Week 21: (B) introduction to Virology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main sites of entry for a virus?

A

respiratory tract (what you beat in)
alimentary tract
urogenital tract

Can also…
conductive (eyes)
Anthropod (insect)
Urinogenital tract)

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2
Q

What is the alimentary tract?

A

things that go in from you mouth ( what you eat)

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3
Q

What virus replicate in the brain?

A

Rabbies
HIV
measles
mumps

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4
Q

What viruses replicate in the mouth?

A

HSV

coxachie virus

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5
Q

What viruses replicate on the skin & mucous membranes?

A

HSV, measles, papilloma

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6
Q

What viruses replicate in the liver?

A

hepatitis A, B,C,D, E, F

yellow fever

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7
Q

What virus replicates in the heart?

A

coxachie virus

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8
Q

What can the human Herpes Virus do?

A

go latent in the host

lay dormant for a period of time and nit showing symptoms

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9
Q

What type of virus is herpes?

A

icosahedral virus
ds DNA genome
wrapped up in a capsid
enclosed in a lipid membrane studded with glycoproteins (lipids)

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10
Q

What is the area called between the membrane and the varian?

A

tegument
solid viral proteins
ask the viral proteins get delivered int the cell

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11
Q

What is the function of the viral proteins in the tegument space?

A

turn off theist cells innate immune response, allow the virus to get going
block the hosts response

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12
Q

What type of herpes is picked up in childhood?

A

type 1
e.g. primary gingivostomatitis
herpes simplex virus

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13
Q

What virus causes chickenpox and shingles?

A

varicella zoster (VSV)

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14
Q

Why does shingles happen in limited areas?

A

it travels downtime nerves

the areas are where the nerves innervate the body

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15
Q

How does Herpes simplex virus spread in the body?

A

herpes simplex infection around mouth
travels down the nerves and goes into the trigeminal ganglia (located tieback of the neck) where they are latent.
The virus doesn’t make any proteins which can be detected by the host immune system.

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16
Q

What brings about a recurrent herpes infection?

A

stress or ultraviolet light

17
Q

How does shingles (VSV) occur?

A

fever
sunlight to face menstruation
immune system
occurs in older people
weaker, unable to completely suppress virus
travels foes periphery nerve erupts at nerve endings

18
Q

What nerve does herpes simple and VZV travel down?

A

peripheral nerve

19
Q

What effects the severity of a virus?

A
target tissue 
viral pathogen (strain, some strains are more pathogenic) 
immune status (immune system can over shoot, cause 
-->competence of the immune system 
--> prior immunity to the virus 
immunopathology) 
cytopathic ability of the virus 
immunopathology 
virus inoculum 
general health oath individual 
genetic make-up of the individual 
genetic make-up of the individual 
age
20
Q

What is epidemiology?

A

study of how viruses are transmitted

21
Q

What are factors of epidemiology?

A

critical community size
Mechanisms of virus transmission
Geographical season

22
Q

How does critical community size effect hoe a virus is transmitted?

A

need big enough community to start spending the virus around
R number

23
Q

What is the R number?

A

How many people 1 person will effect on average
eg. R=3
1 person infects 3 people on average

24
Q

What are some mechanisms of virus transmission?

A
respiratory or salivary spread 
Formites (e.g.tissues, clothes)
sexual contact 
zoonoses (animals, insects called arboviruses) 
Blood transfusions, organ transplant
needle sharing (drug abusers)
25
Q

How does geography/ season effect how a virus is spread?

A

Presence of cofactors or vectors in the environment
Habitat and season for arthropod vectors (mosquitos)
School/uni session; close proximity
Climate conditions

26
Q

What is the fatal-oral route?

A

rotavirus

poor sanitation

27
Q

What is venereal spread a virus?

A

genitalia
HIV
papilloma virus

28
Q

What are the conditions needed for zoonoses spread?

A

vector: insect to human- human cannot spread to another human

Vertebrate reservoir: e.g. rabies spread from vertebrate to vertebrate and vertebrate to Hunan but human cannot spread to another human

vector-vertebrate : e.g. yellow fever
vector to vertebrate and visa verse. only the vector can spread to another human but human cannot spread to a human and neither can the vertebrate.

29
Q

How do we control virus diseases?

A

1) public health care (social distancing, washing hands, good sewage system)
2) vaccination
3) chemotherapy (drugs)

30
Q

What do we not have a vaccine to?

A

HIV
RSV
rotavirus

31
Q

Why don’t we have a vaccine to HIV?

A

we need a sterilising immunity

32
Q

What are difficulties associated with design and the use of anti-viral drugs?

A

1) few biochemical pathways unique to viruses
2) therapeutic index often very low
3) selection of drug resistant mutations
4) many viruses which cause similar disease have very different modes of replication and mayn’t be sensitive to some drugs
5) by the time symptoms appear ofter chemotherapy is too late to make much of a difference to clinical course of disease.

33
Q

What do we need to make anti-viral successful?

A

need an enzyme which is not present in Hunans
e.g HiV has revise transcriptase
doesn’t have a target in humans but the virus