Summary: 2.2 Microbial Components Influencing Host Physiology | Erwin G Zoetendal
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1 Microbial surface molecules
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How are host-microbe interactions studied?
Germ-free animals and epithelial cell lines are used, since they can be inoculated with controlled (mono-) cultures of microbes.
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What are bacterial impacts on the gut-brain axis (3)?
1: activation of neural afferent circuits to the brain
2: activation of mucosal immune responses
3: production of metabolites that directly influence the CNS
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What is the structure of a Gram-positive and a Gram-negative cell envelope?
Gram-positive: cytoplasmic membrane - thick peptidoglycan layer
Gram-negative: cytoplasmic membrane - thin peptidoglycan layer - outer membrane -
How are Gram-positive bacteria recognized by the host?
Lipoteichoic acids (LTA) in the PG layer can bind to TLR2
knock-out of D-alanine in LTA: pro-infl. -> anti-inflammatory response
Peptidoglycan can bind to TLR4 -
What is the structure of LPS of Gram-negative bacteria?
Recognized by TLR4
O-specific polysaccharide: variable among G- bacteria, used for recognition
Core polysaccharides
Lipid A: endotoxic -
Name 3 other envelope structures and their functions.
1: flagellum: motility
2: fimbriae: attachment
3: pili: attachment, conjugation (DNA transfer) -
What are contingency genes, and how do they work?
Genes with a higher mutation rate -> adaptation to changing environment
i.e.: fimbriae: necesaary for host infection, but prone for immune recognition
strand slipping: nucleotide sequence is repeated, copy on homologues strand pair out of register. Leads from single base deletions to larger deletions. -
2 Metabolites
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What are the 3 pathways of carbohydrate degradation?
Complex polymers -> [hydrolysis] -> monomers -> [primary fermenters] -> 1: acetate ->
2: H2, CO2 -> [Acetogenesis] -> acetate ->
3: propionate, butyrate, succinate, alcohols -> [syntrophy] -> H2, CO2 + acetate ->
-> [methanogenesis] -> CH4, CO2 -
Give a model of cross-feeding in the small intestine.
glucose -> [Streptococcus] -> lactate -> [Veilonella] -> propionate, acetate -> host
glucose -> [E. coli] -> acetate (+ lactate) -> [Clostridium] -> butyrate -> host -
What are the 3 propionate production pathways?
Via acrylate, succinate or propanediol
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