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INTRODUCTION

The French disease, for it was that, remained in me more than four months dormant before it showed itself, and then it broke out over my whole body at one instant…with certain blisters, of the size of six-pence, and rose colored.

—Benvenuto Cellini (1500-1571): The Life of Benvenuto Cellini

Spirochetes are bacteria with a spiral morphology ranging from loose coils to a rigid corkscrew shape. The three medically important genera include the cause of syphilis, the ancient scourge of sexual indiscretion, and Lyme disease, a more recently discovered consequence of an innocent walk in the woods.

BACTERIOLOGY

MORPHOLOGY AND STRUCTURE

The spiral morphology of spirochetes (Figure 37–1) is produced by a flexible, peptidoglycan cell wall around which several axial fibrils are wound. The cell wall and axial fibrils are completely covered by an outer bilayered membrane similar to the outer membrane of other Gram-negative bacteria. In some species, a hyaluronic acid slime layer forms around the exterior of the organism and may contribute to its virulence. Spirochetes are motile, exhibiting rotation and flexion; this motility is believed to result from movement of the axial filaments, although the mechanism is not clear.

FIGURE 37–1.

Spirochete morphology. A1. Longitudinal surface view of typical spirochete. A2. Electron micrograph of Treponema with axial filaments extending most of cell length. B. Cross-section of typical spirochete. (Reproduced with permission from Willey JM: Prescott, Harley, & Klein’s Microbiology, 7th ed. New York, NY: McGraw Hill; 2008.)

Spiral structure is wound around axial filaments

Motility includes rotation and flexion

Many spirochetes are difficult to see by routine microscopy. Although they are Gram negative, many either take stains poorly or are too thin to fall within the resolving power of the light microscope. Only darkfield microscopy (Figure 37–2), immunofluorescence, or special staining techniques can demonstrate these spirochetes. Other spirochetes such as Borrelia are wider and readily visible in stained preparations, even routine blood smears.

FIGURE 37–2.

Treponema pallidum seen by darkfield microscopy. The darkfield method creates a bright halo around the corkscrew-shaped spirochetes. (Reproduced with permission from Nester EW, Anderson DG, Roberts CE Jr, et al: Microbiology: A Human Perspective, 6th ed. New York, NY: McGraw Hill; 2008.)

Many are thin and take stains poorly

Darkfield demonstrates spirochetes

GROWTH AND CLASSIFICATION

Parasitic spirochetes grow more slowly in vitro than most other disease-causing bacteria. Some species, including the causative agent of syphilis, have not been grown beyond a few generations in cell culture. Some are strict anaerobes, others require low concentrations of oxygen, and still others are aerobic. Compared with other bacterial groups, the taxonomy of the spirochetes is underdeveloped. ...

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