Intro to Virology Flashcards

1
Q

some viruses have lipid envelopes, which are derived from….

A

host membrane (cell, organelle, etc)

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2
Q

what is the contained in the nucleocapsid (core) of a virion?

A

nucleic acid (RNA OR DNA, not both) and protein capsid

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3
Q

where are glycoprotein spikes found in virions?

A

glycoprotein spikes are found in the envelope (lipid bilayer, host-derived)

viruses can only infect cells that have a receptor for their glycoprotein spike

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4
Q

by convention, what is (+)strand RNA vs (-)strand RNA in classifying viruses?

A

(+)strand = message strand
(-)strand = opposite

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5
Q

icosohedral nucleocapsid

A

20-faced structure of virion

protomer = protein subunits
capsomere = made up of protomers

*note that if virion does not have lipid envelope, proteins sticking out of the icosohedral capsid will serve as spike proteins that bind host receptors

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6
Q

what are 3 shapes virion nucleocapsids can have?

A
  1. icosohedral (20 faces)
  2. helical
  3. complex
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7
Q

what are the steps of viral replication? (5)

A
  1. spikes (proteins or glycoproteins) bind receptors already present (not meant for viruses)
  2. entry via endocytosis or fusion, uncoating
  3. synthesis of non-structural proteins (to make DNA/RNA)
  4. genome replication, synthesis of structural proteins, packaging into nucleocapsid
  5. (sometimes acquisition of envelope from host), exit cell via budding or lysis
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8
Q

virions can enter host cells by either endocytosis or fusion with lipid membranes (if enveloped) - how might fusion be helpful for the immune system?

A

following fusion with plasma membrane, some spike glycoproteins are left on the cell surface and can be used as red flags for the immune system

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9
Q

how to enveloped vs non-enveloped viruses typically exit cells?

A

enveloped viruses tropically exit via budding (how they acquire the envelope)

non-enveloped viruses typically exit via host cell lysis

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10
Q

what is a viral plaque assay

A

tubes with monolayers of cells

viruses are added and form “punch holes” (plaques) through the monolayer of cells if they are able to infect/kill them and move to the next layer

used to determine viral concentration in the sample

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11
Q

what is a hemagglutination inhibition test for viral infections?

A

to test titter in the serum of antibodies against a certain virus

some viruses are able to naturally agglutinate RBC - add RBC + antiviral antibodies from serum + viruses —> viruses are neutralized, hemagglutination is inhibited

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