D Taxonomy of Clinically Relevant Microorganisms - Microbiology | OpenStax (2024)

Bacterial Pathogens

The following tables list the species, and some higher groups, of pathogenic Eubacteria mentioned in the text. The classification of Bacteria, one of the three domains of life, is in constant flux as relationships become clearer through sampling of genetic sequences. Many groups at all taxonomic levels still have an undetermined relationship with other members of the phylogenetic tree of Bacteria. Bergey’s Manual of Systematics of Archaea and Bacteria maintains a published list and descriptions of prokaryotic species. The tables here follow the taxonomic organization in the Bergey’s Manual Taxonomic Outline.1

We have divided the species into tables corresponding to different bacterial phyla. The taxonomic rank of kingdom is not used in prokaryote taxonomy, so the phyla are the subgrouping below domain. Note that many bacterial phyla not represented by these tables. The species and genera are listed only under the class within each phylum. The names given to bacteria are regulated by the International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria as maintained by the International Committee on Systematics or Prokaryotes.

Phylum Actinobacteria
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
ActinobacteriaCorynebacteriumdiphtheriaeDiphtheria
Gardnerellavagin*lisBacterial vaginosis
MicrococcusOpportunistic infections
MycobacteriumbovisTuberculosis, primarily in cattle
MycobacteriumlepraeHansen’s disease
MycobacteriumtuberculosisTuberculosis
PropionibacteriumacnesAcne, blepharitis, endophthalmitis

Table D1

Phylum Bacteroidetes
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
BacteroidiaPorphyromonasPeriodontal disease
PrevotellaintermediaPeriodontal disease

Table D2

Phylum Chlamydiae
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
ChlamydiaeChlamydiapsittaciPsittacosis
ChlamydiatrachomatisSexually transmitted chlamydia

Table D3

Phylum Firmicutes
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
BacilliBacillusanthracisAnthrax
BacilluscereusDiarrheal and emetic food poisoning
ListeriamonocytogenesListeriosis
EnterococcusfaecalisEndocarditis, septicemia, urinary tract infections, meningitis
StaphylococcusaureusSkin infections, sinusitis, food poisoning
StaphylococcusepidermidisNosocomial and opportunistic infections
StaphylococcushominisOpportunistic infections
StaphylococcussaprophyticusUrinary tract infections
StreptococcusagalactiaePostpartum infection, neonatal sepsis
StreptococcusmutansTooth decay
StreptococcuspneumoniaePneumonia, many other infections
StreptococcuspyogenesPharyngitis, scarlet fever, impetigo, necrotizing fasciittis
ClostridiaClostridiumbotulinumBotulinum poisoning
ClostridiumdifficileColitis
ClostridiumperfringensFood poisoning, gas gangrene
ClostridiumtetaniTetanus

Table D4

Phylum Fusobacteria
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
FusobacteriiaFusobacteriumPeriodontal disease, Lemierre syndrome, skin ulcers
StreptobacillusmoniliformisRat-bite fever

Table D5

Phylum Proteobacteria
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
AlphaproteobacteriaAnaplasmaphagocytophilumHuman granulocytic anaplasmosis
BartonellahenselaePeliosis hepatitis, bacillary angiomatosis, endocarditis, bacteremia
BartonellaquintanaTrench fever
BrucellamelitensisOvine brucellosis
EhrlichiachaffeensisHuman monocytic ehrlichiosis
RickettsiaprowazekiiEpidemic typhus
RickettsiarickettsiiRocky Mountain spotted fever
RickettsiatyphiMurine typhus
BetaproteobacteriaBordetellapertussisPertussis
EikenellaBite-injury infections
NeisseriagonorrhoeaeGonorrhea
NeisseriameningitidisMeningitis
Spirillumminus (alt. minor)Sodoku (rat-bite fever)
EpsilonproteobacteriaCampylobacterjejuniGastroenteritis, Guillain-Barré syndrome
HelicobacterpyloriGastric ulcers
GammaproteobacteriaAeromonashydrophilaDysenteric gastroenteritis
EnterobacterUrinary and respiratory infections
CoxiellaburnetiiQ fever
Escherichiacoli
Strains:
shiga toxin-producing (STEC) (e.g., O157:H7) also called enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) or verocytotoxin-producing E. coli (VTEC)
Foodborne diarrhea outbreaks, hemorrhagic colitis, hemolytic-uremic syndrome
Escherichiacoli
Strain:
enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
Traveler’s diarrhea
Escherichiacoli
Strain:
enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
Diarrhea, especially in young children
Escherichiacoli
Strain:
enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
Diarrheal disease in children and travelers
Escherichiacoli
Strain:
diffusely adherent E. coli (DAEC)
Diarrheal disease of children
Escherichiacoli
Strain:
enteroinvasive E. coli (EPEC)
Bacillary dysentery, cells invade intestinal epithelial cells
FrancisellatularensisTularemia
HaemophilusducreyiChancroid
HaemophilusinfluenzaeBacteremia, pneumonia, meningitis
KlebsiellapneumoniaePneumonia, nosocomial infections
LegionellapneumophilaLegionnaire’s disease
MoraxellacatarrhalisOtitis media, bronchitis, sinusitis, laryngitis, pneumonia
PasteurellaPasteurellosis
PlesiomonasshigelloidesGastroenteritis
ProteusOpportunistic urinary tract infections
PseudomonasaeruginosaOpportunistic, nosocomial pneumonia and sepsis
SalmonellabongoriSalmonellosis
SalmonellaentericaSalmonellosis
SerratiaPneumonia, urinary tract infections
ShigellaboydiiDysentery
ShigelladysenteriaeDysentery
ShigellaflexneriDysentery
ShigellasonneiDysentery
VibriocholeraeCholera
VibrioparahemolyticusSeafood gastroenteritis
VibriovulnificusSeafood gastroenteritis, necrotizing wound infections, septicemia
YersiniaenterocoliticaYersiniosis
YersiniapestisPlague
YersiniapseudotuberculosisFar East scarlet-like fever

