Download Viruses

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Taura syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Canine distemper wikipedia , lookup

Human cytomegalovirus wikipedia , lookup

Marburg virus disease wikipedia , lookup

Canine parvovirus wikipedia , lookup

Orthohantavirus wikipedia , lookup

Influenza A virus wikipedia , lookup

Henipavirus wikipedia , lookup

Hepatitis B wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Viruses
What to Know:
Learning Objectives

Overview:


Structure:



What are the shapes?
Reproduction:


What are some basic facts about viruses?
What is the lytic & lysogenic pathways?
Infection:

How do they get into cells and then get reproduced?

How do they get treated?
Describe a few common or well-known virus.

AIDS, the common cold, hepatitis, influenza

What are viroids & prions?
Viruses

Infectious particles (not living cells).

Very small in the biological world (hundreds times
smaller than the cells they infect).

Science is still not sure how or why viruses came
about, but they are integral in all species (no real
benefit to living species).

Major source of disease and genetic diversity in the
living world (diversity comes from the mutations
virus cause).

Typically named after the disease they cause or the
tissues they infect.
Virus Classification

Classification not typical:
 Defies

biological classification.
Classified or grouped various ways
 Morphology:
 What
Shape & structures
is infected: Plants, animals, bacteria
 Genetic
composition: DNA, RNA, single or
double-stranded
 Pathology:
nature of the disease

Simple virus structure
 *Genetics…
this is the
direction to make more virus
Virus Structure
 *Body…
Surrounded by
proteins (capsid)
 May
or may not have an
additional covering
(envelope)
 Many
have protein capsid
with surface markers (like
keys) that are designed to fit
locks in the cells of species
they have evolved to infect.
* All virus have these two features
Viral Shapes
Each
have their
own form but can
be categorized:
 Helical
 Polyhedral
 Enveloped/Spherical
 Other.
Helical
Polyhedral
Enveloped
Others
Viruses: Living or Not?

Considered to be non-living (debated)
 Does
not meet all of the characteristics of life
Living
-Contains genetic
material (RNA/DNA)
-Reproduce (in
host)
-Has organization
Non-Living
-Do not have cells
-Do not respond to stimuli
-Do not use energy
-Do not grow & develop
-Cannot reproduce on
their own
Virus v. Bacteria
Virus & Disease

By virtue of their very
existence, virus are
infectious particles.

They MUST infect a living
host to reproduce.

In the process, they
interrupt host life
functions in a variety of
ways.

This interruption causes
the disease.

Their pathology
(characteristics of their
disease process)
Transmission of Viral Disease

Virus are pathogenic…


They cannot reproduce
unless they attack another
cell.
…and carcinogenic.
 Once
in the cell the have a
tendency to cause
irreparable genetic damage
that can lead to cancer.
 HPV
& Cervical cancer
 Hepatitis
T
B & C & Liver cancer
Lymphotropic & Leukemia

Possible ways to
become infected are

Bites

Physical contact

Body fluid

Mother to child

Contact in the air

Sexual contact

Environmental exposure
Viral Reproduction


Viruses must have a living host cell to
reproduce
 Example:
Bacteriophages infect bacteria
 Example:
Herpes Simplex 1 infects lip cells
Virus insert their genetic information
inside the host cell and use the host cell
to make more virus particles
Viral Replication

Lytic cycle
 Viral
DNA is injected into host cell
 Contains
instructions needed to make more
viruses
 Host
cell replicates viral DNA and makes the
viral capsids (protein coats)
 New
viruses are assembled inside host cell
 Cell
bursts open releasing new viruses
Lytic Cycle
D. Cell bursts open releasing
new viruses
C. New viruses are
assembled
Lytic Cycle inside
host cell
A. Viral DNA is injected into
host cell
B. Host cell replicates viral
DNA and makes the viral
capsids (protein coats)
Viral Replication

Lysogenic cycle
 Viral
DNA is injected into the host cell
 Viral
DNA inserts itself into the host’s DNA
 Remains
inactive for days, months, or years
 As
the cell reproduces, more cells are produced
that have the viral DNA in them
 Eventually,
when the conditions are favorable
(like when your immune system is weakened) the
virus will enter the lytic cycle
Lysogenic Cycle
Lysogenic & Lytic Cycles:
These integrate for dormant-type virus
E Lysis of host cell
lets new virus particles
escape.
A Virus particle binds,
injects genetic material.
A1 Viral DNA is
A2 Chromosome and
inserted into host
integrated viral DNA
chromosome by
are replicated.
viral enzyme action.
Lytic Pathway
D Accessory parts are attached
to viral coat.
C Viral proteins selfassemble into a coat
around viral DNA.
Lysogenic Pathway
B Host replicates viral
genetic material, builds
viral proteins.
A4 Viral enzyme
excises viral DNA
from
chromosome.
A3 Cell
divides;
recombinant
DNA in each
daughter cell.
Treatment of Virus

Antibiotics: Do not work on viruses…


they are not living
Virus treatment options:

Antivirals: specific for infection
 Tamiflu®,

Relenza®, etc.
Body’s natural defenses: Immune
system
 Rest
 Antioxidants
 “Feed

a cold, starve a fever”?
Vaccines are taken beforehand to
prevent infections by introducing the
immune system to viral recognition
signals.

Subject to controversy…
Common Virus Vaccines
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
Influenza (the “Flu”)
Measles, Mumps, Rubella
Pertussis (whooping cough)
Rabies
Polio
Tetanus
Meningitis
Video clip

Write 5 facts from the video

http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/06/01/11
4075029/flu-attack-how-a-virus-invades-your-body

Get into groups, divide the chapter up into sections,
read through and gather information, answer the
questions.

Here's a better, longer answer than the one
in the video. First, some new viruses get
caught in mucus and other fluids inside your
body and are destroyed. Other viruses get
expelled in coughs and sneezes. Second, lots
of those new viruses are lemons. They don't
work that well. Some don't have the right
"keys" to invade healthy cells so they can't
spread the infection. And third, as the
animation shows, your immune system is
busy attacking the viruses whenever and
wherever possible.