Lecture 8 - Segmented RNA Viruses Flashcards

1
Q

Of the segmented RNA viruses, ______ is the most common and _____ is the least common.

A

Influenza

Bunyavirus

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2
Q

Keep in mind that ALL segmented RNA viruses encode/package their own ______ for transcription and replication, and co-infection of a host cell by two viruses from the same genus permits _______ of the genome.

A

Polymerases

Reassortment

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3
Q

Influenza is of the ______ family. Vaccines are used to protect again ___ and ___ of the three (A, B, and C strains.)

A

Orthomixaviridae

A and B

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4
Q

Seasonal flu epidemics are caused by Antigenic _____ (a direct result of ______ errors) while Pandemics are caused by Antigenic _____ (due to ______, introducing a segment from an animal source.)

A

Drift

Polymerase errors

Shift

Reassortment

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5
Q

One of the key differences between influenza and rhinovirus infection is the former involves the ______ respiratory tract (without viremia) while the latter involves just the _____.

A

Entire

Upper

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6
Q

Children are the most significant vector for influenza because they shed the virus for _____ as opposed to days for adults.

A

Weeks

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7
Q

The influenza virus is an enveloped virus that encodes 2 envelope glycoproteins which are the basis for the classification into _____. The first is _____ (N) and the second is _____ (H), each of which is encoded in one of the 8 segments of the genome.

A

Neuraminidase

Hemagglutinin

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8
Q

If two H glycoproteins differ by ____% or less of their AAs, they are considered the same subtype. They are typically considered different subtypes if the difference is greater than ____%.

A

15%

20%

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9
Q

Human Abs are targeted against one of the 5 _____ heads (A, B, C, D, and E.)

A

Globular heads

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10
Q

Only when a mutation is made during creation of ___RNA for replication or during the synthesis of vRNA from the ___RNA can the mutation be passed to progeny.

A

cRNA

cRNA

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11
Q

_____ are the reservoirs for ALL influenza viruses.

A

Water foul

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12
Q

____ are thought to be the mixing vessels for reassortment between avian flu and human flu viruses.

A

Pigs

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13
Q

There are 4 key characteristics of a Pandemic:

  1. Virus breaks ____ barrier
  2. New ____ of virus is detected in Humans
  3. Virus is highly _____
  4. Virus is easily _____ between humans
A

Species barrier

Subtype

Pathogenic

Transmitted

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14
Q

Avian flu (H__N__) had high _____, but negligible _____ between humans. Wet markets in SE Asia were considered the main reservoirs.

A

Pathogenicity

Transmissibility

H5N1

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15
Q

Swine flu (H__N__) had low ______ but high ______. It was a ___ reassortment, containing Human, Avian, and Swine subunits.

A

H1N1

Pathogenicity

Transmissibility

Triple

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16
Q

Four major viral factors affecting pathogenesis are:

  1. _____ specificity (recognition of particular glycosidic bonds)
  2. _____ efficiency
  3. Transmissibility
  4. ____-infection with bacteria.
A

Receptor

Replication

Co-infection

17
Q

2 major host factors affecting pathogenesis are:

  1. overall _____ response (over reaction/more than is helpful.)
  2. type ___ interferon response.
A

Immune response

Type I interferon

18
Q

There are 2 major considerations for replication efficiency of influenza:

  1. The influenza polymerase is species specific
  2. The H protein must be activated by host _____. Strains that are highly activated are much more pathogenic.
A

Protease

19
Q

Neuraminidase aids in transmissibility as does the enhanced ____ transmission in lower temp and humidity (explains why flu season is in colder months.)

A

Aerosol

20
Q

There are 2 considerations for co-infection of influenza with bacteria:

  1. Bacterial _____ can contribute to activation of influenza ____ protein.
  2. Influenza N protein can cleave ____ ____ which would otherwise work to inhibit bacterial binding to host cells.
A

Proteases

H protein

Sialic Acid

21
Q

Influenza ___ protein inhibits host ____ response to dsRNA.

