Yersinia
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
- Cause intestinal disease
Overview
- Cause disease in animals and are important zoonoses
- 10 species of which Y. pestis, Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica are pathogenic to animals and humans; Y. pestis is the most pathogenic
- Rodents provide a reservoir of Y. pestis, which is the cause of human plague; fleas transmit the infection to other animals and humans
- Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica reside in the intestine of domestic and wild animals and birds
- Birds may cause mechanical transfer of the organisms
Characteristics
- Enterobacteria, but grow more slowly and at lower temperatures than other enterobacteria
- Gram negative, non-spore forming, facultative anaerobes - rods or colibacilli
- Non-lactose fermentors
- Facultative intracellular pathogens
- Show bipolar staining in Giemsa-stained smears from animal tissue
- Pathogenic strains identified by serotyping and biotyping
Pathogenesis
- Y. enterocolitica and Y. pseudotuberculosis enter the intestinal mucosa via M cells of the Peyer's patches
- Engulfed by macrphages in the mucosa
- All three invasive species are facultative intracellular organisms and grow inside macrophages
- Plasmid and chromosomal-encoded virulence factors required for survival and multiplication in macrophages
- Survive in phagolysosomes and do not interfere with degranulation or lysosomal fusion
- Resistant to macrophage killing mechanisms
- Antiphagocytic proteins secreted by the organisms interfere with host neutrophils
- Y. pestis is more invasive than the other species and also possesses and antiphagocytic capsule and a plasminogen activator which aids systemic spread; endotoxin also contributes to its pathogenicity
- Transport within macrophages to mesenteric lymph nodes
- Replication in lymph nodes and development of necrotic lesions, with neutrophil invasion
- The bacteria destroy the macrophages causing septicaemia