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Micrb 265 lec 12

What does the gut microbiome instruct?

Both the innate and adaptive immune response

Why is bacterial diversity important in the gut?

It helps establish a tolerogenic immune response

What does tolerogenic mean in this context?

It promotes tolerance to beneficial microbes and limits unnecessary inflammation

What cells help the immune system discriminate between friend and foe in the gut?

Tolerogenic dendritic cells and T regulatory cells

What is the key contrast between mutualists and pathogens in the gut?

Mutualists promote anti-inflammatory responses while pathogens promote pro-inflammatory responses

What cytokine was emphasized as part of the anti-inflammatory response promoted by mutualists?

IL-10

What do mutualists encourage dendritic cells to do?

Give weak signals that promote anti-inflammatory T cell responses

What type of T cells are promoted by mutualists?

T regulatory cells

What kind of environment do pathogens promote?

A pro-inflammatory environment

What Bacteroides fragilis product was specifically emphasized?

Polysaccharide A

What is polysaccharide A?

A capsular polysaccharide from Bacteroides fragilis

How does polysaccharide A promote a healthy colon?

It is taken up by dendritic cells, which drive T cells to become Treg cells and promote anti-inflammatory cytokines

What diseases were linked to microbial dysregulation?

Inflammatory bowel disease, asthma, and allergies

What is the gut-brain axis?

Communication between the gut microbiome and the brain

What are two major routes of gut-brain communication mentioned in lecture?

The vagus nerve and circulation

What kinds of conditions were associated with gut microbiota changes affecting the CNS?

Autism, schizophrenia, and mood disorders

What effect did repeated stress have on the gut microbiome in the lecture example?

It changed the Bacteroides population

Why do changes in Bacteroides matter?

They affect cytokine release by immune and epithelial cells in the gut

What happened in germ-free mice colonized with Lactobacillus rhamnosus?

They completed stressful tasks more easily and had lower anxiety

What possible brain-related change was seen in the Lactobacillus-colonized mice?

Altered neurotransmitter receptors

What important caution did the professor emphasize about gut-brain axis research?

It is an active research area and mechanisms are not fully understood

What amino acid was emphasized in microbiome-brain signaling?

Tryptophan

What does Clostridium sporogenes make from tryptophan?

IPA

What does IPA stand for?

Indolepropionic acid

What are the key effects of IPA?

It supports gut homeostasis, reduces pro-inflammatory signaling, increases tight junction proteins, and acts as a neuroprotectant

What do lactobacilli make from tryptophan?

I3A

What is the important immune effect of I3A?

It increases IL-22 production

What can tryptophanase-expressing bacteria make from tryptophan?

Indole

Why is indole metabolism important systemically?

It can be linked to harmful effects such as vascular disease and chronic kidney disease

What is infection?

The growth of microorganisms on a host

What is disease in pathogenesis?

The tissue damage resulting from infection

What is the first step in bacterial pathogenesis?

Adherence

Is invasion always required for disease?

No

After adherence, what usually comes next in pathogenesis?

Invasion through the epithelium

What happens during multiplication in pathogenesis?

Bacteria grow and produce virulence factors and toxins

What mediates bacterial attachment?

Receptor-ligand interactions

What bacterial structures can mediate attachment?

Capsules, fimbriae, pili, and flagella

What pathogen was used as an example of highly specific mucosal attachment?

Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Where does Neisseria gonorrhoeae adhere?

Genitourinary tract, eye, rectum, and throat

Why does Neisseria gonorrhoeae show tissue specificity?

Its Opa protein binds host proteins found only in those tissues

What host receptor on sperm is bound by gonococcal LOS?

ASGPR

What are the two main invasion mechanisms?

Zipper and trigger

What happens in the zipper mechanism?

Adhesin binding causes host cytoskeleton changes that engulf the bacterium

What pathogen was used as the zipper mechanism example?

Listeria

What happens in the trigger mechanism?

A type III secretion system injects effectors that cause membrane ruffling and cytoskeletal rearrangement

What pathogen was used as the trigger mechanism example?

Salmonella

What can happen after bacteria are internalized?

They can stay inside or exit out the other side

What enzyme was used as an example of a tissue-destroying virulence factor?

Hyaluronidase

How does hyaluronidase help bacteria invade?

It degrades hyaluronic acid between cells, helping bacteria move into deeper tissues

What are exotoxins?

