Caulobacter
• Usually found in aquatic and terrestrial habitats
– may absorb nutrients released from hosts
– long prosthecae may improve nutrient uptake
• Reproduction
– asymmetric transverse binary fission
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Genus Rhizobium
• Gram-negative,
pleomorphic, motile
rods
• Grow symbiotically as
nitrogen-fixing
bacteroids within root
nodule cells of legumes
– most successful plant
family on earth
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Genus Brucella
• Important human and animal pathogen
– undulant fever – zoonosis
• Caused by Brucella species (B. abortus, B.
melitensis, B. ovis, B. suis, or B. canis)
(Select Agents)
• Human infection
– ingestion of Brucella contaminated food, raw
milk or water
– inhalation of organism
– bacterial entry into body through skin wounds
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Brucellosis (Undulant Fever)
• Presents as non-specific, flu-like symptoms
• In undulant form, symptoms include undulant
fevers, arthritis, and testicular inflammation in
males
• In chronic form, symptoms include chronic
fatigue syndrome, depression, and arthritis
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Genus Neisseria…
• May have capsules and fimbriae
• gram-negative cocci
• aerobic chemoorganotrophs
• oxidase positive and usually catalase positive
• Inhabitants of mucous membranes of
mammals
– some human pathogens
• Neisseria meningitidis – meningitis
• Neisseria gonorrhoeae – gonorrhea
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Meningitis
• Inflammation the brain or spinal cord meninges
• Many causes including bacterial
– bacterial may be diagnosed by Gram stain of
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
– culture of CSF may or may not grow bacteria
• Major bacterial causes include
– Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis
(serotypes), and Haemophilus influenza (serotype b)
– may be endogenous infection (normal biota)
• N. meningitidis (meningococcus) causes
epidemic meningitis
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Gonorrhea
• Caused by Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
– Gram-negative, oxidasepositive diplococcus
– referred to as gonococcus
• Disease of mucous membranes
of the genitourinary tract, eye,
rectum, and throat
• Can also be transmitted from
mother to child during birth,
causing
– ophthalmia neonatorum
(conjunctivitis of the newborn)
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The Burkholderiales
• Well-known genera
– Burkholderia, Bordetella, Sphaerotilus, and
Leptothrix
• Some members have a sheath
– hollow tubelike structure surrounding chain of
cells
– may contain ferric or manganic oxides
– functions
• attachment to surfaces
• obtaining nutrients from slowly running water
• protection against predators
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Burkholderia cepacia
• Degrades >100 organic molecules
– very active in recycling organic material
• Plant pathogen
• Has become a major nosocomial pathogen
– particular problem for cystic fibrosis patients
• Outbreaks in mouthwash and medications,
such as Tylenol
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Genus Bordetella
• Gram-negative coccobacilli
– some have capsules
• Aerobic chemoorganotrophs
– respiratory metabolism
– require organic sulfur and amino acids for
growth
• Mammalian parasites that multiply in
respiratory epithelial cells
– nonmotile, encapsulated species
– whooping cough and kennel cough
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Pertussis
• Whooping cough
– caused by Gram-neg Bordetella pertussis
– highly contagious disease that primarily affects
children
• Transmission by droplet inhalation
• Toxins:
– pertussis toxin most important toxin
• stops protein synthesis
– tracheal cytotoxin, dermonecrotric toxin
• destroy epithelial tissue
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Pertussis
• Clinical manifestations
– 7- to 14-day incubation
– initial coldlike symptoms /inflamed mucous membranes
– followed by prolonged coughing sieges with inspiratory
whoop
– permanent or long-lasting immunity develops
• Treatment, prevention, and control
– bacterial culture, fluorescent antibody staining, and
serological tests
– antibiotic therapy
– immunization with DPT for younger or Tdap acellular
vaccines for older children and adults
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Genus Thiobacillus
• Found in soil and
aquatic habitats
– production of sulfuric
acid can cause
corrosion of concrete
and metal structures
– may increase soil
