CBG22 Flashcards

1
Q

What are cells that support viral infection?

A

permissive

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2
Q

What does a productive infection often lead to?

A

cytopathic effects

changes in cell

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3
Q

What does infection of a non permissive cell lead to?

A

abortive or restrictive infection

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4
Q

What is a persistent infection?

A

dont produce much

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5
Q

What is a chronic infection?

A

low level over a long period of time

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6
Q

What does a cytodical productive infection lead to?

A

death, releasese of infectious virus, morphological biochemical and physiological change and DNA degradation.

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7
Q

What does a cytodical abortive infection lead to?

A

variable cell survival
no relase of virus
barable morphological, biochemical and physiological changes
maybe dna mutation

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8
Q

What does a laten infection lead to?

A

survival, no changes

perhaps dna mutation

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9
Q

What does chronic infectoiin lead to?

A
variablle affects
release of virus
variable morphological effects
dont strongly effect biochemistry or physiology
may cause mutations
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10
Q

What do morphological effects include?

A

changes to nucleus (nuclear inclusion)
cytoskeleton
giant cell fromation

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11
Q

How can a virus be diagnosed by looking at cytoskeleton?

example

A

by looking at affects on cytoskeleton
seen via light microscope
eg. nucelear and cytoplasmic inclusion in cell infected by cytomegalovirus

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12
Q

What affect do measles and retroviruses have on cells that can be seen under the light microscope?

A

syncita produced by fusion of viral envelope with uninfected cells.

  • virion entering cell causes production of viral fusion proteins
  • causes cell to fuse more than one nucleus
  • syncitial cell
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13
Q

What are the effects of viruses on cell biochemistry and physiology?

A
  1. activation of cellular proteins and kinases and transcription factors.
  2. activation of cellular oncogenes, cell cycle arrest
  3. inhibition of DNA synthesis
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14
Q

What genetic effects can viruses have on host cells?

A

transformation , generalised chromosome damage.

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15
Q

What happened to the viral syncitin gene?

A

stolen from viruses and domesticated in mammals
twice in primates
involved in placental formation

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16
Q

What is the modern HIV medicine?

A

a combination of inhibitors

- as in interferon

17
Q

What is an example of an induced defence?

A

via interferon
-alpha and beta are the main antiviral defences in the body
interferon acts to induce viral state in cells ‘siege state’
from point of infection
stimulated by viral RNA

18
Q

What does interferon do?

A

as it is easy for virus to develop a mutation interferon activates a variety of inhibitors at the same time to target differetn stages of life cycle.

  1. Transcription inhibitors. - block mrna synthesis
  2. Translation inhibitors - block mrna, via cap and methylation- methylase, protein kinase, phosphodiesterase
  3. protein processing inhibitor - blocks protein glycosylation
  4. virus maturation inhibitors - blocks budding and glycoprotein maturation
19
Q

What can host defences to viruses be?

A

induced or non induced.
viral signals induce antibody defences to ready for infection
- not on all the time as slow down transcription/lation so inefficient

20
Q

What is TIP?

A
translation inhibitory protein
anti viral defence protein 
activated by interferon
once translated binds to ribosomes making it more particular about mRNA  it transaltes
only translates mrna with cap
21
Q

What mechanism does influenza have to overcome TIP?

A

cap snatching mechanism

not only increases viral translation but decreases host

22
Q

What is an example of a non induced defence?

A

APOBEC3G which defends against retroviruses.
enters viron and causes C->U G->A on coding strand- destroys virus
via hypermutation
- hits 30% of viruses that infect cells

23
Q

How does TRIM5 work?

A

act against uncoatinf of virus by binding to capsid protein- chimp
-TRIM5 blocks HIV in chimps
our TRIM5 blocks chimp RV

24
Q

What is RSV?

A

Rous Sarcoma Virus
Retrovirus
causes sarcoma in chickens
+ sense
src was taken up by RSV and incorperated into genome
src gene is an oncogene- stimualtes uncontrolled mitosis
src is non essential but increases its virulance

25
Q

What defence has HIV developed against APOBEC3G?

A

vif gene which binds to APOBEC3G and shunts it into degradation pathway.

26
Q

What did peyton do?

A

put chicken tumour extract into healthy chicken. tumour had virus. peyton isolated RSV
SRC gene produces tumours/proteins which make them

27
Q

What affect does papillomavirus have on cell?

A

causes cell transformation
= DNA virus
accidental transformation
not part of life cycle

28
Q

What is a benign growth/wart an example of?

A

accidental integration to host DNA of viral episome
causes unbalanced production of viral replication proteins
- causes malignant tumour
abortative - only half virus is reproduced

29
Q

What is an abortive infection?

A

Abortive infection, a viral infection that infects a cell without reproducing into more infectious viruses.

30
Q

What is a non permissive cell?

A

condition which does not support the replication of a mutant gene of a virus or bacteriophage