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C16-Aerobic Gram Bacilli

This document summarizes several aerobic gram-positive bacilli including Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the causative agent of diphtheria. C. diphtheriae produces diphtheria toxin which is responsible for cytotoxicity. The toxin is composed of fragment A, which causes cytotoxicity, and fragment B, which binds to receptors on host cells and mediates entry of fragment A. Diphtheria presents as respiratory or cutaneous infections transmitted by droplets or direct contact. Laboratory diagnosis involves culture identification of C. diphtheriae based on morphology and biochemical tests. Other Corynebacterium species discussed include C. amycolatum, C. jeikeium, C
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views9 pages

C16-Aerobic Gram Bacilli

This document summarizes several aerobic gram-positive bacilli including Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the causative agent of diphtheria. C. diphtheriae produces diphtheria toxin which is responsible for cytotoxicity. The toxin is composed of fragment A, which causes cytotoxicity, and fragment B, which binds to receptors on host cells and mediates entry of fragment A. Diphtheria presents as respiratory or cutaneous infections transmitted by droplets or direct contact. Laboratory diagnosis involves culture identification of C. diphtheriae based on morphology and biochemical tests. Other Corynebacterium species discussed include C. amycolatum, C. jeikeium, C
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Chapter 16 : Aerobic Gram + Bacilli - can produce the toxin when infected with tox-carrying

β-phage
Diphtheria Toxin
- secreted by the bacterial cell and is nontoxic until exposed to
trypsin
● A fragment
- responsible for the cytotoxicity
● B fragment
- binds to receptors on the eukaryootic cells
- mediates th entry of fragment A into the cytoplasm
Toxin production:
● alkaline pH (7.8-8.0)
● Oxygen
● iron concentration
Clinical Infections:
● Respiratory diphtheria
Non–Spore-Forming, Nonbranching Catalase-Positive Bacilli
- Transmission: droplet, hand-to-mouth
- Incubation: 2-5 days
➢ CORYNEBACTERIUM
- Most common site: tonsil or pharynx
● lipophilic
● Cutaneous diphtheria
- often considered fastidious Ø grow slowly on standard
culture media
● nonlipophilic
Gram stain​:
- slightly curved, gram + rods with unparallel sides and
slightly wider ends
- “club shape” or coryneform

❖ C. diphtheriae
Virulence Factors​:
Diphtheria Toxin ​Lab Diagnosis
- major virulence factor - Pleomorphic
- produced by C. diphtheriae strains infected with - gram + bacilli
lysogenic β-phage - appears in palisades or forming “V”/ “L”angles
❖ C. ulcerans - stains irregularly with methylene blue (beaded appearance)
❖ C. pseudotuberculosis - Babes-Ernst granules
- metachromatic areas
- accumulation of polymerized polyphosphates Lab Diagnosis: Toxi- genecity Test
Lab Diagnosis: Culture Characteristics ELEK TEST
- facultative anaerobe - immunodiffusion test for in vitro diphtheria toxin detection
- Loeffler medium - organisms (ctrl and unknowns) are streaked (single straight
- well demonstrated morphology line parallel to each other, 100 mm apart) on medium of low
- SBA iron content
- small zone of B-hemolysis - incubated at 35°C
Cystine-tellurite blood agar (CTBA) - examined after 18,24, and 48 hours
- Tinsdale medium modification
- selective and differential
- potassium tellurite
- inhibits non-coryneform bacteria
- brown halo
● C. diphtheriae
● C. ulcerans
● C. pseudotuberculosis
Lab Diagnosis: ID
- Catalase-positive
● C. amycolatum
- nonmotile
- most frequently recovered sp. from human clinical
● C. diphtheriae
material
- lack of urease production
- associated with prosthetic joint infection
- glucose and maltose fermenter
- reported to cause bloodstream infection and
- acid producing
endocarditis, typically in immunocompromised patients
- reduces nitrate to nitrite
or in patients in a health care setting
- Nonlipophilic
- Colonies : flat, dry. matte/waxy appearance

