Lecture 21 - Poliovirus Flashcards

1
Q

What genome type do Polioviruses have?

A

(+) ssRNA

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2
Q

What effect does Polio generally cause people?

A

paralysis

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3
Q

Has Polio been eradicated?

A

no

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4
Q

What disease does Poliovirus cause?

A

Poliomyelitis

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5
Q

What type of virus is Poliovirus? What does that mean?

A

enterovirus = intestines = where the virus likes to infect

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6
Q

What can be done with a (+)ssRNA? What is it’s template? How can it be translated into protein?

A

(+)ssRNA –> (-)ssRNA = template to make more (+)ssRNA | can be directly translated into protein

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7
Q

Where do enteroviruses multiply?

A

mucosa of the gut

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8
Q

How serious are most of the diseases due to enteroviruses?

A

usually mild and result in full recovery of the patients

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9
Q

What viral family are Polioviruses part of?

A

Picornaviridae

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10
Q

What does it tell us about Polioviruses due to the fact that they are very resistant to most of the antimicrobials used to target viruses?

A

can stick around for a long time and hard to eliminate it

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11
Q

Where is VP4 found?

A

inside of capsid

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12
Q

Where is the VPg protein found? At end of the genome?

A

found on the RNA (+ss) genome | 5’ end

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13
Q

What is VPg used for?

A

replication, serves as a protein primer

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14
Q

What significant structure is at the 5’ end? What purpose does it serve?

A

clover-leaf tRNA-like structure = serves as an internal ribosomal entry site (IRES)

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15
Q

What does the internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) mean?

A

ribosomes can enter with that and do not need to rely on a 5’ cap

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16
Q

Why does the Polioviral genome don’t need to acquire a 5’ cap?

A

it has an IRES that the ribosome can bind to and start translation

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17
Q

For a monocistronic genome, how does the Poliovirus carry out translation for the different proteins it needs?

A

encodes a POLYPROTEIN precursor = gets cleaved and cut up to different proteins

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18
Q

What is the receptor for Poliovirus?

A

CD155 (poliovirus receptor PVR)

19
Q

What are the 2 lymphoid tissues that poliovirus infects?

A

Peyer’s patches and tonsils

20
Q

Which viral proteins form a pore on the host cell membrane?

A

VP1 and VP4

21
Q

Where are Peyer’s patches found?

A

along the intestines

22
Q

Where does the injection of the Poliovirus genome occur?

A

at the cell membrane or in early endosomes after being endocytosed

23
Q

After the Poliovirus genome enters the cytoplasm, what immediately occurs?

A

VPg is removed = translation can happen efficiently

24
Q

After translation of the Poliovirus genome, what happens next?

A

polyprotein = processed via protease

25
Q

In terms of the replication process, what happens first?

A

protein products for viral RNA replication transported to membrane-bound vesicles

26
Q

During genome replication, what happens after the proteins are transported to membrane-bound vesicles?

A

VPg acts as a protein primer = make (-)ssRNA –> dsRNA –> (+)ssRNA

27
Q

Why must genome replication occur within membrane-bound vesicles?

A

due to dsRNA intermediate

28
Q

How does Poliovirus exit the cell?

A

via lysis

29
Q

What is the portal of entry of Poliovirus?

A

mouth

30
Q

What is the transmission of Poliovirus?

A

fecal-oral or oral-oral

31
Q

What percent of poliovirus infections causes mild symptoms? What are these mild symptoms?

A

4-8% = malaise, fever, flu-like, GI disturbances

32
Q

What percent of poliovirus infections cause paralysis? What are characteristics of this paralysis?

A

1-2% = flaccid paralysis leading to inflammation and destruction of neurons; paralysis can be asymmetric

33
Q

What is the defining symptom of Poliomyelitis?

A

flaccid paralysis

34
Q

What is flaccid paralysis?

A

can’t move but limbs are limpy

35
Q

What are the 3 forms of paralytic poliomyelitis?

A

spinal, bulbar, bulbospinal

36
Q

What is the spinal paralytic form of poliomyelitis?

A

when the virus infects lower spinal cord = asymmetric/symmetric paralysis due to spinal cord

37
Q

What is the bulbar paralytic form of poliomyelitis?

A

muscle weakness; cannot talk or swallow, hard time breathing = lung muscle impacted | iron-lung

38
Q

What is the bulbospinal paralytic form of poliomyelitis?

A

combination of the bulbar and spinal paralytic forms of poliomyelitis

39
Q

What is the transient viremia stage and when during the Poliovirus pathogenesis does it occur?

A

virus is in the blood for a short time | after infects and replicates initial sites of infection

40
Q

How does the virus get into the central nervous system?

A

through the blood

41
Q

Where and when did polio epidemics occur?

A

intermittently, seasonally, and more often in industrialised countries

42
Q

Why was Polio a mass public concern?

A

disease appearance was mysterious (its all of the sudden and didn’t know the cause of symptoms) and seasonal | paralyze respiratory muscles | disfiguring, crippling, and sometimes fatal

43
Q

What is the percentage of Polio infected individuals are asymptomatic?

A

95%