Practice 08 Nomenclature and taxonomy [Kompatibilitási mód]
Transcription
Practice 08 Nomenclature and taxonomy [Kompatibilitási mód]
2014.11.06. Taxonomy Nomenclature and taxonomy The groups of pathogenic microbes Eukarya Protista Kinetoplastida Haemosporidea Haemosporidia Plasmodiaceae Plasmodium falciparum Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Species concept Species definition • Traditional – group of genetically closely related individuals • In case of asexually reproducing creatures (as the majority of microbes), the species is determined as a certain level of genetic similarity. • Genomospecies – genetically homogenous species • Species complex – group of related genomospecies, which is classified into the complex based on traditional methods (biochemical activity, serological characteristics), but which are genetically different (e.g. M. tuberculosis complex – M. tbc., M. bovis, M. africanum és M. caprae) • Sometimes taxa, which belong to one genomospecies genetically, but differ pathogenetically, are calssified into different species, even to different genera (Neisseria meningitidis and N. gonorrhoeae; Escherichia coli and Shigella spp.) Nomenclature • Linné • Genus species (subspecies) (variant) Staphylococcus cohnii ssp. cohnii Salmonella enterica ssp. Enterica sv. Typhi – – – – Subspecies Biovariants and serovariants Isolate – individual microbes cultured from a single sample Strain, clone – group of genetically related isolates – DNA-DNA hybridization – Sequences of conservative genes (rDNA, rpoB) • Identification – Still mostly based on the phenotype – Biochemical tests – Serological tests • Taxonomic changes are slowly acknowledged and accepted by medical microbiology; frequently an outdated traditional name and classification is used Phylogeny of living organisms Escherichia coli • Categories below species level: • Criteria • Archaea (Crenarchaeot a, Euryarchaeot a, Nanoarchaeot a, Korachaeota) • Eubacteria • Eukarya (Protista, Chromista, fungi, plants, animals) • Viruses (DNARNAviruses) – Extremophil es – Methanogen es 1 2014.11.06. Classification of bacteria Human pathogenic eubacteria • Gram positives • Proteobacteria – α-proteobacteria (Ehrlichia, Bartonella, Brucella, Rickettsia, Rhizobium) – β-proteobacteria (Neisseria, Burkholderia, Alcaligenes) – γ-proteobacteria (Aeromonas, Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas, Vibrio) – δ-proteobacteria – ε-proteobacteria (Helicobacter, Campylobacter) • • • • Spirochaetes Chlamydias Bacteroidetes Fusobacteria Gram positive bacteria • Gram positive cocci – Staphylococci – Streptococci • Gram positive rods – – – – – – – – Bacillus Listeria Corynebacterium Eubacterium Clostridium Actinomyces Propionibacterium Gardnerella • Not based on taxonomic data • Gram stain (based on cell wall structure), shape – Gram positives (a phylogenetically homogeneous group) – Gram negatives (a phylogenetically highly diverse group) – Bacteria without cell wall (Mycoplasmatales; phylogenetically related to Gram positives) – Acid-fast bacteria (with acid fast cell wall) (Mycobacteria; phylogenetically related to Gram positives) – Bacteria not staining with Gram (others) (Rickettsia, Chlamydia, spirochaetes; phylogenetically diverse) • Based on oxigen requirement – – – – – Obligate aerobic Aerotolerant Facultative anaerobic Obligate anaerobic Microaerophilic Not stained by Gram • Acid fast – Mycobacterium – Nocardia • Cell-wall-less bacteria – Mycoplasma Gram positive cocci • Staphylococcus – Coagulase positive – S. aureus – Coagulase negative – S. epidermidis, S. haemolyticus, S. lugdunensis) • Streptococcus – Streptococcus – S. pyogenes, S. agalactiae, S. pneumoniae, etc. – Enterococcus – E. faecalis, E. faecium, etc. – Peptostreptococcus (obligate anaerobic) 2 2014.11.06. Gram positive rods • • • • • • • • • • Aerobic/facultative anaerobic: Bacillus – B. anthracis, B. cereus, B. subtilis Listeria – L. monocytogenes Corynebacterium – C. diphtheriae, C. jeikeium, etc. Obligate anaerobic: Eubacterium – E. lentum Clostridium – C. tetani, C. botulinum, C. perfringens, etc. Actinomyces – A. israeli, A. naeslundii, etc. Propionibacterium – P. acnes Gardnerella – G. vaginalis Bacillus anthracis Clostridium tetani Corynebacterium diphtheriae Actinomyces israelii Acid-fast bacteria; bacteria without a cell wall • Acid-fast bacteria (phylogenetically related to Actinomycetes) • Mycobacterium – M. tuberculosis (complex), M. leprae, etc. • Weakly acid-fast b. (phylogenetically related to Actinomycetes) • Nocardia – N. farcinica, etc. (presently changing taxonomy) • (rare human pathogens – Rhodococcus) • Cell-wall-less bacteria • Mycoplasma – M. hominis, M. pneumoniae, etc. • Ureaplasma – U. urealyticum Gram negative bacteria • Gram negative cocci and coccobacilli – – – – – – – – – Neisseria Haemophilus Moraxella Acinetobacter Pasteurella Bordetella Francisella Brucella Veilonella • Gram negative rods – Enterobacteriaceae – Pseudomonas – Aeromonas – Anaerobic Gram negative rods – Streptobacillus • Gram negative curved rods – Vibrio – Helicobacter – Campylobacter • Intracellular Gram negative bacteria • Spirillum • Spirochaetes Acid-fast stain (Ziehl-Neelsen) M. tuberculosis on LJ medium Gram negative cocci and coccobacilli • Neisseria – N. gonorrhoeae, N. meningitidis (genetically a single species) • Haemophilus – H. influenzae, H. ducreyi, etc. • Moraxella – M. lacunata, M. (Branhamella) catarrhalis • Acinetobacter – A. baumannii (complex), A. lwoffii, etc. • Pasteurella – P. multocida, etc. • Bordetella – B. pertussis, etc. • Francisella – F. tularensis • Brucella – B. melitensis, B. abortus, B. canis, B. suis • Veilonella – V. parvula (obligate anaerobic) 3 2014.11.06. Gram negative rods Neisseria gonorrhoeae Francisella tularensis • Enterobacteria • Escherichia – E. coli • Shigella (forms a single genomospecies together with E. coli) – S. dysenteriae, S. flexneri, S. boydii, S. sonnei • Salmonella – S. enterica, S. bongori (complicated taxonomy based on serological properties) • Klebsiella – K. pneumoniae, K. oxytoca • Enterobacter – E. aerogenes, E. cloacae, etc. • Citrobacter – C. freundii (complex), C. koseri, etc. • Proteus – P. mirabilis, P. morganii, P. vulgaris • Serratia – S. marcenscens, etc. • many other genera, several may be opportunistic pathogens Acinetobacter sp. Gram negative rods Gram negative curved rods Pseudomonas (taxonomy has changed a lot, still debated) Pseudomonas – P. aeruginosa, etc. Stenotrophomonas – S. maltophilia Burkholderia – B. cepacia (complex), B. mallei, B. pseudomallei, etc. many other genera, several may be opportunistic pathogens Aeromonas (taxonomy has changed a lot, still debated) Aeromonas – taxonomically uncertain species, A. sobria, etc. Plesiomonas – P. shigelloides Obligate anaerobic (phylogenetically two unrelated large groups) Bacteroides – B. fragilis, etc. Prevotella – P. melaninogenica, etc. Porphyromonas – P. gingivalis, etc. Fusobacterium – F. nucleatum, F. necrophorum, etc. (differs phylogenetically from the former three related groups) • Streptobacillus – S. moniliformis (rat bite fever) • Vibrio – V. cholerae, V. vulnificus, V. parahaemolyticus, etc. • Helicobacter – H. pylori • Campylobacter – C. fetus, C. jejuni, C. coli, etc. • Arcobacter – A. butzleri, etc. Intracellular Gram negative bacteria Spirillums and spirochaetes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Chlamydia (ATP parasite) Chlamydia – C. trachomatis Chlamydophila – (formerly Chlamydia) C. psittaci, C. pneumoniae many other genera, several were implicated in human disease Rickettsia (NAD parasite) Rickettsia – R. prowazeckii, R. slovaca, etc. Orientia – (formerly Rickettsia) O. tsutsugamushi Coxiella – C. burnettii Ehrlichia Ehrlichia – E. chafeensis, E. sennetsu, E. ewingi Anaplasma – A. phagocytophylum Bartonella (culturable in cell-free medium) Bartonella – B. quintana, B. bacilliformis, B. henselae, etc. Legionella (culturable) – L. pneumophila, L. micdadei, etc. • Spirillum – S. minor • Spirochaetes • Treponema – T. pallidum ssp. pallidum, T. pertenue, T. vincenti etc. • Borrelia – B. recurrentis, B. burgdorferi, etc. • Leptospira – L. icterohaemorrhagiae (complicated taxonomy within the genus) 4 2014.11.06. Borrelia hermsii - Giemsa Treponema pallidum – dark-field Leptospira sp. – silver imp. 5