Transcript Viruses

Adenovirus - cause of the common cold
Viruses
Viruses are pathogens that attack cells from the
inside. They hijack your own DNA and use it against
you. A virus cannot be treated with antibiotics, it can only
run its course until your immune system kicks it out.
..Even then, the virus may lay dormant within the cells and
come back at a later date
Adapted from www.biologycorner.com
Properties of viruses
no membranes, cytoplasm, ribosomes, or other cellular
components
they cannot move or grow
they can only reproduce inside a host cell
they consist of 2 major parts - a protein coat, and hereditary
material (DNA or RNA)
they are extremely tiny, much smaller than a cell and only
visible with advanced electron microscopes
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Structure of DNA (review)
Shape of a DOUBLE HELIX
Each side held together by weak
HYDROGEN BONDS
Repeating units of NUCEOTIDES
Sides of "ladder" are deoxyribose
and phosphates
Center is A, T, G, C
A -> T
G -> C
*base pair rule
nucleotide
Virus Structure
Parasitic Nature
Obligate intracellular parasites (they cannot exist independently)
Specific to hosts (human, dog, some can cross species)
Specific to cells , the common cold is a virus that specifically
attacks cells of the respiratory track (hence the coughing and
sneezing and sniffling). HIV specifically attacks white blood cells
This is a bacteriophage, a type of
virus that attacks bacteria. It is
recognizeable because it looks like
the lunar landing spaceship.
See
animation http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41aqxcxsX2w
&feature=related
Viral Reproduction
Lytic cycle = reproduction occurs, cells burst
Lysogenic cycle = reproduction does not immediately occur
(dormancy)
Virulent = viruses that undergo both cycles
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rpj0emEGShQ&feature=p
layer_embedded
Viruses multiply, or replicate using their
own genetic material and the host cell's
machinery to create more viruses. Viruses
cannot reproduce on their own, and must
infect a host cell in order to create more
viruses.
1. Attachment
2. Penetration - the virus is engulfed by the cell
(Cell can enter Lysogenic or Lytic Cycle)
3. Biosynthesis - viral components are made
(protein coat, capsid, DNA/RNA)
4. Maturation - assembly of viral components
5. Release - viruses leave host cell to infect new cells
(often destroys host)
Lytic vs Lysogenic
Pathways of viruses
Starring the phage
named Lambda
See: http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/007352543x/student_view0/chapter20/lambda_phage_replication_cycle.html
Retroviruses -- RNA viruses that have a DNA stage
• Human Immunodefiency Virus - causes AIDS
• Retrovirus (RNA inside a protein coat)
• Reverse Transcriptase makes DNA from the virus RNA
• DNA inserts into host DNA
• Proteins are assembled from the DNA code
• Viruses assembled from the proteins
• Viruses released from the cell
(Link) HIV Animation - how virus infects cells
What we know about HIV.....
Developing a vaccine for AIDS is difficult because it is a
RETROVIRUS. RNA mutates easily and each individual virus can be
slightly different from the others. In fact, different viruses can exist
within the same person.
See: HIV coloring
Emerging Viruses
illnesses not previously known
AIDS, West Nile Virus, SARS, Ebola, Bird Flu
• Could be mutations of known viruses
• Could be viruses exposed when new areas were developed
• Could have jumped species (avian flu, swine flu)
Related to Viruses
Viroids - even smaller than viruses, consist of RNA strands that
lack a protein coat
Prions - "rogue protein", believed to be the cause of Mad Cow
Disease, also may cause Kuru in cannibal tribes
See:
http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/007352543x/student_view0/chapter20/how_prions_arise.html
How Do Vaccines Work?
1. Once you have gotten a virus, such as chicken pox, your body
develops the immunity to that virus.
2. Vaccines are made by growing a weakened or killed form of the
virus (often grown in eggs)
3. This form of the virus is injected into a person's body, which causes
an immune response, and immunity to the virus.
- Remember Jenner's
cowpox vaccine?
RV = rotovirus; DTaP = diptheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough); Hib =
haemophilus influenza type B; PCV = pneumococcal vaccine; IPV = inactivated
polio virus; MMR = measles, mumps, rubella,
INFLUENZA
BACTERIOPHAGE
H1N1
SMALLPOX