fertility by releasing
sulfate
– used in leaching
metals from low
grade metal ores
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Genus Thiomargarita
• Among largest bacteria
• Over 100 microns in
diameter and
hundreds of
centimeters long
• Beggiatoa, Thioploca,
Thiomargarita grow in
bundles, appear
hollow
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The Legionellaceae
• Family Legionellacaea
– genus Legionella
• Family Coxiellaceae
– genera Coxiella and Rickettsiella
• All are intracellular pathogens
– dimorphic lifestyle (two forms)
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Genus Legionella
• L. pneumophilia intensely studied
– causative agent Legionnaire’s disease
– transmission through aerosols
– intracellular pathogen of protozoa
• invade cooling towers, air conditioning, hot tubs
– Gram-negative rods that replicates by binary
fission
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Legionnaires’ Disease
and Pontiac Fever
• Caused by Legionella pneumophila
– fastidious, Gram-negative rod
– harbored by free-living amoebae and ciliated protozoa
• Spread by airborne transmission from environmental
reservoir to human host
– soil, aquatic ecosystems, air-conditioning systems,
and shower stalls
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Legionnaires’ Disease (Legionellosis)
• Reproduction of bacterium in alveolar macrophages
causes localized tissue destruction
– produce cytotoxic exoprotease
• Clinical manifestations
– fever, cough, headache, neuralgia, and
bronchopneumonia
– severe in immunocompromised
• Treatment, prevention, and control
– isolation of bacteria and immunodiagnostics
– symptomatic/supportive therapy and antibiotic therapy
– eliminate nosocomial spread
– Identification/elimination of environmental source
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Genus Coxiella
• Host range
– birds, insects, fish, rodents, sheep, goats, humans
• Transmitted through aerosol
• Life cycle similar to L. pneumophilia
– small cell variant (SCV) enters cell by
phagocytosis
– phagosome low pH triggers SCV to become
metabolically active
– SCV differentiates into large cell variant (LCV)
– replicates by binary fission, are infectious
– long-term survival outside the host
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Q Fever (Select Agent)
• Caused by Coxiella burnetii
– intracellular Gram-negative
bacterium
– proliferates in lungs
– survives outside host by
forming endospore-like body
• Transmitted by
– ticks between animals
– contaminated dust to humans
– occupational hazard among slaughterhouse
workers, farmers, and veterinarians
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa
• Widely found in the environments
• Common cause of “Swimmer’s ear,” folliculitis and
other rashes, urinary tract infections
– Can be picked up by poorly maintained swimming pools and spas
• One of the most common causes of nosocomial
infections
– 4th most common 2013 (most common in hosp stays over 1 week)
– 5% entering hosp fecal carriers, after 72 hrs in hosp 20% carriers
• “Extremely high fatality rate” in pneumonia, sepsis,
burn infections and meningitis
• Frequently antibiotic resistant
• Produce siderophores that scavenge and bind to iron
(pyoverdine – yellow green, pycocyanin – blue)
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Practical Importance of
Pseudomonads
• Degrade wide variety of organic molecules
– mineralization - microbial breakdown of
organic materials to inorganic substrates
– use in bioremediation
– found in environments such as disinfectants,
bottled mineral water, adhesives in caps, soap
residues
• Some are major animal and plant pathogens
• Some cause spoilage of refrigerated food
– can grow at 4°C
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Cholera
• Caused by Vibrio
cholerae, a commashaped, Gram-negative
bacterium
• Acquired by ingesting food
or water contaminated by
fecal matter from patients
or carriers
• Shellfish are natural
reservoirs
• Organisms adhere to
intestinal mucosa of small
intestine and secrete the
toxin choleragen
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Cholera
• Presence of toxin results in massive loss of
water and electrolytes
– production of “rice-water stools”
• Diagnosis
– culture from feces with subsequent
identification by agglutination reactions
• Treatment, control, and prevention
– oral rehydration
– antibiotic therapy
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V. vulnificus and V. parahaemolyticus
• Both are infections that increase during the summer
months because the organism thrives in warmer
