THE HUMAN MICROBIOME
COLONIZATION-DISEASE
PORTALS/ADHESION/SURVIVAL
Virulence, Toxins & Damage
Stages, Signs & Transmission
200

This term means “a human plus all of its resident microbiota.”

What is a holobiont?

200

Pathogenic microbes penetrate host defenses, enter tissues, and multiply—this is the definition of this process.

What is infection?

200

This is the characteristic route a microbe takes to initiate infection (skin, mucous membranes, etc.).

What is a portal of entry?

200

This is the degree of pathogenicity; it is measured by how well a microbe can establish itself and cause damage.

What is virulence?

200

This is the time from initial contact with the infectious agent until the first symptoms appear.

What is the incubation period?

400

The Human Microbiome Project showed that healthy people carry these in low numbers—even potentially dangerous ones.

What are (potentially dangerous) pathogens?

400

This type of infection is caused by the host’s own normal biota (example: S. pneumoniae causing pneumonia in an AIDS patient).

What is an endogenous infection?

400

These are the three skin sites where microbes most easily enter.

What are nicks, abrasions, and punctures?

400

This toxin is actively secreted by living bacteria into tissues (many types exist)

What is an exotoxin?

400

Earliest notable (but often vague) symptoms appear during this period.

What is the prodromal period?

600

Breast milk contains Approximately this number of  species of bacteria plus sugars that feed healthy gut bacteria in infants.

What is Approx. 600

600

This is the minimum number of microbes needed to start an infection; smaller numbers = higher virulence.

What is infectious dose (ID)?

600

This process lets microbes gain a stable foothold on host tissues via specific molecule binding.

What is Adhesion

600

These secreted proteins (mucinase, keratinase, hyaluronidase) break down tissues and help microbes spread.

What are exoenzymes?

600

The infectious agent multiplies at its highest level and shows greatest virulence in this phase.

What is the acute phase?

800

“Good” microbes use this general effect to prevent intruders from taking over.

What is microbial antagonism?

800

Many scientists now believe most infections are this type, with more than one microbe contributing (example: flu → bacterial pneumonia).

What is polymicrobial?

800

These virulence factors help pathogens avoid or survive inside phagocytes (kill the phagocyte, block engulfment, or live inside them).

What are antiphagocytic factors?

800

This toxin is lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that sheds from the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria.

What is an endotoxin?

800

This is transmission from parent to offspring via placenta, milk, ovum, or sperm.

What is vertical transmission?

1000

Sites now thought to harbor normal microbiota (or their DNA) include the lungs, placenta, brain, and bloodstream.

What are additional sites now thought to harbor normal microbiota (or their DNA)?

1000

True pathogens cause disease in healthy people; this other type only causes disease when host defenses are weak or the microbe is in the wrong body site.

What is an opportunistic pathogen?

1000

Intact skin is a tough barrier, but some microbes make their own entry using digestive enzymes—this describes which portal.

What is the gastrointestinal tract (or skin, respiratory, urogenital portals)?

1000

Long-term or permanent damage after infection (example: deafness after meningitis or arthritis after Lyme disease).

What are sequelae?

1000

A live animal (usually an arthropod) that carries the pathogen; a biological one actually multiplies the microbe inside itself. 

(Other term used instead of Resevoirs)

What is a (biological) vector?