2. Viruses Flashcards

Lecture 2

1
Q

What makes a virus different?

A
  • Infectious agent
  • not cellular
  • cannot reproduce by itself
  • needs a host cell to make copies of itself
  • comprised of a genome (DNA or RNA)
  • no organelles (or energy metabolism)
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2
Q

General properties of viruses

A
  • small ( ~20 to 300nm)
  • obligate parasites (unculturable)
  • infectious particles of nucleic acid and protein
  • complete infectious particle is known as a virion
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3
Q

Properties of a virion

A
Complete infectious particle 
• nucleic acid genome
• 6400 nucleotides in TMV
• protein coat: capsid
• sometimes a lipid envelope and enzymes
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4
Q

What is protein capsid constructed from?

A

protein subunits

• self-assembling

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5
Q

What are the different shapes of protein capsids?

A
  • Helical array - tobacco mosaic virus
  • icosahedral - papilloma adenovirus
  • complex - bacteriophage
  • other - brick-like, worm like (ebola), bullet-shaped
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6
Q

Describe the steps in the replication of viruses

A
  1. Taken up by injection or endocytosis
  2. genome released
  3. parasites of translation
  4. RNA acts as a template for protein synthesis to make DNA (retrovirus)
  5. DNA viruses replicate genome in host nucleus and direct capsid synthesis via mRNA
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7
Q

What factors are virus classification based on?

A
  • morphology
  • type of nucleic acid
  • single or multiple-particle virion
  • host virus-vector relationships
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8
Q

Define zoonosis

A

A pathogen that can jump from animals to humans

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9
Q

What are the H and N particles of influenza virus?

A

Hemagglutinin and Neuraminidase

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10
Q

Function of Hemagglutinin

A

• enables the virus to enter the cell

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11
Q

Function of neuraminidase

A

• Enables the virus to leave the cell

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12
Q

Describe the emergence of new flu strains

A
  • multiple different version of Hemagglutinin and neuraminidase in different virus strains
  • each flu virus carries one gene for H and another for N
  • genes are in separate pieces of RNA
  • two different strains of flu infecting one host cell can exchange versions of H&N to make new combinations
  • immune system cannot recognise new combinations
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13
Q

What are chemical treatments for flu and their modes of action

A
  • relenza
  • tamiflu
  • both are neuraminidase inhibitors that prevent flu virus from exiting used host cells
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14
Q

genetic material found in viroids

A
  • single circular strand of naked RNA

* Rna is catalytic

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15
Q

Prions

A

infectious proteins

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16
Q

What is the mechanism of action of prions?

A
  • PrP is the normal brain prion protein
  • in infected animals, PrP is converted to PrPsc
  • if we eat PrPsc, it spontaneously converts our PrP to PrPsc
17
Q

What is the effect of PrPsc

A

Forms insoluble plaques in brain disease

18
Q

What do viruses, viroids and prions have in common?

A
  • They are infectious particles that rely on a host cell for their replication
  • they lack energy metabolism but are capable of heritable change (Except prions)