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Download Chapter 13 Characterizing Viruses, Viroids, and Prions
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Chapter 13 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions 1 Not all pathogens are cellular! • Many infections of humans, animals, plants, and even bacteria are caused by acellular (noncellular) particles • Acellular infectious particles include – Viruses – Viroids – prions 2 Characteristics of Viruses • Virus • Much smaller than bacteria(usually measured in nanometers) • Acellular infectious agent having either DNA or RNA • They do not have both! • Cause many infections in humans, animals, plants, and bacteria • Cause most of the diseases that affect the industrialized world – Examples: common cold, influenza, herpes, SARS, Polio, HIV 3 Figure 13.4 Sizes of selected virions E. coli (bacterium) (1000 nm 3000 nm) Red blood cell (10,000 nm in diameter) Bacterial ribosomes (25 nm) Poliovirus (30 nm) Bacteriophage MS2 (24 nm) Smallpox virus (200 nm 300 nm) Bacteriophage T4 (50 nm 225 nm) Tobacco mosaic virus (15 nm 300 nm) 4 Characteristics of Viruses • Cannot carry out any metabolic pathway outside of a cell • Neither grow nor respond to the environment • Cannot reproduce independently – Recruit the cell’s (animal, plant, or bacterial cells) metabolic pathways to reproduce • No cytoplasmic membrane, cytosol (liquid portion of cytoplasm), organelles • Have extracellular and intracellular state 5 Characteristics of Viruses • Extracellular State (Naked or Enveloped) – Protein coat (capsid) surrounding nucleic acid (naked) – Some have a phospholipid envelope which surrounds the capsid (enveloped) – Outermost layer provides protection and recognition sites for host cells • Intracellular State – Capsid removed – Virus exists inside the cell as nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) 6 Figure 13.1 Virions-overview 7 Differentiating Viruses • We can differentiate viruses from one another based on their Genetic Material • Show more variety in genomes than cells – The genetic material a virus contains is the primary way scientists categorize and classify viruses 8 Differentiating Viruses • We can differentiate viruses from one another based on their Genetic Material – Viral genome may be DNA or RNA, but never both • dsDNA, ssDNA, dsRNA, ssRNA – ds= double stranded, ss= single stranded • Linear and segmented or single and circular – Influenza virus genome has 8 linear segments of ssRNA • Much smaller than genomes of cells – Cells always have double stranded DNA • ssDNA and dsRNA are almost nonexistent in cells 9 Differentiating Viruses • Hosts of Viruses – Most viruses infect only particular host’s cells • Species specific – Dog viruses don’t infect humans – May be so specific they infect only particular kind of cell in a particular host • HIV attacks helper T lymphocytes in humans but does not infect muscle or bone cells – Generalists – infect many kinds of cells in many different hosts • Rabies 10 Figure 13.3 Hosts of viral infections-overview Tobacco mosaic virus infected leaf on left Bacteria (blue/gray) under attack from a bacteriophage (pink) Human WBC cytoplasmic membrane with HIV particles (blue) attached 11 Differentiating Viruses • Host specificity – Due to viral surface proteins which have a precise affinity (attraction) for complementary proteins on the host cell membranes Differentiating Viruses • Hosts of Viruses – All types of cells can be infected by a virus • Archaeal, bacterial, plant, protozoan, fungal, animal – Most research focuses on animal and bacterial viruses • A virus that infects a bacterium is called a bacteriophage or phage 13 Naked vs. Enveloped Differentiating Viruses • Capsid Morphology – Capsids • Provide protection for viral nucleic acid • Means of attachment to host’s cells • Composed of proteinaceous subunits called capsomeres – Capsomere made of single or multiple types of proteins 15 Differentiating Viruses • Viral Shapes – Three basic shapes • Helical (capsomeres bond in a spiral fashion) • Polyhedral (close to spherical, geodesic dome) • Complex (many different shapes, bullet shaped rabies virus) 16 Figure 13.5 The shapes of virions-overview 17 Figure 13.6 Bacteriophage T4-overview 18 Differentiating Viruses • The Viral Envelope – Acquired from host cell during viral replication or release • Envelope is portion of membrane system of host – Composed of phospholipid bilayer and proteins • Some proteins are virally coded proteins (spikes) – Envelope proteins play a role in host recognition 19 Figure 13.7 Enveloped virion-overview 20 Viral