● C. jeikeium
- most common cause of corynebacterium- associated
prosthetic valve endocarditis in adults
- causes septicemia, meningitis,
- prosthetic joint infections, and skin complications such
as rash and subcutaneous nodules.
- Lipophilic
- strict aerobe
- Nonhemolytic
- urease production - negative - urease production - positive
- nitrate reduction - negative
- vancomycin - drug of choice ● C. urealyticum
- most commonly associated with UTIs
● C. pseudodiphtheriticum - Lipophilic
- most frequently associated with respiratory tract - strict aerobe
infections in immunocompromised individuals or - nitrate - negative
patients with other underlying diseases - catalase - positive
- reported to cause endocarditis, urinary tract infections - urease - positive (w/n minutes on Christensen urea
(UTIs), and cutaneous wound infections slant)
- does not show the characteristic pleomorphic - Presumptive ID: pinpoint, nonhemolytic, white colonies
morphology
- urease production - positive ➢ ROTHIA
- nitrate reduction - positive ● R. mucilagonisa
- inked to bacteremia, endocarditis, pneumonia, and
● C. pseudotuberculosis other infections
- causes a granulomatous lymphadenitis ● R. dentocariosa
- produces a dermonecrotic toxin - found in saliva and supragigival plaque
- urease production - positive - isolated from patients with endocarditis
- yellowish-white colonies - SBA
Listeria monocytogenes
● C. striatum Virulence factors​:
- most commonly associated with device-related - hemolysin (listeriolysin O)
infection and has been reported in cases of - damages phagosome membrane
endocarditis, septic arthritis, meningitis, and - Catalase
pneumonia - superoxide dismutase
- nonlipophilic - phospholipase C
- pleomorphic - surface protein (p60)
- Colonies (after 24 hrs) : small, shiny, convex - induces phagocytosis
Clinical Infection​:
● C. ulcerans - infection commonly seen during third trimester on pregnant
- veterinary pathogen women
- human infxns acquired thru contact or by ingestion of - spontaneuos abortion and stillborn neonates
unpasteurized dairy products - food contamination (cheese, coleslaw, and chicken)
- grows well on Loeffler agar and SBA (narrow zone of Lab Diagnosis:
b-hemolysis) - gram positive coccobacillus→ coccoidal (subculture)
- nitrate reduction - negative - older cultures- gram variable
- singly, short chains, pallisades

Non–Spore-Forming, Nonbranching Catalase-Negative Bacilli


➢ Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
- Gram-positive
- catalase negative
- Pleomorphic
Cold Enrichment - tendency to form lng
- broth inoculation filaments
- incubation at 4°C for several weeks - decolorizes easily (gram
- subcultures - weekly intervals variable)
Lab Diagnosis: ID - workers handling fish and
- Catalase-positive animal products are at risk
- motile (RT) Clinical infection:
- tumbling motility in wet mount prep ● Erysipeloid
- “umbrella” pattern - most common infection (skin) in humans
- B-hemolytic - esembles streptococcal
- hydrolyzes esculin erysipelas
- hydrolysis hippurate ● Septicemia
● cutaneous infection
- Rare
- exacerbation of the
erysipeloid lesion
- lasts longer
Culture:
CAMP test - nutrient broth w/ 1% glucose
- Rhodococcus equi - incubated at 5% CO2 @ 35°C
- “block” type hemolysis SBA colonies (24 hrs):
- distinguishes L. monocytogenes from other Listeria spp. - nonhemolytic
- pinpoint
Gardnerella vaginalis
➢ Arcanobacterium - gram positive (cell wall) rod/coccobacillus
● A. haemolyticum - stains gram neg or gram-variable
- recovered from patients with pharyngitis (10-20 y.o) - primarily known for bacterial vaginosis (BV) in humans
- associated with soft tissue infections, sepsis, - results fom a reduction in the Lactobacillus population
endocarditis, and other infections in the vagina→ increase in pH
● A. pyogenes - UTIs in men and women
- best known for causing infections in cattle Lab Diagnosis:
- causes sepsis and wound infections - can be visualized in wet mounts of vaginal fluid
● A. bernardiae - “clue cells”
- associated with bacteremia, wound infections, UTIs - large squamous epith cells w/ gram + and
and septic arthritis gram-variable bacilli on edges

