Clinical meaning
Cervicitis is inflammation of the uterine cervix, most commonly caused by sexually transmitted pathogens. The cervical transformation zone - where columnar epithelium meets squamous epithelium - is particularly vulnerable to infection due to its single-layer columnar cells and high density of immune cells.
Chlamydia trachomatis has a unique biphasic developmental cycle. The elementary body (EB) is the infectious extracellular form - metabolically inert, resistant to environmental stress, with a rigid disulfide-cross-linked outer membrane. EBs attach to host columnar epithelial cells via heparan sulfate proteoglycans and MOMP (Major Outer Membrane Protein) interaction with host cell receptors. Following receptor-mediated endocytosis, EBs reside within membrane-bound inclusions that evade lysosomal fusion through type III secretion system (T3SS) effector proteins (Inc proteins - IncA, IncD, IncG) that modify the inclusion membrane. Within 6-8 hours, EBs differentiate into reticulate bodies (RBs) - the metabolically active, non-infectious intracellular form that replicates by binary fission. After 48-72 hours, RBs condense back into EBs, and the inclusion ruptures (or is extruded), releasing 200-1000 infectious EBs to infect adjacent cells. Chlamydia induces a chronic inflammatory response dominated by Th1 cytokines (IFN-γ, IL-12) and tissue remodeling factors that can cause tubal scarring and infertility.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae evades host immunity through several molecular mechanisms. Antigenic variation of pili (via RecA-mediated gene conversion at the pilE/pilS loci) and opacity proteins (Opa) allows continuous immune evasion. Porin protein PorB inserts into host cell membranes, inhibiting phagosome-lysosome fusion and inducing host cell apoptosis of neutrophils. Gonococcal IgA1 protease cleaves mucosal IgA, neutralizing a key first-line mucosal defense. Lipooligosaccharide (LOS) sialylation with host-derived sialic acid provides molecular mimicry, reducing complement activation. Gonococcal infection triggers a robust neutrophilic response (mucopurulent discharge), but the organism survives within neutrophils through catalase and superoxide dismutase production.