Microbiome
Bacterial Mechanisms
E. Coli
Salmonella
Virology
100

The two main functions of the microbiota

What is Host health/Nutrition and Colonization Resistance

100

Bacteria that are typically part of the normal microbiota and don't cause disease in their normal location

What is opportunistic bacteria

100

Transmission of exogenous E. Coli

What is contaminated food/water

Causes colibacillosis (if they said this for some reason.. bonus of 1000 points)

100

This bacteria is transmitted through fecal/oral transmission

Gram negative rod

Facultative Intracellular bacteria

What is Salmonella

100

The location that all RNA viruses replicate

What is the cytoplasm

If they mention DNA viruses replicate in the nucleus, bonus of 500 points

200

Three of the five ways a patient's microbiome can be altered

What is:

Disease, poor diet, travel/stress, medications, weaning

200

How the two types of GI pathogens create a niche

What is:

Opportunistic- expand, spread to other sites

Frank- Cause GI disease/damage

200

E. Coli express these 5 structures that determine serotypes

What are LPS (O antigen), Capsule (K antigen), Flagella (H antigen), Adhesins, and proteins (toxins)
200

This strain of salmonella causes abortion in cattle

What is Salmonella Dublin

200

The cycle of virus replication

What is attachment, entry/uncoating, replication, protein synthesis, assembly/release

300

The three ways we can attempt to fix dysbiosis

What is:

Prebiotics, probiotics, and FMT/RFT

300

How the two types of GI pathogens overcome host defenses (Need all three for frank pathogens)

What is:

Opportunistic- something else caused the dysbiosis so they can spread

Frank- Bloom to high levels, evade host immunity, damage host cells 

300

This serotype of E. coli causes severe diarrhea (+/- hemorhhagic) and abdominal pain

Causes Edema Disease in weaned pigs

Releases Stx1 and Stx2/VT1 and VT2 that damage epithelial cells but also enter circulation to cause systemic damage

Cause attaching and effacing lesions

What is Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC)

300

The effects of toxins from SPI-1 and SPI-2 gene expression

What is toxin release:

Causes inflammation, macrophage infestation, and siderophores stealing iron from host

300

The three types of viral entry into the cell

What are direct penetration, membrane fusion, and endocytosis

400

The two most prevalent bacterial types in a healthy colon microbiome

What are Firmicutes and Bacteriodetes

400

Difference between damage caused by non-invasive and facultative intracellular bacteria

What is:

Non-invasive- Cause attaching and effacing lesions

Facultative intracellular- Attach and move intracellularly, often with use of toxins

400

This serotype of E. coli causes diarrhea in in many species

No toxins

Classic attaching and effacing lesions with pedestal formation

What is Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)

400

Difference between Host-restricted, Host-adapted, and Host-unrestricted salmonella infections

What is:

Restricted- disease in species restricted to

Adapted- Septicemia in adapted species, enteritis in others

Unrestricted- Diarrhea many species

400

The polarity of a single stranded RNA virus that needs to transcribe the opposite strand before being translated in a host cell

What is minus sense (negative)

500

3 of the 9 diseases linked to Dysbiosis

What is:

Acute Hemorrhagic Diarrhea Syndrome, CKD, Atopic Dermatitis, B cell Lymphoma, Thromboembolism, Asthma/COPD, Laminitis, Diabetes Mellitus, Necrotic Enteritis

500

Detailed description of 2/3 methods frank pathogens use to overcome host defenses

What is:

Bloom to high numbers, overwhelm host defenses, outcompete other bacteria. Faster replication or more time to replicate and GI transit time can contribute.

Evade host immunity, survive in range of PHs, motility in mucus, evade IGA binding

Damage host cells, helps bacteria remain in intestine, bind to epithelial cells by pili/fimbriae

500

Serotype of E. Coli that causes secretory diarrhea in neonatal animals, especially calves, lambs, and piglets

Releases LT and STa/STb toxins that cause loss of electrolytes and water from enterocytes

Attach to host cells and don't cause damage this way

What is enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)

500

Host adapted strain of Salmonella from mice that causes enteritis in pigs

Can cause systemic disease in non-mouse species too

What is Salmonella Typhimurium

500

How non-enveloped viruses are released from cells

What is cell lysis and death

If they mention how enveloped viruses bud off the cell, a penalty of 300 points is incurred for being a know-it-all

M
e
n
u