Table D6

Phylum Spirochaetes
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
SpirochaetiaBorreliaburgdorferiLyme disease
BorreliahermsiiTick-borne relapsing fever
BorreliarecurrentisLouse-borne relapsing fever
LeptospirainterrogansLeptospirosis
TreponemapallidumSyphilis, bejel, pinta, yaws

Table D7

Phylum Tenericutes
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
MollicutesMycoplasmagenitaliumUrethritis, cervicitis
MycoplasmahominisPelvic inflammatory disease, bacterial vaginosis
MycoplasmapneumoniaeMycoplasma pneumonia
UreaplasmaurealyticumUrethritis, fetal infections

Table D8

Viral Pathogens

There are several classification systems for viruses. The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) is the international scientific body responsible for the rules of viral classification. The ICTV system used here groups viruses based on genetic similarity and presumed monophyly. The viral classification system is separate from the classification system for cellular organisms. The ICTV system groups viruses within seven orders, which contain related families. There is, presently, a large number of unassigned families with unknown affinities to the seven orders. Three of these orders infect only Eubacteria, Archaea, or plants and do not appear in this table. Some families may be divided into subfamilies. There are also many unassigned genera. Like all taxonomies, viral taxonomy is in constant flux. The latest complete species list and classification can be obtained on the ICTV website.2

D Taxonomy of Clinically Relevant Microorganisms - Microbiology | OpenStax (1)

Figure D1

D Taxonomy of Clinically Relevant Microorganisms - Microbiology | OpenStax (2)

Figure D2

Fungal Pathogens

The Fungi are one of the kingdoms of the domain Eukarya. Fungi are most closely related to the animals and a few other small groups and more distantly related to the plants and other groups that formerly were categorized as protist. At present, the Fungi are divided into seven phyla (or divisions, a hold over from when fungi were studied with plants), but there are uncertainties about some relationships.3 Many groups of fungi, particularly those that were formerly classified in the phylum Zygomycota, which was not monophyletic, have uncertain relationships to the other fungi. The one species listed in this table that falls into this category is Rhizopus arrhizus. Fungal names are governed by the International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi, and Plants,4 but the International Commission on the Taxonomy of Fungi (ICTF) also promotes taxonomic work on fungi. One activity of the ICTF is publicizing name changes for medically and otherwise important fungal species. Many species that formerly had two names (one for the sexual form and one for the asexual form) are now being brought together under one name.

Fungal Pathogens
DivisionGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
AscomycotaAspergillusflavusOpportunistic aspergillosis
AspergillusfumigatusOpportunistic aspergillosis
BlastomycesdermatitidisBlastomycosis
CandidaalbicansThrush (candidiasis)
CoccidioidesimmitisValley fever (coccidioidomycosis)
EpidermophytonTinea corporis (ringworm), tinea cruris (jock itch), tinea pedis (althlete’s foot), tinea unguium (onychomycosis)
HistoplasmacapsulatumHistoplasmosis
MicrosporumTinea capitis (ringworm), tinea corpus (ringworm), other dermatophytoses
PneumocystisjiroveciiOpportunistic pneumonia
SporothrixschenckiiSporotrichosis (rose-handler’s disease)
Trichophytonmentagrophytes var. interdigitaleTinea barbae (barber’s itch), dermatophytoses
TrichophytonrubrumTinea corporis (ringworm), tinea cruris (jock itch), tinea pedis (althlete’s foot), tinea unguium (onychomycosis)
BasidiomycotaCryptococcusneoformansOpportunistic cryptococcosis, fungal meningitis, encephalitis
MalasseziaDandruff, tinea versicolor
uncertainRhizopusarrhizusMucormycosis

