Pathogen

A pathogen is a biological agent that can cause disease, otherwise known as an infectious agent. They are disease causing organisms that grow and multiply within a host.

There are many types of pathogens. Listed on this page (below) are some specific examples of pathogens, shown organized into major categories. The term "pathogen" is most often applied to infectious biological agents that disrupt the normal physiology of multicellular animals or plants. There are also infectious agents that disrupt the normal physiology of unicellular organisms from all of the kingdoms (see Viruses, below). For example, the cells of a pathogenic strain of Escherichia coli may themselves be infected and destroyed by a virus. While many pathogenic viruses directly infect human cells, some viruses can indirectly effect human health by modulating the pathogenicity of bacteria, fungi or protozoa that infect humans.

Table of contents
1 Bacteria
2 Viruseses
3 Subviral pathogens
4 Infectious fungi
5 Parasites
6 See also

Bacteria

Viruseses

Viruses can modulate the effects of fungal and bacterial pathogens

Subviral pathogens

Infectious fungi

Parasites

See also






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