Secreted bacterial proteins that interfere with host cell processes and cause tissue damage

What are the three main exotoxin types?

AB toxins, cytolytic toxins, and superantigen toxins

What is an enterotoxin?

An exotoxin whose site of action is the small intestine

How do AB toxins work in general?

The B subunit binds and helps the A subunit enter the cell, and the A subunit has enzymatic activity

What does the B subunit of an AB toxin do?

Binds the host cell and helps transport the A subunit across the membrane

What does the A subunit of an AB toxin do?

Has enzymatic activity inside the host cell

What was the key effect of the shiga-like toxin example?

It cleaves ribosomal RNA, inhibits protein synthesis, and causes vascular damage leading to hemorrhage

What kind of toxin is botulinum toxin?

An AB toxin

What does botulinum toxin block?

Release of acetylcholine-containing vesicles

What paralysis does botulinum toxin cause?

Flaccid paralysis

Why does blocking acetylcholine release cause flaccid paralysis?

The muscle cannot receive the signal to contract

What is special about botulinum toxin potency?

It is the most potent biological toxin known

What are cytolytic toxins?

Toxins that lyse cells, usually by disrupting membranes

Why are cytolytic toxins also called hemolysins?

They were first discovered because they lyse red blood cells

How do cytolytic toxins damage cells?

They form pores in membranes, disrupting osmotic balance and causing lysis

What bacteria were emphasized as major producers of superantigen toxins?

Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes

How do superantigens differ from normal antigen responses?

They non-specifically activate huge numbers of T cells

How many T cells are normally activated by a specific antigen?

Up to about 0.001%

How many T cells can superantigens activate?

Up to about 20%

What is the consequence of superantigen activity?

Massive cytokine release and widespread inflammation

What can superantigen toxins lead to clinically?

Hypotension, intestinal disruption, organ failure, and death

What syndrome is associated with superantigen toxins?

Toxic shock syndrome

What are the major epithelial defenses emphasized in mammalian immunity?

Physical barrier, high salt, low pH, mucus, lysozyme, and normal microbiota

How does mucus help defend against bacteria?

It traps microbes and can be shed to remove them

What does lysozyme do?

Cleaves peptidoglycan in bacterial cell walls

What are CAMPs?

Cationic antimicrobial peptides

How do CAMPs work?

They poke holes in bacterial membranes

What is the main protective role of IgA on mucosal surfaces?

It binds pathogens and prevents their adhesion to the epithelial layer

What else can IgA do besides block binding?

Cross-link pathogens so they can be cleared

What are phagocytes?

Immune cells that engulf and degrade microbes

What do phagocytes recognize on pathogens?

PAMPs

What does PAMP stand for?

Pathogen-associated molecular pattern

What does PRR stand for?

Pattern recognition receptor

What is TLR4?

A pattern recognition receptor that recognizes LPS

What happens when TLR4 recognizes LPS?

It dimerizes and triggers inflammatory gene expression

Why is LPS recognition helpful to the host?

It triggers inflammation against Gram-negative pathogens

How can bacterial capsules help pathogens evade immunity?

They shield surface molecules from PRRs

How can pathogens evade TLR4 recognition of LPS?

By remodeling LPS, such as changing acyl chains or charges

What effect can missing acyl chains on LPS have?

Poorer recognition by TLR4-MD2

What effect can added phosphoethanolamine on LPS have?

It changes charge and interferes with TLR4 recognition

What was the key activity takeaway about ETEC compared with EIEC?

ETEC makes exotoxins but EIEC does not

What was the key activity takeaway about Staphylococcus aureus immune evasion?

It can use molecules that help hide from pathogen recognition

What was the key activity takeaway about Mycobacterium tuberculosis compared with E. coli?

It can live inside macrophages

What was the Week 12 probiotic example involving Bacillus and Staphylococcus aureus?

Bacillus makes fengycin, which blocks AIP binding and prevents quorum sensing

What is AIP in Staphylococcus aureus?

Auto-inducing peptide used for quorum sensing

Why is blocking AIP signaling helpful?

It prevents activation of virulence genes

What is the simplest memory chain for S. aureus quorum sensing inhibition?

Bacillus makes fengycin, fengycin blocks AIP receptor signaling, quorum sensing fails, virulence drops

Quiz
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