lecture 10 - viruses 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is smallpox?

A

Widely endemic in Europe/Asia
Introduced to the Americas

Exclusively human disease
Spread by person-person contact

Starts as respiratory infection
High rate of mortality 20-30%
Lead to high level of immunity

Closely related to other pox viruses which infect other animal species.
DNA virus (double strand)
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2
Q

Describe the immunisation and eradication of smallpox

A

Variolation (1500 – 1700 Asia)
inoculation against smallpox using
live smallpox virus (0.5-2% fatality)

  1. Edward Jenner:
    vaccination with cowpox (vacca = cow)

19th Century:
vaccination with Vaccinia virus

1960’s campaign to eradicate smallpox
Last case in 1977
Extinct ~1979

Smallpox eradication was possible because:

Exclusive to humans
No hidden carriers (obvious disease)
Only one serotype
Vaccination 100% successful

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3
Q

What are human herpesviruses?

A

dsDNA viruses with relatively large genomes (80 – 200 genes)

Lifelong infections

Latent cycle –
few viral proteins expressed
no virions produced

Lytic cycle –
all viral proteins expressed
virions produced to infect new cells (reactivation)

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4
Q

What are herpes simplex viruses?

A

HSV-1: Infects nerve cells. During primary infection and reactivation it manifests as ‘cold sores’. Reactivation due to “stress”.

HSV-2: genital

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5
Q

What is the polio virus?

A

Positive strand ssRNA virus

Linear genome

Related to Rhinovirus (colds)
& Foot and Mouth virus.

Small (28nm)

Genome codes 4 proteins

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6
Q

What is poliomyelitis?

A

Oral route of infection.
Infects gut, then invades blood.
Targets nerve cells (specific receptor) and destroys them.
Leads to paralysis of infected tissues.

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7
Q

How could vaccination against the polio virus work?

A

Importantly:

No asymptomatic carriers for Poliovirus in immunocompetent individuals

No non-primate reservoir in nature

Infection control and prevention could lead to worldwide eradication.

Inactivated (dead) and attenuated (live) vaccines

Inactivated (killed): treated with formaldehyde
(Salk, 1955)
Prevents entry to nerve cells, but infection of gut remains.

Attenuated: attenuated (cell culture).
Sabin 1959.
Induces immunity in the gut, prevents infection.

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8
Q

Discuss the advantages vs disadvantages of Inactivated vs Attenuated polio vaccines

A
Inactivated (killed):
Advantages:
Effective
Can be incorporated into routine immunizations with DPT
Good stability in transport and storage
No risk for poliomyelitis in recipients and contacts
Safe for immunodeficient individuals
Disadvantages:
Does not induce local (gut) immunity
Booster vaccines required
Administered as injection
Higher community vaccination levels required
Attenuated (live):
Advantages:
Effective
Lifelong immunity
Induces immune (antibody) response similar to natural infection
Indirect community immunization through spread of the attenuated virus
Administration (oral) 
Booster vaccines not required
Disadvantages:
Vaccine-induced (iatrogenic) poliomyelitis
Spread to contacts without consent
Unsafe for immunodeficient individuals
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9
Q

What is influenza?

A
Influenza A, B, and C serotypes
 Negative ssRNA virus
Serotype A = most serious
Related to mumps and measles viruses
ssRNA negative strand virus

Segmented genome = 8 fragments
Produce 10 proteins

Nucleoprotein = helical

No defined shape = polymorphic

Enveloped

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10
Q

Describe the envelope structure of influenza

A

Two important proteins:

Hemagglutinin (HA) : Attaches to host receptors

Neuraminidase (NA) : Breaks down sialic acid to allow budding

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11
Q

Describe antigenic variation in influenza

A

Antigenic drift - Minor mutations occur as a result of the low fidelity viral polymerase.

Antigenic shift - major reassortment of genome segments - Viruses infecting different species recombine (in a permissive host) leading to major genomic changes (reassortment of viral genome).

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12
Q

What are influenza epidemics and pandemics?

A

Epidemics (seasonal flu)
Associated with antigenic drifts
Cause seasonal flu outbreaks (localised)
Cycle: every 2 – 3 years

Pandemics
Associated with antigenic shifts
Worldwide outbreaks – increased severity
Cycle: every 10 – 40 years

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13
Q

What are influenza reservoirs?