Replication • Dependent on hosts’ organelles and enzymes to produce new viral particles • Lytic replication – Replication cycle usually results in lysis and death of host cell • Basic stages of lytic replication cycle 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Recognition and Attachment Entry Chromosome degraded Synthesis Assembly Release 21 Figure 13.12 Three mechanisms of entry of animal viruses-overview 22 Figure 13.8 The lytic replication cycle in bacteriophages-overview Attachment Bacteriophage genome Entry Tail sheath Outer membrane Peptidoglycan Cytoplasmic membrane Bacterial chromosome Entry Attachment Phage DNA Lytic replication cycle of bacteriophage Bacterial chromosome degraded Release Synthesis Phage proteins Assembly Assembly Base Tail Sheath DNA Capsid Mature head Tail fibers Mature virion 23 Viral Replication • Lysogeny – Modified replication cycle – Infected host cells grow and reproduce normally for generations before they lyse – Inactive bacteriophage is called a prophage – Induction occurs and the prophage is excised from the host chromosome • Induction can occur through DNA damaging chemicals, UV light, X rays • After induction the lytic cycle will occur 24 Figure 13.11 The lysogenic replication cycle in bacteriophages: phage lambda and E. coli Attachment Prophage in chromosome Entry Lambda phage Lytic cycle Lysogeny Synthesis Release Replication of chromosome and virus; cell division Assembly Induction Further replications and cell divisions 25 Transduction Viral Replication • Replication of Animal Viruses – Same basic replication pathway as bacteriophages 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Recognition and Attachment (capsid or envelope proteins recognize host cell receptors) Entry (fusion with cell membrane or endocytosis) Synthesis (DNA virus in the nucleus, RNA virus in the cytoplasm) Assembly Release (budding, exocytosis, lysis) 27 Viral Replication • Replication of Animal Viruses – Enveloped viruses cause persistent infections • Released from cell by budding – Naked viruses are released by exocytosis or lysis 28 Figure 13.14 The process of budding in enveloped viruses Enveloped virion Budding of enveloped virus Viral glycoproteins Cytoplasmic membrane of host Viral capsid 29 Viral Replication • Replication of Animal Viruses – Latency of animal viruses (chicken pox and herpes virus) • Called latent viruses or proviruses – When animal viruses remain dormant in host cells » May be prolonged for years with no viral activity 30 The Role of Viruses in Cancer • Viruses cause 20–25% of human cancers – Some viruses carry copies of oncogenes as part of their genomes • Oncogenes are involved in cell division and are usually repressed (not activated) and no cancer results – Some promote oncogenes already present in host – Specific viruses are known to cause human cancers • Kaposi’s sarcoma (HIV) • Cervical cancer (HPV) 31 Are Viruses Alive? • Infectious agents with both living and non-living characteristics – Living characteristics: • Reproduce, but only in living host cells • Can mutate – Nonliving characteristics: • Acellular: no cytoplasm or organelles • Cannot carry out metabolism on their own • Have DNA or RNA but not both 32 Other Parasitic Particles: Viroids and Prions • Characteristics of Viroids – Extremely small, circular pieces of RNA that are infectious and pathogenic in plants – Similar to RNA viruses, but lack capsid – No known animal diseases are known to be caused by viroids 33 Figure 13.21 One effect of viroids on plants 34 Characteristics of Prions • Proteinaceous infectious agents • Are ONLY protein • Cause spongiform encephalopathies: – – – – Mad cow Scrapie Kuru Creutzfeld-Jakob syndrome • Resistant to proteases, UV light, heat, disinfectants • Prions only destroyed by incineration or autoclaving in NaOH 35 Prions • Characteristics of Prions – Prion diseases • Fatal neurological degeneration, and loss of brain matter • Large vacuoles form in brain – Characteristic spongy appearance 36 Chronic wasting disease Prions • Characteristics of Prions – Proteinaceous infectious agents – Cellular PrP protein • Made by all mammals • Normal structure with -helices called cellular PrP – Prion PrP • Disease-causing form with -pleated sheets called prion PrP – Prion PrP changes shape of cellular PrP so it becomes prion PrP 38 Figure 13.22 The two stable, three-dimensional forms of prion protein (PrP)-overview 39 Shared characteristics of viruses, viroids, and prions • • • • Simple compared to cells Lack cell membranes Composed of 1 or a few organic molecules Lack most of the characteristics of life 40