Mycobacterium leprae: Difference between revisions

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==Pathology==
==Pathology==
The transmission of this disease is not fully understood yet , but it's likely to spread through  the air from coughing and sneezing.It attacks the nervous system and skin  lesios are formed on the patient in the early stage. It leads to paralysis  and loss of extremeties. One its virulence factor is the formation of mycolic acid that formed the waxy exterior coating that is unique to Mycobacteria.
M.leprae is responsible for the disease leprosy. It's a chronic disease that infects the peripheral nerves, the skin, the nervous system and the mucous membranes of the nose , throat and eyes. It has a slow growth rate and also a long incubation time. The symptoms of leprosy are skin lesions, pain and weakness. If left untreated it can cause nerve damage that can lead to numbness, deformities of extremeties.It can also cause blindness. It can be treated with multiple drug therapy but some strands are becaming resistant to some of the drugs.
The tranmission of the disease is not yet undrestood and current research are being done on that. But scientists believe that it might be transmitted from infected individuals to uninfected ones through close contacts.
 
==Current Research==
==Current Research==



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Mycobacterium leprae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Eubacteria
Phylum: Actinobacteria
Order: Actinomycetales
Family: Mycobacteriaceae
Genus: Mycobacterium
Species: leprae
Binomial name
Mycobacterium leprae

Description and significance

This M.leprae causes the disease leprosy. It's also called the Hansen's disease after the scientist that discovered the bacteria in the skin nodules of leprosy patient. For a long time this disease was seen as a curse , an hieredietery disease and its patients used to be stimatized.

Genome structure

Mycobactrium M.leprae has about 3,268,203 base pairs. Only 49% of the genome encode for proteins. The rest is composed of pseudogenes. In size and shape M.leprae resemble the M. tuberculosis.

Cell structure and metabolism

It’s a gram positive ,aerobic rod-shaped acid fast. Scientists believe that the pseudogenes used to be involed in metabolic patways but now this bacteria lost its metabolic capability. Because of this lost the M.leprae is now an obligate parasite that depends on its host for most of its nutritional and functional needs. They have a waxy coating which is caused by the mycolic acid. That coating is unique to mycobacterium. The mycolic acid is composed of large lipids that are covalently bonded to each other to form the waxy coating. It's solid at room temperature. That's one of the causing why this bacteia is so hard to fight and destroyed.

Ecology

This bacteria is believed to live in the soil. Scientists think that the reservoir for this bacteria is the new world armadillos and African primates. At the beginning the idea that the habitat of this bacteria was in soil was just an hypothesis but some research were done and DNA of the m.leeprae was found in soil close to where peope were infected with leprosy. Its ideal temperature is about 30-33 degres C

Pathology

M.leprae is responsible for the disease leprosy. It's a chronic disease that infects the peripheral nerves, the skin, the nervous system and the mucous membranes of the nose , throat and eyes. It has a slow growth rate and also a long incubation time. The symptoms of leprosy are skin lesions, pain and weakness. If left untreated it can cause nerve damage that can lead to numbness, deformities of extremeties.It can also cause blindness. It can be treated with multiple drug therapy but some strands are becaming resistant to some of the drugs. The tranmission of the disease is not yet undrestood and current research are being done on that. But scientists believe that it might be transmitted from infected individuals to uninfected ones through close contacts.

Current Research

Enter summaries of the most recent research here--at least three required Recent are being done on strains of rifampin-resistant M. leprae in two of three patients with recurring leprosy

References

[Sample reference] [Irgens L (2002). "The discovery of the leprosy bacillus". Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen 122 (7): 708-9. PMID 11998735] [Cole ST, Eiglmeier K, Parkhill J, et al (2001). "Massive gene decay in the leprosy bacillus". Nature 409 (6823): 1007-11. doi:10.1038/35059006. PMID 11234002.] [Hernández E, Cardona-Castro N, Rodríguez G, Villegas S, Beltrán C, Kimura M, Vissa VD, Gómez Y. "Study of rifampin and dapsone resistance in three patients with recurring leprosy".Rev Panam Salud Publica. 2008 Feb;23(2):73-7.]