Abstract

The paper discusses the issues of morphofunctional variability of causative agents of sapronoses under stressful environmental conditions. In the current century, sapronoses infections attract more and more attention. Under unfavorable habitat conditions, their pathogens use a strategy for the formation of resting (stable) states: viable but non-cultured cell forms and the persistence of bacteria, which are characterized by reduced metabolism, changes in the morphology and physiology of microorganisms, and termination of their replication. With the formation of resistant forms of bacteria, the possibility of survival of sapronoses causative agents in the interepidemic period, the formation of their antibiotic resistance, which plays an important role in the chronicity of infections, is associated. The literature widely discusses the mechanisms and conditions for the formation of resistant states of pathogenic bacteria, their pathogenetic significance in infectious pathology, whereas the ultrastructural organization and morphological variability of resistant cellular forms, as well as their differentiation, causing the heterogeneity of the pathogens population, are not yet well covered. The emergence of molecular cell biology methods and the discovery of genetic modules of toxin-antitoxin systems revealed a single mechanism for regulating the formation of resistant cellular forms of bacteria. This served as the basis for the development of fundamentally new technologies for the study of the mechanisms for the conservation of the pathogenic potential of resistant cellular forms of pathogens of natural focal sapronosis in interepidemic periods. Based on the analysis of current data, as well as their own experience, the authors assess the role of morphofunctional changes in resistant cellular forms of bacteria and their significance in the adaptation strategies of causative agents of sapronoses (on the example of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis). The study of the manifestations of heteromorphism of causative agents of sapronoses forms the paradigm of the need to improve methods for detecting resistant forms of these bacteria in human and animal biomaterial in order to diagnose chronic recurrent and persistent infections, create effective strategies for monitoring and monitoring the environment.

Highlights

  • By the end of the twentieth century, new information was accumulated on the adaptation mechanisms of infectious disease pathogens and the strategies for their existence in unfavourable environmental conditions

  • At the end of the twentieth century, the stable (‘dormant’) cell forms in non-sporeforming pathogens of sapronoses inhabiting in soils and reservoirs, viable but non-cultured cells (VBNC), and bacterial persister cells in the body of warm-blooded animals and people were characterized [5,6,7,8,9]

  • The specific feature of resistant cellular forms of bacteria lies in their low metabolic and replicative activity, which complicates their detection by traditional microbiological methods [10,11,12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

By the end of the twentieth century, new information was accumulated on the adaptation mechanisms of infectious disease pathogens and the strategies for their existence in unfavourable environmental conditions. The development of molecular-cell biology methods and the recent discovery of genetic modules of toxin-antitoxin systems (TAS) revealed a single mechanism for regulating the formation of resistant cellular forms of bacteria [18,19,20] This served as the basis for the development of fundamentally new technologies for the study of the mechanisms for the conservation of the pathogenic potential of resistant cellular forms in the causative agents of natural focal sapronoses in interepidemic periods [15,21,22,23].

Ultrastructural organization of bacteria
Ultrastructure of sapronoses causative agents in model microecosystems
Pathogenic bacteria under stress
Dormant forms of bacteria as infectious agents
Heteromorphism of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis in soil habitat
Findings
L-transformation as a form of bacteria persistence
Full Text
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