A. haemolyticum
- smal colonies with narrow zone of b- hemolysis (24-48 hrs)
- black opaque dot
- pitting of the agar beneath the colony

Reverse CAMP test (inhibition reaction)


- β-lysin–producing S. aureus is inhibited by a phospholipase D
- S. agalactiae (positive)
Virulence Factor:
- superoxide disutase & catalase
- Nocobactin
- iron-chelating compound
Clinical Infection:
● Pulmonary
- inhalation of organism present in dust or soil
- N. cyriacigeorgica and N. farcinica
- progresses more rapidly than TB
- no sulfur granules
● Cutaneous
- N. brasiliensis
- actinomycotic mycetomas lesion
- with sulfur granules

Culture:
- grows best at 5%-7% CO2 (35-37°C)
- human blood bilayer Tween (HBT) agar - medium of choice
● SBA colonies:
- Pinpoint
- nonhemolytic
Culture:
● HBT agar:
- grows on buffered charcoal-yest extract (BCYE) agar
- b-hemolytic
- nonselective
- small, gray, opaque
Colonies:
- chalky, matte, velvety/powdery
Non–Spore-Forming, Branching
- dry, crumbly( similar to breadcrumbs)
Aerobic Actinomycetes
➢ Nocardia
- beaded gram-positive
- weakly acid-fast
- referred to as
modified acid-fast
positive
- weak acid
decolorizer
- increases the conc of cAMP in host cells
● lethal factor (LF)
- Protease
- kills host cells
❏ PA + EF = edema
❏ PA + LF = death

Clinical infection:
● anthrax
○ cutaneous
○ inhalation/pulmonary
○ gastrointestinal Ø injectional
- recent form
- direct injection during the administration of
drugs of abuse Clinical Infection:
Clinical Infection: Cutaneous Anthrax
- wound contamination
➢ Tropheryma whipplei - small pimple for papule→ ring of
- agent of Whipple's dss vesicles→ erythematous ring
- more common in middle-aged men - Eschar
- identified from duodenal biopsy in 1991 - small dark area at the center of
thering
Spore-Forming, Nonbranching Catalase Positive Bacilli - sometimes referred to as
➢ Bacillus malignant pustule
- gram + or gram-variable - Painless
- divided into two groups: - no pus
● B. cereus ● Inhalation anthrax
● B. mycoides - also known as woolsorter's dss
- most relevant group ● Gastrointestinal anthrax
- ingestion of spores
B. cereus grp: B. anthracis - bloody diarrhea
- glutamic acid capsule - abdominal pain, nausea, anorexia, vomiting
- exotoxin ● Injectional anthrax
● protective antigen (PA) - soft tissue infection assoc with “skin popping”
- binding molecule for EF & LF
● edema factor (EF)
- adenyl cyclase
Lab Diagnosis: Mx - incubate for 3-6 hrs at 37°C
- large, square-ended
- gram-pos (young cultures)
- gram-variable (old or under B. cereus grp: B. cereus
nutritional stress) - common cause of food poisoning
- Singly ● diarrheal
- in chains - associated with ingestion of meat/poultry, veggies and
- bamboo rods pasta
appearance (unstained - incubation period: 8-16 hrs
central spore) ● Emetic
- capsule production - culture in - associated with ingestion of fried rice
CO2 incubator ● eye infection
Culture: - most common type of nonGI infxn
- nonhemolytic, large, gray, flat with
irregular margin
- “medusa head”
- beaten egg white characteristic
CDC lvl A testing protocol recommendation:
- PEA agar for stools in addition to
SBA and other commonly used
media.

“String of pearls” phenomenon


- noculate the isolate onto penicillin-containing (0.05 to 0.5
U/mL) agar

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