Types of Pathogen
- Communicable diseases are spread by pathogens
- A pathogen is any microorganism that causes disease in another organism (e.g. in plants or animals)
- Many microorganisms are pathogens including:
- Bacteria
- Fungi
- Protists (protoctists)
- Viruses
- Not all species within these groups (apart from the viruses) are pathogens, as many bacteria, fungi and protists are harmless and do not cause disease
- However, all viruses are pathogenic as they can only exist by living inside the living cells of other organisms (or by using these cells to create more viruses)
Pathogenic bacteria
- Pathogenic bacteria do not always infect the hosts of cells, they can remain within body cavities or spaces
- Toxins produced by the bacteria also damage cells
- They are small and can reproduce very quickly
- Bacterial infections include:
- M. tuberculosis causes tuberculosis (TB) in humans
- N. meningitidis causes bacterial meningitis in humans
- Helicobacter Pylori causes stomach ulcers
- V. Cholerae causes cholera in humans
Pathogenic fungi
- Fungal diseases are much more common in plants than animals
- Fungi can be single-celled or multicellular (with threads of hyphae)
- The spores they produce allow them to infect other organisms
- In plants, fungal diseases tend to be much more serious and can threaten entire crops
- Fungal diseases include:
- Cattle ringworm and athletes foot are fungal diseases in animals
- Black Sigatoka is a fungal disease in bananas
- Chalara Ash Dieback is a fungal disease that affects ash trees
Pathogenic protists
- Protists are a diverse group of eukaryotic (and usually unicellular) organisms
- They are parasites which means they need a host in order to survive
- Only a small number of protists are pathogenic, but the diseases they cause are often serious
- Examples of diseases caused by protists are:
- Plasmodium falciparum is a protist that causes severe forms of malaria in humans
- P. infestans causes the infamous potato blight
The Lifecycle of a Virus
- Viruses are not usually included in the classification of living organisms as they are not considered to be alive
- This is due to the fact that viruses do not carry out the 8 life processes for themselves
- In fact, the only life process they seem to display is reproduction but even to carry out this process they must take over a host cell’s metabolic pathways in order to make multiple copies of themselves
- Viruses, which have a wide variety of shapes and sizes, all share the following biological characteristics:
- They are small particles (always smaller than bacteria)
- They are parasitic and can only reproduce inside living cells
- They infect every type of living organism
- They have no cellular structure but have a protein coat and contain one type of nucleic acid, either DNA or RNA
Structure of a typical virus
- Examples of viruses include:
- Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) causes discolouring of the leaves on tobacco plants by preventing the formation of chloroplasts
- HIV virus causes AIDS
- Influenza virus causes the ‘flu’
- Ebola virus causes haemorrhagic fever
- When a virus infects a host cell, it can then reproduce using two different pathways, known as:
- The lytic pathway
- The lysogenic pathway
The lytic pathway
- The virus infects the host cell and injects its DNA into the cytoplasm
- Next, the virus uses proteins and enzymes within the host cell to produce new virus particles
- Finally, the cell bursts, releasing the virus particles into the host organism to infect more cells
The lysogenic pathway
- The virus injects its DNA into the host cell and the DNA becomes incorporated into the host DNA
- As the host cell replicates, the viral DNA replicates also, but no new virus particles are made during this time (the virus is dormant)
- Changes in the environment (e.g. a chemical trigger) cause the viral DNA to move to the lytic pathway to make new virus particles
A virus can follow two different pathways after infecting the host cell