A

NS1

Interferon

22
Q

There are a few antivirals for influenza treatment. Amantadine and Rimantadine target the viral ____ protein which helps with viral uncoating. Oseltamivir and Zanamivir (brand name Tamiflu) target the viral ___ protein to inhibit its ability to cleave sialic acid.

A

M2 protein

NA protein

23
Q

Bunyaviruses are the least common in humans (most prevalent in Asia), and have a genome comprised of ___ segments. Humans are a dead-end host.

A

3

24
Q

_____ is the most prevalent encaphalitis-causing Bunyavirus while _____ is the most common hemorrhagic-causing.

A

La Crosse

Hanta

25
Q

Hantavirus is transmitted to humans via a non-arboviral route: dried rodent _____. Following heavy rain seasons there is more vegetation, so increase in rodent population –> greater chance of infection. Hanta is the only Bunyavirus not transmitted through an arthropod vector.

A

Feces

26
Q

The key takeaway about Bunyaviral diseases is they result primarily from infections of ____ or ____ cells. Infection of ____ presents as aseptic (non-bacterial) meningits or encephalitis (rare in US with low fatality.) Infection of ____ cells presents with ____ fever and has higher fatality rates.

A

Neurons

Endothelial

Neurons - aseptic meningitis or encephalitis

Endothelial cells - Hemorrhagic fever

27
Q

Arenaviruses have ___ RNA segments, and like Flu and Bunya, it is an enveloped virus that packages its own _____.

A

Polymerase

28
Q

Human to human transmission of Arenaviruses is only seen in Lassa (semen transmission), LCMV (in ____) or exposure to infected tissues of hemorrhagic viruses. In most other ways it’s similar to Bunyaviruses (transmission via rodent excreta etc…)

A

Utero

29
Q

LCMV is a congenital ____, causing birth defects like chorioretinitis or optic atrophy. It is an Arenavirus that affects the ____ (not usually hemorrhagic, but can be in immunosuppresed –> organ transplant recipients.) Early replication occurs in ______ and Dendritic cells and can establish persistent infection.

A

Teratogen

CNS

Macrophages

30
Q

Big takeaway for the process of pathogenesis in ALL hemorrhagic fevers is as follows:

Initial infection typically occurs in ____ or dendritic cells with a few major outcomes:

  1. disruption of ____ that leads to apop of lymphocytes
  2. release of chemokines from infected _____ to recruit naive _____ (continue the infection)
  3. Initiation of DIC
  4. Disruption of porocity of ____ cells –> edema.
A

Macrophages

Cytokines

Macrophages

Macrophages

Endothelial cells

31
Q

Ribavirin is an antiviral drug that is a _____ analog. The idea is to push viral replication toward _____ catastrophe (accumulation of too many mutations due to Polymerase _____.)

A

Nucleoside

Error Catastrophe

Polymerase Errors

32
Q

Rotavirus belongs to the _____ family. It has a ____-layered protein capsid and does not have an _____. It is transmitted via ___/___. The capsid contains all the enzymes necessary for mRNA production. Its genome is comprised of ____ segments of ___RNA. It is the primary agent of sever ________ in infants and young children worldwide. It’s the only human virus that encodes a ____. Disease is treated with hydration and electrolytes.

A

Reoviridae

Double-layered

Fecal/Oral

11 segments

dsRNA

Gastroenteritis

Toxin

33
Q

One of the unique features of Rotavirus infection is the virion retains its ______ capsid layer (protects against host enzymes that degrade dsRNA.)

A

Inner capsid layer

34
Q

Mechs of Rotavirus-induced diarrhea come from two interactions with the host:

  1. Malabsorptive component–> Kills ______ cells of small intestine and alters ____ junctions and actin skeleton (increased permeability.)
  2. Secretory component –> virally encoded NSP4 toxin activates ____ nervous system.
A

Epithelial cells

Tight junctions

Enteric