COMMUNICABLE DISEASES
L1 pathogens notes
Communicable - Caused by an organism that infects another by pathogens.
diseases - Pathogens; bacteria, viruses, fungi, Protoctista
- Often infectious and passed on from organism to organism easily.
Damage to - Viruses – take over cellular metabolism, viral genetic material into genetic material of
tissues host cell which makes more virus and bursts the cell to destroy.
- Protista – take over cell and digest insides to reproduce inside and burst.
- Fungi – digest and destroy living cells.
Producing - Most pathogens produce toxin which is poisonous.
toxins - Toxin damages cells plasma membrane or inactivating enzymes.
- Some fungi produce toxins.
Bacteria - Most common organism for infection
- Not all cause disease
- Prokaryotic cells with no membrane bound organelles.
- Shapes; rod, spherical, comma, spiraled, corkscrew
tuberculosis - Airborne bacteria; mycobacterium tuberculosis affecting respiratory system.
- Antibiotics help but there are resistant strains emerging.
- Macrophages (leucocytes) engulf bacteria by phagocytosis.
- Tissue called tubercle forms around infected site and heals after 3-8 weeks.
- Bacteria can survive in macrophages until immune system weakens.
- Rapid reproduction results in destroying of lung tissue.
- Coughing, shortness of breath, loss if appetite, weight loss, fever, night sweats and
extreme fatigue.
- Fever and night sweats; neutrophils and macrophages releasing fever causing
substances part of response and increase body temperature.
viruses - Non-living infectious agents
- Sort section of RNA surrounded by protein and inserts own RNA into DNA of cell.
- Infected cell reproduces with viral RNA.
- All viruses are pathogens.
bacteriophages - Virus affecting bacteria.
- Viruses insert genome into host cell, so it is away from medicine and immune
responses.
- Virus replicates and the external proteins are self-proteins – so if medicine attacks these
proteins it would affect healthy cells.
- Can change external proteins quickly so medicine and vaccines are irrelevant.
Protista - Eukaryotic cells
- Single or multicellular
- Very few are pathogens affecting organisms
- Often require a vector
Fungi - Unicellular or multicellular
- Eukaryotic
- Made of chitin
- Made up of mycelium of hyphae (Moulds)
- Reproduce and spreads via spores
- Mainly affect plants
- Saprophytic – release digestive enzymes onto dead organic matter and absorbs
nutrients leaving it Moulding
- In plants they affect the leaves mostly preventing photosynthesis
- Release many spores that spread onto other organisms.
- Some are parasitic – live off of living organic matter.
, L2 transmission notes
Mechanism, of disease - Damage cells
- Produce toxins;
- Exotoxins – secreted by living normal pathogen.
- Endotoxin – released when pathogen is damaged.
Methods of disease spread - Direct transmission – direct contact, inoculation (introducing pathogen to
organism directly), ingestion.
- Indirect transmission – fomites, droplet infection, vectors
- Direct contact – exchange of bodily fluids, skin to skin contact and micro-
organism from faces.
- Inoculation – break in skin, bites, puncture wounds or sharing needles.
- Ingestion – contaminated food or water
- Fomites – inanimate objects carrying pathogens such as bedding, socks,
cosmetics.
- Droplet – saliva and mucus spreading through talking, coughing or
sneezing.
- Vectors – transmit from one host organism to another.
Factors affecting - Use of traditional medicine
transmission of disease - Climate change
(animals) - Overcrowded living
- Poor waste disposal
- Bad immune system
- Poor nutrition
- Lack of helpers or socio-economic factors.
Spreading disease in plants - Direct contact – any contact between healthy and contaminated
- Soil contamination – infected plants leave pathogens in soil and can be
passed on.
- Vectors – wind, water, animals and humans.
L3 Plant defences notes
Plant health is important. - Crop damage means loss of money, you don’t sell and lose money or trying
to maintain damaged plants – you end up losing money.
Passive and active defences - Passive – defences present before infection, they prevent entry and spread
of pathogen e.g., physical and chemical barriers.
- Active defence's – fortification of defences when pathogens are detected.
Recognising an attack - Plants don’t have an immune system but use cell signalling to initiate
defence measures and communicate to other cells.
Primary defences – physical - Cell wall – cellulose and lignin
barriers - Leaf cuticle – wax stops moisture building up and keeps it dry as pathogens
require water
- Stomata – prevents droplet pathogens and spores entering leaf
- Bark – contains chemical where production of chemical increases when
plant is under attack
Strengthening cell walls - Rapid, unspecific response to invasion by pathogen
with callose - Callose is synthesised and deposited between cell wall and membrane and
at plasmodesmata preventing spread of pathogen to other cells
- Further thickening and deposition of lignin increases effectiveness of
barrier
- Also blocks sieve plates in phloem, seals infected cells and prevent spread
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller saimabegum. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for £5.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.