pathogen

(noun)

any organism or substance, especially a microorganism, capable of causing disease, such as bacteria, viruses, protozoa, or fungi

Related Terms

  • Trypanosoma
  • inducible response
  • zoonosis
  • plague
  • leukocyte
  • granule
  • immune system
  • plasmodium
  • macrophage

Examples of pathogen in the following topics:

  • Innate Immune Response

    • A host is the organism that is invaded and often harmed by a pathogen.
    • Mammalian immune systems evolved for protection from such pathogens.
    • Components of both immune systems constantly search the body for signs of pathogens.
    • When pathogens are found, immune factors are mobilized to the site of an infection.
    • Features of the immune system (e.g., pathogen identification, specific response, amplification, retreat, and remembrance) are essential for survival against pathogens.
  • Plant Defenses Against Pathogens

    • Plants defend against pathogens with barriers, secondary metabolites, and antimicrobial compounds.
    • Pathogens are agents of disease.
    • Both protect plants against pathogens.
    • Additionally, plants have a variety of inducible defenses in the presence of pathogens.
    • Plants can close stomata to prevent the pathogen from entering the plant.
  • Physical and Chemical Barriers

    • The innate immune response has physical and chemical barriers that exist as the first line of defense against infectious pathogens.
    • In the innate immune response, any pathogenic threat triggers a consistent sequence of events that can identify the type of pathogen and either clear the infection independently or mobilize a highly-specialized adaptive immune response.
    • Pathogens are killed or inactivated on the skin by desiccation (drying out) and by the skin's acidity.
    • Some pathogens have evolved specific mechanisms that allow them to overcome physical and chemical barriers.
    • Some of these include the low pH of the stomach, which inhibits the growth of pathogens; blood proteins that bind and disrupt bacterial cell membranes; and the process of urination, which flushes pathogens from the urinary tract.
  • The Complement System

    • The innate immune system serves as a first responder to pathogenic threats that bypass natural physical and chemical barriers of the body.
    • An array of approximately 20 types of soluble proteins, called a complement system, functions to destroy extracellular pathogens.
    • They serve as a marker to indicate the presence of a pathogen to phagocytic cells, such as macrophages and B cells, to enhance engulfment.
    • These structures destroy pathogens by causing their contents to leak .
    • Pathogens lacking these regulatory proteins are lysed.
  • Pathogen Recognition

    • Upon pathogen entry to the body, the innate immune system uses several mechanisms to destroy the pathogen and any cells it has infected.
    • When a pathogen enters the body, cells in the blood and lymph detect the specific pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) on the pathogen's surface.
    • A macrophage is a large, phagocytic cell that engulfs foreign particles and pathogens.
    • Dendritic cells bind molecular signatures of pathogens, promoting pathogen engulfment and destruction.
    • A neutrophil is also a phagocytic leukocyte that engulfs and digests pathogens .
  • Immunological Memory

    • The adaptive immune system has a memory component that allows for a rapid and large response upon re-invasion of the same pathogen.
    • As the infection is cleared and pathogenic stimuli subside, the effector cells are no longer needed; they undergo apoptosis.
    • Vaccination is based on the knowledge that exposure to noninfectious antigens, derived from known pathogens, generates a mild primary immune response .
    • When exposed to the corresponding pathogen to which an individual was vaccinated, the reaction is similar to a secondary exposure.
    • Vaccines, often delivered by injection into the arm, result in a secondary immune response if the vaccinated individual is later exposed to that pathogen.
  • Humoral Immune Response

    • The humoral immune response defends against pathogens that are free in the blood by using antibodies against pathogen-specific antigens.
    • The humoral immune response fights pathogens that are free in the bodily fluids, or "humours".
    • It relies on antigens (which are also often free in the humours) to detect these pathogens.
    • Antibody neutralization can prevent pathogens from entering and infecting host cells.
    • The neutralized antibody-coated pathogens can then be filtered by the spleen to be eliminated in urine or feces.
  • Antibody Functions

    • Antibodies, part of the humoral immune response, are involved in pathogen detection and neutralization.
    • The antibodies they secrete are particularly significant against extracellular pathogens and toxins.
    • Antibodies coat extracellular pathogens and neutralize them by blocking key sites on the pathogen that enhance their infectivity, such as receptors that "dock" pathogens on host cells .
    • The neutralized antibody-coated pathogens can then be filtered by the spleen and eliminated in urine or feces.
    • It would be expected to present a more challenging defense against the pathogen corresponding to the specific antigen.
  • Antigen-presenting Cells: B and T cells

    • However, adaptive immunity is more specific to an invading pathogen and can fight back much more quickly than the innate response if it has seen the pathogen before.
    • Adaptive immunity occurs after exposure to an antigen either from a pathogen or a vaccination.
    • Upon infection, activated T and B cells that have surface binding sites with specificity to the molecules on the pathogen greatly increase in number and attack the invading pathogen.
    • Their attack can kill pathogens directly or they can secrete antibodies that enhance the phagocytosis of pathogens and disrupt the infection.
    • Meanwhile, T cell receptors are responsible for the recognition of pathogenic antigens by T cells .
  • Fungi as Plant, Animal, and Human Pathogens

    • From crop and food spoilage to severe infections in animal species, fungal parasites and pathogens are wide spread and difficult to treat.
    • Many plant pathogens are fungi that cause tissue decay and eventual death of the host .
    • In addition to destroying plant tissue directly, some plant pathogens spoil crops by producing potent toxins.
    • Smuts, rusts, and powdery or downy mildew are other examples of common fungal pathogens that affect crops.
    • Give examples of fungi that are plant and animal parasites and pathogens
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