A

Many flu viruses found in
Birds and pigs.

Pathogenic strain = H5N1

Can spread to other animals
Usually not transmissible from human to human.

Serious concerns for antigenic shift
or progressive antigenic drift that would result in human-to-human transmission.

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14
Q

What are anti-influenza drugs?

A

Drugs: Amantidine

Target: M2 protein on envelope.

Mode of action: Stops un-coating of virus in the cell;

Some strains of influenza resist through mutation of M2

Drugs: Oseltamivir (Tamiflu), Zanamivir (Relenza)

Target: Neuraminidase on envelope

Mode of action: Stops budding of virus

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15
Q

Describe flu vaccination

A

Killed vaccine

Comprise at least 3 strains

80-90% effective.

Need to predict future strain
Can take 6-9 months

Live cold adapted strain

 Recombinant HA vaccine
Vaccine targeted to:
	Elderly
	Young children
	Patients with respiratory conditions
	Individuals in high risk occupations (NHS workers)
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16
Q

What is HIV?

A

HIV is a retrovirus = RNA virus which replicates through a DNA intermediate
HIV-1 99% of infections
HIV-2 is less virulent (confined to W. Africa)
Single strand RNA virus (2 copies per virion)
Enveloped virus
The HIV genome contains 3 regions:
1. gag internal structural proteins
2. pol Reverse transcriptase + integrase
3. env envelope protein

17
Q

What are the origins of HIV infection?

A

HIV originated from Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV)

SIV infects apes (Chimpanzees and Gorillas in Africa)

Hypothesized that Zoonosis (species jump) occurred during handling of infected meat (due to a cut or bite)

18
Q

Describe HIV disease pathology (AIDS)

A

Infection

1) Infects cells of the immune system
(T-lymphocytes and macrophages)

2) Progressively destroys immune cells, impairs their function and reduces numbers
3) Weakening of the immune system results in increased susceptibility to opportunistic infections
4) Inability to battle secondary infections leads to disease and death

Transmission occurs via bodily fluid exchange

High risk activities:
Intravenous drug use
Unprotected sex
Blood (Transfusion prior to screening)

19
Q

What are the features associated with AIDS?

A

Definitive Diagnostics (1993):

Very Low CD4+ T-cell counts:

less than 200 / mm3 whole blood
or
less than 15% of B+T lymphocyte population

Or

AIDS-specific conditions:

Fungal infections: candidiasis, cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis,
Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia

Bacterial infections: Mycobacterium, cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis

Viral cancers: Kaposi’s sarcoma, Hodgkin’s Disease, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma

20
Q

How does AIDS affect Kaposi’s sarcoma?

A

Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpes virus

Persistent infection

KSHV infects immune cells and endothelial cells

Low prevalence in Northwestern Europe and North America

Endemic in sub-Saharan African and para-Mediterranean countries

Infection is largely asymptomatic

but introduction of HIV in US population dramatically increased incidence of what was previously a very rare disease
treated with highly active antiretroviral therapies in early 90s
remains the most common cancer among HIV-infected people

21
Q

How does antiretroviral therapy work as an AIDS treatment?

A

Reverse transcription inhibitors
Stop the function of the viral reverse transcriptase; prevent generation of viral DNA.
First type of treatment introduced in 1987

Protease inhibitors
Stop the function of the viral protease that is required for processing of viral proteins and formation of new virions

Integrase inhibitors
Prevent integration of viral DNA in the host genome; inhibit viral integrase

Fusion inhibitors
Prevent the binding and fusion of HIV particles to target cells

22
Q

What are the effects of plant viruses?

A

Cause a wide range of effects:

Stunted growth
Zonation of petals
Yellowing of leaves Infect a wide range of plants:

Wheat, corn and rice
Reduce yields by >50%
Yet highly valuable
tulips

23
Q

How does plant virus infection take place?

A
Do not use host receptors
Enter via wounds
Can use vectors (e.g. insects)
Pass from cell to cell by plasmodesmata
e.g. tobacco mosaic virus.