Table D9

Protozoan Pathogens

The relationships among the organisms (and thus their taxonomy) previously grouped under the name Protists are better understood than they were two or three decades ago, but this is still a work in progress. In 2005, the Eukarya were divided into six supergroups.5 The latest high-level classification combined two of the previous supergroups to produce a system comprising five supergroups.6 This classification was developed for the Society of Protozoologists, but it is not the only suggested approach. One of the five supergroups includes the animals, fungi, and some smaller protist groups. Another contains green plants and three algal groups. The other three supergroups (listed in the three tables below) contain the other protists, many of them which cause disease. In addition, there is a large number of protist groups whose relationships are not understood. In the three supergroups represented here we have indicated the phyla to which the listed pathogens belong.

Supergroup Amoebozoa
PhylumGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
AmoebozoaAcanthamoebaGranulomatous amoebic encephalitis, acanthamoebic keratitis
EntamoebahistolyticaEnterobiasis

Table D10

Supergroup SAR (Stramenopiles, Alveolata, Rhizaria)
PhylumGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
ApicomplexaBabesiaBabesiosis
CryptosporidiumhominisCryptosporidiosis
CryptosporidiumparvumCryptosporidiosis
CyclosporacayetanensisGastroenteritis
PlasmodiumfalciparumMalaria
Plasmodiummalariae“Benign” or “quartan” (3-day recurrent fever) malaria
Plasmodiumovale“Tertian” (2-day recurrent fever) malaria
Plasmodiumvivax“Benign” “tertian” (2-day recurrent fever) malaria
PlasmodiumknowlesiPrimate malaria capable of zoonosis, quotidian fever
ToxoplasmagondiiToxoplasmosis

Table D11

Supergroup Excavata
PhylumGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
MetamonadaGiardialambliaGiardiasis
Trichom*onasvagin*lisTrichom*oniasis
EuglenozoaLeishmaniabraziliensisLeishmaniasis
LeishmaniadonovaniLeishmaniasis
LeishmaniatropicaCutaneous leishmaniasis
TrypanosomabruceiAfrican sleeping sickness (African trypanosomiasis)
TrypanosomacruziChagas disease
PercolozoaNaegleriafowleriPrimary amoebic meningoencephalitis (naegleriasis)

Table D12

Parasitic Helminths

The taxonomy of parasitic worms, all of which belong to the kingdom Animalia still contains many uncertainties. The pathogenic species are found in two phyla: the Nematoda, or roundworms, and the Platyhelminthes, or flat worms. The Nematoda is tentatively divided into two classes7, one of which, Chromadorea, probably contains unrelated groups. The parasitic flatworms are contained within three classes of flatworm, of which two are important to humans, the trematodes and the cestodes.

Phylum Nematoda
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
ChromadoreaAncylostomacaninumDog hookworm infection
AncylostomaduodenaleOld World hookworm infection
AscarislumbricoidesAscariasis
EnterobiusvermicularisEnterobiasis (pin worm)
LoaloaLoa loa filariasis (eye worm)
NecatoramericanusNecatoriasis (New World hookworm infection)
StrongyloidesstercoralisStrongyloidiasis
EnopleaTrichinellaspiralisTrichinosis
TrichuristrichiuraTrichuriasis (whip worm infection)

Table D13

Phylum Platyhelminthes
ClassGenusSpecific EpithetRelated Diseases
TrematodaClonorchissinensisChinese liver fluke
FasciolopsisbuskiFasciolopsiasis
FasciolagiganticaFascioliasis
FasciolahepaticaFascioliasis
OpisthorchisfelineusOpisthorchiasis
OpisthorchisviverriniOpisthorchiasis
SchistosomahaematobiumUrinary schistosomiasis
SchistosomajaponicumSchistosomiasis
SchistosomamansoniIntestinal schistosomiasis
CestodaDiphyllobothriumlatumDiphyllobothriosis
EchinococcusgranulosusHydatid cysts (cystic echinococcosis)
EchinococcusmultilocularisEchinococcosis
TaeniaasiaticaIntestinal taeniasis
TaeniasaginataIntestinal taeniasis
TaeniasoliumIntestinal taeniasis, cysticercosis

Table D14

D Taxonomy of Clinically Relevant Microorganisms - Microbiology | OpenStax (2024)
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