Virology Flashcards

1
Q

What info does the genome need encoded?

A
  • replication and efficient expression of genome
  • assembly and packaging of genome
  • regulation and timing of the reproductive cycle
  • modulation of host defences
  • spread to other cells and hosts
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2
Q

What is the difference between +ve and -ve sense ssRNA?

A

+ve can encode straight away while -ve must be converted to +ve first

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3
Q

What are ds DNA viruses?

A

Poxvirus
Herpesvirus
papilliomavirus
addenovirus

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4
Q

What are ds RNA viruses?

A

Reovirus

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5
Q

What are ss DNA viruses?

A

parvovirus

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6
Q

What are ds RNA viruses with a RNA intermediate?

A

hepadenaviridae

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7
Q

What are -ve sense ss RNA viruses?

A

orthomyxovirus
paramyxovirus
rhabdovirus

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8
Q

What are +ve sense ss RNA virsues?

A

calicivirus
coronavirus
flavivirus

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9
Q

What are ss RNA viruses with a DNA intemediate?

A

retrovirus

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10
Q

What is the function of viral proteins?

A

Protection of genome
- Assembly of a stable protective shell
- specific recognition and packaging of nucleic acid
- interaction with host cell membranes

Delivery of genome
- Binding to external receptors on host cells
- transmission of signals that frees the genome
- induction of fusion with the host cell membranes

Other
- Viral replication

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11
Q

What is the capsid made of?

A

capsomer subunits

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12
Q

What is the function of the capsid?

A

packaging the genome and essential enzymes, protection from nucleases and UV light

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13
Q

What are the different ways viral proteins can be packaged?

A

icosohedral symmetry
helical
complex

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14
Q

What viruses have a lipid bilayer?

A

many icosohedral symmetry viruses and most helical

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15
Q

What ways can a virus enter the body?

A

Respiratory
Oral
Cutaneous

percutaneous injection
sexually transmitted

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16
Q

What happens in lytic infection?

A
  • many acute infections end in cell death - complete loss of cell function and release of new viral particles Cytopathic effect
  • Release of virus from one cell can infect 1000s of new cells
  • extensive loss of function - loss of mucocilliary clerarance and localised respiratory disease
  • general multisystem disease (canine dystemper)
17
Q

What happens in latent infection?

A
  • Virus infection is dormant and not replicating in cells (transcriptional silence) - no cell death
  • can persit for lifetime of host
  • latently infected animals act as source of infection for others
18
Q

What is the significance of a persistant infection?

A
  • different to latent as cells continually make and shed new viruses
  • associated with immune system failure to clear a viral infection
19
Q

What is the inflammatory response to a viral infection?

A

Virus is detected by pattern recofnition receptors ( → induces inflamatory cytokine (TNF-a, IL-6/12) and type 1 interferon (IFN-a/b) release
- interferons produced are secreted and bind to receptors on cells
- signals synthesis of proteins with antiviral activity

20
Q

How does a fever form?

A
  • infection leads to interferon and TNFa production
  • binds to opiod receptors on nerve cells in the hypothalamus
  • activates COX-2 leading to increased PGE2
  • altered firing rate of temperature sensitive neurones in the anterior hypothalamus
21
Q

What are examples of sickness behaviour?

A
  • decreased motor activity
  • Social withdrawal reduced responsiveness
  • Reduced food and water intake
  • Increased slow-wave sleep
  • Altered cognition
  • Increased pain sensitivity
22
Q

How are sickeness behaviours mediated?

A

pro-inflammatory cytokines on the CNS released in response to pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)

23
Q

How does FMD infect the host cells?

A

-FMD enters host by ingestion/inhalation from infected pastures & sets up a primary oro-nasal infection
-FMD attaches to integrins, binding by an RGD (amino acid triplet) motif in the virus capsid protein which mimics the natural ligand on matrix proteins
-Virus spreads from oropharynx (primary infection: first detected on tonsillar crypts, in epithelium) to other sites

24
Q

What are the concequences of FMD on the host animal?

A

-Causes shutdown of host cell protein synthesis
-Loss of host cell integrity & cell death with lysis (=cytolytic infection) > release of infectious virus
-Virus spreads locally to basal epithelial cells with high integrin expression
-Presence of virus causes inflammatory response both in the epithelium & in adjacent tissues, through influx of immune cells to site of infection
(several round of viral replication needed before macroscopic lesions appear)

25
Q

What are the 6 phases of a plaque assay?

A

Inoculation
Virus attachement
Uncoating
Eclipse phase
virus assembly
cell lysis

26
Q

What happens during uncoating?

A

virus enters the cells and releases its nucleic acid into the cell, for this to happen the virus has to be dismantled inside the cell

27
Q

What happens during the eclipse phase?

A

new virus proteins and nucleic acids are being synthesised. No infectious virus particles can be detected

28
Q

What is a summery of virus replication?

A
  • Attachment to plasma
  • Enter into cytoplasm and nucleus
  • Un-coating of virus particle
  • Synthesis of mRNA and protein
  • Replication of nucleic acid
  • Virus assembly
  • Exit of cell
29
Q

What region of the mRNA encodes proteins?

A

Open reading frame

30
Q

How do you convert +ve sense ssRNA into +ve mRNA?

A
  • reverse transcriptase copies it into double stranded DNA
  • integrase integrates this into the host genome
  • the host uses transcription and RNA polymerase to make mRNA