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Transcript
Human Biology
Sylvia S. Mader
Michael Windelspecht
Infectious
Diseases
Supplement
Lecture Outline
See separate FlexArt PowerPoint slides
for all figures and tables pre-inserted into
PowerPoint without notes.
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Infectious Diseases
• Epidemiology: the study of diseases in
populations
• Infectious Diseases: diseases caused by
pathogens
–
–
–
–
–
–
Bacteria
Viruses
Fungi
Parasites
Protozoans
Prions
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Infectious Diseases
• Epidemic: more cases of the disease than
expected in a certain area for a certain period
• Outbreak: if the epidemic is confined to a
local area
• Pandemic: a global epidemic
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
History of HIV
• Originated in Africa in the late 1950’s
• Originally found in nonhuman primates and may
have mutated
• First documented in the US in 1969
• HIV was found to be the cause of AIDS in 19831984
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Prevalence of HIV
•
•
•
•
~ 33.2 million people are living with HIV
At least 0.8% of adults have HIV
2.1 million people died during 2007
Over 25 million people have died since the
beginning of the epidemic
• Most people living with HIV live in
developing countries
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Prevalence of HIV
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
North America
1.3million
(480,000-–1.9million
Caribbean
230,000
(210,000-–270,000
Latin America
1.6million
(1.4–1.9million)
Western and
Central Europe
760,000
(600,000-–1.1million
Middle East
and North Africa
380,000
(270,000-–500,000
Sub-Saharan
Africa
22.5million
(20.9–24.3million)
Eastern Europe
and Central Asia
1.6million
(1.2-–2.1million
East Asia
800,000
(620,000-–960,000
South and
Southeast Asia
4.0 million
(3.3-5.1 million)
Oceania
75,000
(53,000-–120,000)
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Prevalence of HIV
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Phases of HIV infection
• Category A:
– Asymptomatic but highly infectious
– CD4 count above 500 cells/mm3
• Category B:
– Has one or more of a variety of symptoms related to an impaired
immune system
– CD4 count between 200-499 cells/mm3
• Category C:
– At this point the person has AIDS in which they have one or
more of the AIDS opportunistic infections that eventually is the
cause of death
– CD4 count has fallen below 200 cells/mm3
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Phases of HIV infection
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Category B: Chronic Phase
Category C: A IDS
107
1,100
1,000
106
900
800
105
CD4 T lymphocytes
700
600
500
104
400
300
200
103
HIV
100
102
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Years Since Infection
7
8
9
10
HIV in Plasma (per mL)
CD 4T Lymphocyte in Blood (permm3)
Category A: Acute Phase
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Structure of HIV
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
RNA
envelope
protease
gp120
(spike)
• Two single strands
of RNA
• Enveloped with
spikes (Gp120)
• Carries 3 enzymes
– Reverse
transcriptase
– Integrase
– Protease
integrase
capsid
reverse
transcriptase
matrix
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
HIV life cycle/replication
• Attachment: Gp120 binds to CD4 receptors
• Fusion: HIV fuses with the cell membrane
• Entry: uncoating occurs to release the RNA
• Reverse transcriptase: RNA is transcribed into double-stranded
DNA
• Integration: new DNA becomes part of the host cell’s DNA in the
nucleus (provirus)
• Biosynthesis: produces more viral RNA and proteins
• Assembly: assemble new parts into viral particles
• Budding: viral particles bud from the cell membrane taking a piece
with it that becomes the envelope
• Transmission to a new host: passed to a new host
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
HIV life cycle
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
plasma membrane
2. Fusion
envelope
spike
capsid
8. Budding
protease
1. Attachment
3. Entry
viral
RNA
receptor
viral RNA
ribosome
capsid
reverse
transcriptase
c DNA
6. Biosynthesis
and cleavage
7. Assembly
4. Reverse
transcription
viral
RNA
host DNA
HIV
provirus
double-stranded DNA
integrase
5. Integration
nuclear pore
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Transmission and prevention of HIV
• Transmission is through sexual contact, dirty
needles, a blood transfusion, or to a baby from their
mother
• Globally, heterosexual sex is the most common mode
of transmission
• HIV is not passed through casual contact
• Prevention is through abstinence, sex with only one
uninfected partner, and proper, consistent use of
condoms
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
HIV testing and treatment
• HIV tests test for the presence of antibodies not the
virus itself
• Most people develop antibodies within 2-8 weeks of
infection but it can take 3-6 months (consider this
when being tested!)
• Treatments:
– Drug therapy: highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
uses a combination of drugs to inhibit HIV replication
– Vaccines: scientists have studied 50 different preventive
vaccines and 30 therapeutic vaccines
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Science Focus: HIV vaccines
• Difficulties in producing a vaccine
development:
– HIV viruses locally and globally are genetically
different
– No vaccine so far is 100% effective and may only
provide short-term protection
– Concerns that the vaccine may increase the
chances of getting the disease or even cause the
disease
– There is no ideal animal model for testing besides
humans themselves
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Tuberculosis
• 1/3 of the world’s population has been exposed to TB
• ~ 9 million people are infected and 2 million die each year
• Cause and Transmission:
– Mycobacterium tuberculosis
– Spread when an infected person coughs, sings, or sneezes
– Likelihood of infection increase with length and frequency of exposure
• Disease:
– Incubation period is from 4 to 12 weeks
– Latent TB
– Active TB
• Treatment and Prevention:
–
–
–
–
Multiple anti-TB drugs are given simultaneously for 12 to 24 months
Common drugs: INH, RIF, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide
It takes at least 6 months to kill all of the TB in the body
Active TB patients are isolated and anyone exposed is treated
S.1 AIDS and Other Pandemics
Malaria
• ~ 350-500 million cases and over 1 million
deaths each year
• Cause and Transmission:
– Four species of Plasmodium infect humans
– Spread by the female Anopheles gambiae mosquito
• Disease:
– Incubation period is from 7 to 30 days
– Symptoms range from very mild to fatal
– People develop a flulike illness with chills and fever
• Treatment and Prevention:
– Antimalarial drugs include quinine and artesunate
– Prevention includes eliminating the mosquito by removing its
breeding sites
S.2 Emerging Diseases
Emerging Diseases
• National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID) lists 18 pathogens that are
newly recognized in the last two decades.
– avian influenza (H5N1)
– swine flu (H1N1)
– severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
• Reemerging Diseases: diseases that have
reappeared after a significant decline in
incidence
– Streptococcus: bacteria that causes strep throat and
other infections
S.3 Antibiotic Resistance
How does antibiotic resistance
develop?
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
not drug resistant
drug-resistant mutant
exposure
to drug
a. Initial population of microbes
Remaining
population
grows
overtime.
b. Weaker (non resistant) cells killed
by antibiotic; resistant cells survive.
c. Most cells are now resistant.