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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Our bodies are gardens of microorganisms
- Important Gram-positive bacterial species
- Anatomy and normal flora (1)
- Anatomy and normal flora (2)
- Anatomy and normal flora (3)
- Factors that influence the microbiota
- Vaginal flora responds to hormone changes
- What you eat influences mouth microbial flora
- Food consumption influence intestinal microbiota
- Bifidobacterium defends against Gram- pathogens
- Antibiotic therapy induces disease
- Antibiotic therapy knocks out competitors
- Community acquired disease is on the rise
- Intestine microbiota induced biochemical changes
- Antibiotic therapy changes the bacteria population
- Bacterial interference
- Fecal transplants cure C. difficile infections
- What you first contact seeds mucosal surfaces
- Staphylococcus aureus on the skin - friend or foe
- Controlling staph. abscesses using 502A strain
- Microbiota and the newborn
- Neonatal sepsis and meningitis
- Fetus/new born inoculated in utero during birth
- S. agalactiae
- Yin and Yang of infectious disease
- Gram positive acquire genes to become pathogens
- S. pneumoniae
- S. pneumoniae – a candy coated bacterium
- Penicillin binding proteins
- Who evolved from who: commensal and pathogen
- Enterococci are part of the intestinal microbiota
- S. pyogenes
- S. pyogenes – the bacterium
- S. pyogenes expresses a complex array of factors
- Mutations in the two component regulator CovR/S
- CovR/S mutations turn on virulence genes
- Summary
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Important Gram-positive bacterial species
- How the human environment influence the Gram + microbiome
- Bifidobacterium defends against Gram-negative pathogens
- Antibiotic therapy induces disease
- Intestine microbiota induced biochemical changes
- Fecal transplants cure C. difficile infections
- The genetic plasticity of the Gram-positive with regard to disease potential
- Gram-positive acquire genes to become pathogens
Talk Citation
Cleary, P.P. (2017, January 31). Gram+ bacterial microbiota - Yin & Yang of infectious disease [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 23, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/UTUQ8525.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. P. Patrick Cleary, Lecturer, shared royalty payments from sales of lecture series.
Gram+ bacterial microbiota - Yin & Yang of infectious disease
A selection of talks on Microbiology
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Welcome to another lecture
on this series on the human microbiome.
I'm Pat Cleary.
I'm a Professor of Microbiology
at the University of Minnesota.
I've spent many years
working on the pathogenesis
of group A Streptococcus.
You'll notice in my title
that I have a subtitle "Yin & Yang
of Infectious Disease".
This is a special interest of mine
because there are many bacteria
which are members of the microflora,
cause no problems at the time,
but have the potential
to also cause very serious infections
and are considered primary pathogens.
Those same pathogens can also
revert back to being normal flora.
0:44
As I'm sure you've learned already
from some of the other lectures,
our bodies are gardens
of microorganisms.
Some see the sun,
they're on our skin.
Some line the dark passages,
such as our intestines.
While others are just
transient visitors.
1:00
During this presentation,
I'll touch on several different genera
of bacteria
that can be either normal flora
or primary pathogens.
I'll spend a considerable time
on Streptococcus,
Streptococcus pyogenes,
agalactiae, and pneumoniae.
I'll touch on Staph aureus, and
Clostridium difficile.
I'll talk some about bifidobacterium,
as a helpful member of the normal flora.
And I'll mention Enterococcus
as a source of antibiotic resistance.
1:36
The next three slides will give you
a taste of what the microflora
is on different parts of the body.
Again though, I will tend to focus
on Gram positive bacteria.
And we'll start with the outer surface,
the skin,
which in fact is primarily Gram positive
and can contain anywhere from 1,000
to 10,000 bacteria per centimeter.
Staph aureus is common
and Staphylococcus epidermidis.
Corynebacteria are there,
they're not pathogenic.
The hair follicles
are quite interesting actually,
because they have their own microflora.
The Gram positive bacterium,
Propionibacterium acnes is one example.
And as some of you know,
when you reach puberty,
the number of these bacteria increase
because of the chemical changes
in the sebaceous secretions,
and pimples result,
the bane of being a teenager.
Blood, spinal fluid,
and tissue spaces are sterile.