Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY Chronic bacterial disease

123


The linear chromosomes of bacteria are similar to those
of eukaryotes such as yeast in that they have specialized
regions of DNA at the end of each double strand of DNA.
These regions are known as telomeres, and serve as bound-
aries to bracket the coding stretches of DNA. Telomeres also
retard the double strands of DNA from uncoiling by essen-
tially pinning the ends of each strand together with the com-
plimentary strand.
There are two types of telomeres in bacteria. One type
is called a hairpin telomere. As its name implies, the telomers
bends around from the end of one DNA strand to the end of
the complimentary strand. The other type of telomere is
known as an invertron telomere. This type acts to allow an
overlap between the ends of the complimentary DNA strands.
Replication of a linear bacterial chromosome proceeds
from one end, much like the operation of a zipper. As replica-
tion moves down the double helix, two tails of the daughter
double helices form behind the point of replication.
Research on bacterial chromosome structure and func-
tion has tended to focus on Escherichia colias the model
microorganism. This bacterium is an excellent system for such
studies. However, as the diversity of bacterial life has become
more apparent in beginning in the 1970s, the limitations of
extrapolating the findings from the Escherichia colichromo-
some to bacteria in general has also more apparent. Very little
is known, for example, of the chromosome structure of the
Archae, the primitive life forms that share features with
prokaryotes and eukaryotes, and of those bacteria that can live
in environments previously thought to be completely inhos-
pitable for bacterial growth.

See alsoGenetic identification of microorganisms; Genetic
regulation of prokaryotic cells; Microbial genetics; Viral
genetics; Yeast genetics

CChronic bacterial diseaseHRONIC BACTERIAL DISEASE

Chronic bacterial infections persist for prolonged periods of
time (e.g., months, years) in the host. This lengthy persist-
ence is due to a number of factors including masking of the
bacteriafrom the immune system, invasion of host cells, and
the establishment of an infection that is resistance to anti-
bacterial agents.
Over the past three decades, a number of chromic bac-
terial infections have been shown to be associated with the
development of the adherent, exopolysaccharide-encased
populations that are termed biofilms. The constituents of the
exopolysaccharide are poorly immunogenic. This means that
the immune system does not readily recognize the
exopolysaccharide as foreign material that must be cleared
from the body. Within the blanket of polysaccharide the bac-
teria, which would otherwise be swiftly detected by the
immune system, are protected from immune recognition. As
a result, the infection that is established can persist for a
long time.
An example of a chronic, biofilm-related bacterial infec-
tionis prostatitis. Prostatitis is an inflammationof the prostate

gland that is common in men over 30 years of age. Symptoms
of this disease can include intense pain, urinary complications,
and sexual malfunction including infertility. Chronic bacterial
prostatitis is generally associated with repeated urinary tract
infections. The chronic infection is typically caused by
biofilms of Escherichia coli.
A second biofilm-related chronic bacterial infection is
the Pseudomonas aeruginosalung infection that develops
early in life in some people who are afflicted with cystic fibro-
sis. Cystic fibrosis is due to a genetic defect that restricts the
movement of salt and water in and out of cells in the lung. The
resulting build-up of mucus predisposes the lungs to bacterial
infection. The resulting Pseudomonas aeruginosainfection
becomes virtually impossible to clear, due the antibiotic resis-
tanceof the bacteria within the biofilm. Furthermore, the
body’s response to the chronic infection includes inflamma-
tion. Over time, the inflammatory response is causes breathing
difficulty that can be so pronounced as to be fatal.
Another chronic bacterial infection that affects the
lungs is tuberculosis. This disease causes more deaths than
any other infectious disease. Nearly two billion people are
infected with the agent of tuberculosis, the bacterium
Mycobacterium tuberculosis. As with other chronic infec-
tions, the symptoms can be mild. But, for those with a weak-
ened immune system the disease can become more severe.
Each year some three million people die of this active form of
the tuberculosis infection.
Tuberculosis has re-emerged as a health problem in the
United States, particularly among the poor. The develop-
ment of drug resistance by the bacteria is a factor in this re-
emergence.
Beginning in the mid 1970s, there has been an increas-
ing recognition that maladies that were previously thought to
be due to genetic or environmental factors in fact have their
basis in chronic bacterial infections. A key discovery that
prompted this shift in thinking concerning the origin of certain
diseases was the demonstration by Barry Marshallthat a bac-
terium called Helicobacter pyloriis the major cause of stom-
ach ulcers. Furthermore, there is now firm evidence of an
association with chronic Helicobacter pyloristomach and
intestinal infections and the development of certain types of
intestinal cancers.
At about the same time the bacterium called Borrelia
burgdorferiwas established to be the cause of a debilitating
disease known as Lyme disease. The spirochaete is able to
establish a chronic infection in a host. The infection and the
host’s response to the infection, causes arthritis and long-last-
ing lethargy.
As a final recent example, Joseph Penningerhas shown
that the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatisis the agent that
causes a common form of heart disease. The bacterium chron-
ically infects a host and produces a protein that is very similar
in three-dimensional structure to a protein that composed a
heart valve. The host’s immune response to the bacterial pro-
tein results in the deterioration of the heart protein, leading to
heart damage.
Evidence is accumulating that implicates chronic bacte-
rial infection with other human ailments including schizo-

womi_C 5/6/03 2:04 PM Page 123

Free download pdf