Chapter 19: Enterobaceriaceae
human gastrointestinal tract
site of primary infections cause by several organisms included in Enterobacteriaceae
_____ is neither a requirement or a stimulant for growth of enterics.
sodium
In a Citrate Utilization Test, citrate agar is used to test an organism's ability to utilize citrate as a(n) _______.
source of energy
The primary pathogens, which include S. enterica, Shigella spp., and Yersinia spp., are considered ______--that is, they are not present as commensal flora in the G.I. tract of humans.
true pathogens
The _____ forms a capsule on Salmonella cells.
vi antigen
Genera of Tribe I: Escherichia include: 1. Escherichia 2. ______ 3. Citrobacter 4. Salmonella 5. Shigella
Edwardsiella
Genera of Tribe I: Klebsiella include: 1. Klebsiella 2. _____ 3. Serratia 4. Pantoea 5. Cronobacter 6. Hafnia
Enterobacter
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Morganella 2. ______ 3. Serratia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli 6. Providencia
Enterobacter
Pneumonia affects the lower respiratory tract and can be caused by Klebsiella, ______, or Escherichia.
Enterobacter
Sepsis affects the bloodstream and can be caused by Escherichia, Klebsiella, and _____.
Enterobacter
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Escherichia coli 2. Klebsiella pneumoniae 3. ______ 4. Serratia marcenscens 5. Proteus spp. 6. Provencia spp. 7. Citrobecter spp.
Enterobacter aerogenes
The single genus in Tribe IV: Erwinieae ______.
Erwinia
Taxonomical Tribe IV: ______
Erwinieae
Diarrhea affects the gastrointestinal tract and can be caused by Salmonella, Shigella, ______, and Yersinia.
Escherichia
Genera of Tribe I: Escherichia include: 1. ______ 2. Edwardsiella 3. Citrobacter 4. Salmonella 5. Shigella
Escherichia
Pneumonia affects the lower respiratory tract and can be caused by Klebsiella, Enterobacter, or ______.
Escherichia
Sepsis affects the bloodstream and can be caused by _____, Klebsiella, and Enterobacter.
Escherichia
Taxonomical Tribe I: _____
Escherichia
UTIs affect the urinary tract and can be caused by ______, Proteus, Klebsiella, and Morganella.
Escherichia
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Morganella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. _____ 6. Providencia
Escherichia coli
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. ______ 2. Klebsiella pneumoniae 3. Enterobacter aerogenes 4. Serratia marcenscens 5. Proteus spp. 6. Provencia spp. 7. Citrobecter spp.
Escherichia coli
Gram stain morphology of enterobacteriaceae
Gram-negative short rods
The _____ is found on the flagella of the cell.
H antigen
Genera of Tribe I: Klebsiella include: 1. Klebsiella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Pantoea 5. Cronobacter 6. _____
Hafnia
The _____ is found in the capsule of the cell.
K antigen
All forms of enterobacteriaceae are motile except for Shigella and ______.
Klebsiella
Genera of Tribe I: Klebsiella include: 1. ______ 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Pantoea 5. Cronobacter 6. Hafnia
Klebsiella
Pneumonia affects the lower respiratory tract and can be caused by ______, Enterobacter, or Escherichia.
Klebsiella
Sepsis affects the bloodstream and can be caused by Escherichia, _____, and Enterobacter.
Klebsiella
Taxonomical Tribe II: ______
Klebsiella
UTIs affect the urinary tract and can be caused by Escherichia, Proteus, ______, and Morganella.
Klebsiella
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Morganella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. ______ 5. Escherichia coli 6. Providencia
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Escherichia coli 2. ______ 3. Enterobacter aerogenes 4. Serratia marcenscens 5. Proteus spp. 6. Provencia spp. 7. Citrobecter spp.
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Primary pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Shigella 2. Salmonella 3. Yersinia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. ______
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Primary pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Shigella 2. Salmonella 3. Yersinia 4. ______ 5. Escherichia coli
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Enterobacteriaceae have simple nutrition requirements, and _____ is used to isolate and differentiate the entire family.
MacConkey agar
Genera of Tribe III: Proteeae include: 1. Providencia 2. _____ 3. Proteus
Morganella
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. ______ 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli 6. Providencia
Morganella
UTIs affect the urinary tract and can be caused by Escherichia, Proteus, Klebsiella, and _______.
Morganella
The _____ is found on the outer membrane of the cell.
O antigen
Genera of Tribe I: Klebsiella include: 1. Klebsiella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. _____ 5. Cronobacter 6. Hafnia
Pantoea
Tribe II: Klebsiella is negative for what?
Potassium cyanide broth H₂S production Deamination of phenylalanine Urease (generally) Indole (usually) Methyl Red
Taxonomic Tribe III: ______
Proteeae
Genera of Tribe III: Proteeae include: 1. Providencia 2. Morganella 3. _____
Proteus
UTIs affect the urinary tract and can be caused by Escherichia, ______, Klebsiella, and Morganella.
Proteus
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Escherichia coli 2. Klebsiella pneumoniae 3. Enterobacter aerogenes 4. Serratia marcenscens 5. ______ 6. Provencia spp. 7. Citrobecter spp.
Proteus spp.
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Escherichia coli 2. Klebsiella pneumoniae 3. Enterobacter aerogenes 4. Serratia marcenscens 5. Proteus spp. 6. ______ 7. Citrobecter spp.
Provencia spp.
Genera of Tribe III: Proteeae include: 1. ______ 2. Morganella 3. Proteus
Providencia
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Morganella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli 6. ______
Providencia
Diarrhea affects the gastrointestinal tract and can be caused by ______, Shigella, Escherichia, and Yersinia.