ocean waters of Gulf coast, however the incidence
has spread to colder waters of the north, possible
effect of global warming
• Raw oysters are the biggest risk, also wounds
infected from ocean water
• V. parhaemolyticus had a 43% increase in infection
reported in 2012 by CDC, they estimate 142 cases
not reported for every reported case
• In 2010 CDC reported Vibrio case up 115%
• High fatality rate in compromised people, including
diabetics
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V. fischeri, V. harveyi
• Free-living
• Capable of bioluminescence
– emission of light catalyzed by luciferase
– symbiotic relationship with fish organs
– also observed in at least two species of
Photobacterium
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Order Enterobacteriales
• One family, Enterobacteriaceae; 44 genera
– enteric bacteria or enterobacteria
• Facultative anaerobes
• Very common, widespread, and important
• Chemoorganotrophs degrade sugars
– majority are mixed acid fermenters
– others are butanediol fermenters
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Escherichia coli
• Probably best studied bacterium
• Inhabitant of intestinal tracts of many animals
• Used as indicator organisms for testing water
for fecal contamination
• Some strains are pathogenic
– gastroenteritis
– urinary tract infections
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Important Pathogenic
Enteric Bacteria
• Salmonella – typhoid fever and gastroenteritis
• Shigella – bacillary dysentery
• Klebsiella – pneumonia
• Yersinia pestis – plague
• Yersinia enterocolitica – G.I. illness
• Erwinia – blights, wilts, etc., of crop plants
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Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
• Traveler’s diarrhea
– caused by certain viruses, bacteria, or protozoa normally
absent from traveler’s environment
– E. coli is one of major causative agents
• E. coli 0157:H7 and other STECs (Shigatoxin producing E.coli)
–
cause more severe infections associated with fecal
contamination
• Part of normal flora of intestines and
normally not pathogenic
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Pathogenic E. coli Strains
• Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
– produces one or both enterotoxins
responsible for diarrhea
– distinguished by their heat stability
• Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
– multiplies within intestinal epithelial
cells
– may produce a cytotoxin and an
enterotoxin
• Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
– causes effacing lesions
• caused by destruction of brush
border microvilli on intestinal
epithelial cells
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Pathogenic E. coli Strains
• Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
– produces effacing lesions and hemorrhagic colitis
– releases shiga-like toxins
• Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
– forms clumps adhering to epithelial cells
• “stacked brick” appearance
– toxins have not been identified
• Diffusely adhering E. coli (DAEC)
– adheres in a uniform pattern to epithelial cells
– particular problem in immunologically naïve or
malnourished children
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Salmonellosis
• Caused by >2,000 Salmonella serovars,
Gram-negative non-spore forming rods
• Transmitted to humans by contaminated
foods such as beef products, poultry, egg
products, and water
• Disease results from food-borne infection
– bacteria in intestinal mucosa produce
enterotoxin and cytotoxin
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Salmonellosis
• Symptoms include abdominal, pain, cramps,
diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and fever
• Diagnosis
– isolation of organism from food or patients’
stools
• Treatment, control, and prevention
– fluid and electrolyte replacement
– good food handling practices, proper
refrigeration, adequate cooking
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Typhoid Fever
• Caused by Salmonella enterica subspecies
enterica serovar Typhi, a Gram-negative rod
• Acquired by ingestion of food or water
contaminated by feces in infected humans or
person-to-person contact
• Paratyphoid fever
– milder form of disease
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Typhoid Fever
• Bacteria spread from small intestine to
lymphoid tissue, blood, liver, and gallbladder
• Symptoms include fever, headache,
abdominal pain, anorexia, and malaise
• In carriers (e.g., Typhoid Mary) bacteria grow
in gallbladder and reach intestine through bile
duct
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Typhoid Fever
