Spirochetes and Spirillum
Spirochetes and Spirillum
Spirochetes and Spirillum
Infect humans and have not been cultivated for more than
one passage in vitro
Passage- number of times a cell culture has been
subcultured
Have to know passage number since it can make
or break an experiment of that certain organism
In vitro- outside the body/ living organism
Stain poorly with Gram staining or Giemsa
Best observed with the use of dark-field or phase-contrast
Long, slender, helically curved, gram (-) bacilli microscopy
Axial filaments (axial fibrils/endoflagella) facilitate Microaerophilic- grow in environment with 5-10% O2,
motility of the organisms (most distinctive & unusual higher is detrimental
morphologic feature- also outer sheath)
Composed of 2-100 axial fibrils/ endoflagella-
unusual since common bacteria have their flagella
attached outside the bacterial cell (spirochetes-
flagella is inside, responsible for motility of
organism )
Motility is by rapid rotation around its long axis
PATHOGENIC SPIROCHETES
LEPTOSPIRA
Spiral-shaped, right handed helices with hooked ends
Contain 2 axial filaments- spinning or a rapid back-and-
forth movement
1. Leptospira interrogans
Most pathogenic Leptospira spp
Can infect most mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, birds,
and invertebrates
Cause Leptospirosis- contact with infected animals or
water contaminated with urine or blood of infected animals
Zoonotic disease
Most common in developing countries and warm
climates
Incubation period: 2-20 days
Transmission: enters the human host through breaks in the
skin, mucous membranes or conjunctivae
Clinical infection:
Symptoms begin abruptly from 2-20 days after
infection
Fever, headache, myalgia, muscular pains
(gastrocnemius muscle- calves), redness of
conjunctiva, jaundice
Anicteric leptospirosis- most common; self-limiting,
high fever and severe headache that lasts 3-7days; not
affected by jaundice; mild type
Weil’s disease or icteric leptospirosis- most severe
illness; liver, kidney, or vascular dysfunction with
lethal pulmonary hemorrhage; death can occur in up
to 10% of cases; affects the liver=jaundice