Salmonella
Genera of Tribe I: Escherichia include: 1. Escherichia 2. Edwardsiella 3. Citrobacter 4. ______ 5. Shigella
Salmonella
Primary pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Shigella 2. ______ 3. Yersinia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli
Salmonella
Obligate pathogens in the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. ______ 2. Shigella spp. 3. Yersinia spp. 4. Some E. coli strains
Salmonella spp.
opportunistic infection caused by enterics
Septicemia, pneumonia, meningitis, UTIs
Genera of Tribe I: Klebsiella include: 1. Klebsiella 2. Enterobacter 3. ______ 4. Pantoea 5. Cronobacter 6. Hafnia
Serratia
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Morganella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli 6. Providencia
Serratia
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Escherichia coli 2. Klebsiella pneumoniae 3. Enterobacter aerogenes 4. ______ 5. Proteus spp. 6. Provencia spp. 7. Citrobecter spp.
Serratia marcenscens
All forms of enterobacteriaceae are motile except for _____ and Klebsiella.
Shigella
Diarrhea affects the gastrointestinal tract and can be caused by Salmonella, _____, Escherichia, and Yersinia.
Shigella
Genera of Tribe I: Escherichia include: 1. Escherichia 2. Edwardsiella 3. Citrobacter 4. Salmonella 5. _____
Shigella
Primary pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. _____ 2. Salmonella 3. Yersinia 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli
Shigella
Obligate pathogens in the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Salmonella spp. 2. ______ 3. Yersinia spp. 4. Some E. coli strains
Shigella spp.
Tribe II: Klebsiella is positive for what?
Simmon's citrate and VP
Obligate pathogens in the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Salmonella spp. 2. Shigella spp. 3. Yersinia spp. 4. ______
Some E. coli strains
What separates enterics from other bacteria with similar morphology (i.e., pseudomonas, Aeromonas, Vibrio, Alcaligenes, Achromobater, Flavibacterium)?
They are oxidase negative
An Indole Test is used to observe whether or not an organism produces _____.
Tryptophanase
Diarrhea affects the gastrointestinal tract and can be caused by Salmonella, Shigella, Escherichia, and ______.
Yersinia
Primary pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family are: 1. Shigella 2. Salmonella 3. ______ 4. Klebsiella pneumoniae 5. Escherichia coli
Yersinia
Obligate pathogens in the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Salmonella spp. 2. Shigella spp. 3. ______ 4. Some E. coli strains
Yersinia spp.
Salmonella and Shigellaare highly ______.
pathogenic
All enterics are catalase ______.
positive
In a ______, the medium contains citrate as the sole carbon source and inorganic ammonium salts (NH4H2PO4) as the sole source of nitrogen.
Citrate Utilization Test
Genera of Tribe I: Escherichia include: 1. Escherichia 2. Edwardsiella 3. ______ 4. Salmonella 5. Shigella
Citrobacter
Opportunistic pathogens of the Enterobacteriaceae family include: 1. Escherichia coli 2. Klebsiella pneumoniae 3. Enterobacter aerogenes 4. Serratia marcenscens 5. Proteus spp. 6. Provencia spp. 7. ______
Citrobecter spp.
Genera of Tribe I: Klebsiella include: 1. Klebsiella 2. Enterobacter 3. Serratia 4. Pantoea 5. _____ 6. Hafnia
Cronobacter
When Kovac's reagent is added to a broth with indole in it, what develops?
a dark pink color
Enterics produce ____ from glucose (ferment glucose).
acid
Meningitis
affects the central nervous system and is caused by Escherichia
non-lactose fermenters
appear clear on MacConkey agar
lactose fermenters
appear pink on MacConkey media
The Enterobacteriaceae family contains a large number of genera that are _____ related to one another.
biochemically and genetically
In a Citrate Utilization Test, the medium contains citrate as the sole _____ source and inorganic ammonium salts (NH4H2PO4) as the sole source of nitrogen.
carbon
Salmonella and Shigella are lactose - nonfermenters, so they produce ______ colonies on MacConkey media.
colorless
neutral red
pH indicator in MacConkey agar; acidic = pink
lactose
differentiates between fermenters and non-fermenters in MacConkey agar
The microscopic characteristics of ______ are indistinguishable from other gram-negative bacteria.
enterics
Enterics contain a characteristic antigen call the _______ antigen.
enterobacterial common
In a(n) _____ test, the test organism is inoculated in tryptone broth, a rich source of the amino acid tryptophan.
indole
When an organism produces tryptophanase, an enzyme that cleaves tryptophan, it produces _____ and other products.
indole
The primary pathogens, which include S. enterica, Shigella spp., and Yersinia spp., produce infections resulting from ______, or from other sources.
ingestion of contaminated food or water
bile salts
inhibits the growth of G+ve bacteria in MacConkey agar
purpose of bile salts and crystal violet
inhibits the growth of certain organisms in agar, causing the selectivity of agar
crystal violet
like bile salts, inhibits the growth of G+ve bacteria in MacConkey agar
If an enteric is ______, it is by means of peritrichous (lateral) flagella.
motile
All enterics are oxidase ______.
negative
Enterbacteriaceae usually reduce what?
nitrate to nitrite
In a Citrate Utilization Test, the medium contains citrate as the sole carbon source and inorganic ammonium salts (NH4H2PO4) as the sole source of _____.
nitrogen
Members of the Enterobacteriaceae family are major causes of ______ infection.
opportunistic
primary pathogens
organisms capable of causing disease in anyone
opportunistic pathogens
organisms that can only cause disease under certain conditions or in certain hosts