• Diagnosis
– demonstration of typhoid bacilli in blood, urine,
or stools
– serology (Widal test)
• Treatment, prevention, and control
– antibiotic therapy
– vaccine for high risk individuals
– purification of drinking water, prevention of
food handling by carriers, and isolation of
patients
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Shigellosis
• Bacillary dysentery
– caused by four species of genus Shigella
– gram-negative, non-spore forming rods
– intracellular parasites, multiply in colonic
epithelium
– cause inflammatory reaction in mucosa
– humans are the only host
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Virulence in Shigellosis
• Endotoxin
• Exotoxins play role in disease progression
– shiga toxin
– targets glomerular epithelium and may lead to
kidney failure
• Type III secretion system delivers virulence
factors into epithelial cells
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Shigellosis
• Watery stools often contain blood, mucus,
and pus
• Diagnosis
– biochemical characteristics
– serology
• Treatment, prevention, and control
– antibiotic therapy
– prevention by use of good personal hygiene
and a clean water supply
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Plague
• Yersinia pestis – Gram-negative
• Transmission rodent to human
– bite of infected flea, direct contact with infected
animal or product, inhalation contaminated
airborne droplets
• In body, multiply in blood and lymph
– survive and proliferate
in phagocytic cells
– enlarged lymph nodes
(buboes)
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Plague
• Virulence factor
– proliferates in phagocytes,
not killed
– type III secretion systems
deliver yersinal outer
membrane proteins
(YOPS) into cells which
shut down defense
mechanisms
• Y. pestis is Select agent
– potential bioterrorism
threat
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Plague
• Clinical manifestations
– subcutaneous hemorrhages, fever, and
buboes (hence name bubonic plague)
– high mortality if untreated
– pneumonic plague arises from:
• primary exposure to infectious respiratory
droplets of infected persons
or cats
• secondary to hematogenous spread in a patient
with bubonic plague
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Plague
• Diagnosis made in reference labs which use
direct microscopic examination, culture and
serological tests, and PCR
• Treatment, prevention, and control
– antibiotic therapy
– ectoparasite and rodent control, isolation of
human patients, prophylaxis of exposed
persons, immunization of persons at high risk
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Order Bdellovibrionales
• One family, Bdellovibrionaceae; four genera
– best studied is Bdellovibrio
• aerobic, Gram-negative, motile curved rods
• predatory bacteria life cycle that resembles
bacteriophages, also studied in treatment of infections
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Order Myxococcales
• Contains five families distinguished based on
shape of vegetative cells, myxospores, and
sporangia, develop fruiting bodies
• Gram-negative, rod-shaped gliding bacteria
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• Distinctive life
cycle resembling
that of cellular
slime molds
Myxobacteria
• In presence of
food form a swarm
and glide on solid
surfaces using
slime
• Form a fruiting
body when
nutrients
exhausted
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Myxospores
• Frequently enclosed
in walled structures
called sporangioles
(sporangia)
• Dormant and
desiccation-resistant
– may survive up to 10
years
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Campylobacter jejuni formerly C. fetus
•
reproductive disease, abortions in cattle and sheep
• carried by birds
– studies show 20-100% of all retail chicken
contaminated
– raw milk is significant source of outbreaks
• septicemia and enteritis in humans
– septicemia – pathogens or their toxins in blood
– enteritis – inflammation of intestinal tract
• one of most common food-borne illness in U.S.
– causes more than Shigella and Salmonella
combined, CDC reports 14% increase in 2012
– low infective dose
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Genus Helicobacter
• At least 23 species isolated from stomachs
and upper intestines of mammals
• e.g., Helicobacter pylori
– causes gastritis and peptic ulcer disease
– motility important for colonization
– does not grow below pH 4.5
• urease converts urea to ammonia and CO2
– urea hydrolysis appears to be associated with
virulence
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