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http://foodsafety.wisc.edu/assets/foodfacts_2007/wffFeb2007_clip_image002.jpg VIRUSES, BACTERIA, and PRIONS https://www.msu.edu/course/isb/202/ebertmay/images/HIV%20virus.png http://www.scifair.org/+images/Electrophoresis.gif Concept 19.1 A virus consists of a nucleic acid surrounded by a protein coat AP Biology The Discovery of Viruses: Scientific Inquiry Tobacco mosaic disease stunts growth of tobacco plants and gives their leaves a mosaic coloration In the late 1800s, researchers hypothesized that a particle smaller than bacteria caused the disease In 1935, Wendell Stanley confirmed this hypothesis by crystallizing the infectious particle, now known as tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) AP Biology Structure of Viruses not cells small infectious particles consisting of nucleic acid enclosed in a protein coat and, in some cases, a membranous envelope AP Biology VIRUSES Tiny: smaller than ribosomes http://academic.pgcc.edu/~kroberts/Lecture/Chapter%2013/13-04_SizesOfViruses_0_L.jpg VIRUSES Contain DNA or RNA SINGLE or DOUBLE stranded NUCLEIC ACID surrounded by PROTEIN coat = CAPSID Some have ENVELOPE outside capsid http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/cells/virus.html Capsids and Envelopes A capsid is the protein shell that encloses the viral genome Capsids are built from protein subunits called capsomeres A capsid can have various structures AP Biology Fig. 19-3 RNA DNA Capsomere Membranous envelope RNA Head DNA Capsid Tail sheath 18 Capsomere of capsid Glycoproteins Glycoprotein 250 nm 70–90 nm (diameter) 80–200 nm (diameter) 20 nm (a) Tobacco mosaic virus AP Biology 50 nm (b) Adenoviruses 50 nm Tail fiber 80 225 nm 50 nm (c) Influenza viruses (d) Bacteriophage T4 Some viruses have membranous envelopes that help them infect hosts These viral envelopes surround the capsids of influenza viruses and many other viruses found in animals Viral envelopes, which are derived from the host cell’s membrane, contain a combination of viral and host cell molecules AP Biology BACTERIOPHAGE viruses that infect bacteria no cellular machinery of their own Can only reproduce in host cells have the most complex capsids found among viruses have an elongated capsid head that encloses their DNA A protein tail piece attaches the phage to the host and injects the phage DNA inside HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) AIDS virus RETROVIRUS (Contains RNA) Infects WHITE BLOOD CELLS Has REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE Enzyme that can use RNA to make DNA https://www.msu.edu/course/isb/202/ebertmay/images/HIV%20virus.png Concept 19.2: Viruses reproduce only in host cells Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites, which means they can reproduce only within a host cell Each virus has a host range, a limited number of host cells that it can infect AP Biology General Features of Viral Reproductive Cycles Once a viral genome has entered a cell, the cell begins to manufacture viral proteins The virus makes use of host enzymes, ribosomes, tRNAs, amino acids, ATP, and other molecules Viral nucleic acid molecules and capsomeres spontaneously selfassemble into new viruses Animation: Simplified Viral Reproductive Cycle AP Biology Reproductive Cycles of Phages Phages are the best understood of all viruses Phages have two reproductive mechanisms: 1. the lytic cycle 2. the lysogenic cycle AP Biology AP Biology The Lytic Cycle a phage reproductive cycle that culminates in the death of the host cell produces new phages and digests the host’s cell wall, releasing the progeny viruses A phage that reproduces only by the lytic cycle is called a virulent phage Bacteria have defenses against phages, including restriction enzymes that recognize and cut up certain phage DNA Animation: Phage T4 Lytic Cycle AP Biology The Lysogenic Cycle The lysogenic cycle replicates the phage genome without destroying the host The viral DNA molecule is incorporated into the host cell’s chromosome This integrated viral DNA is known as a prophage Every time the host divides, it copies the phage DNA and passes the copies to daughter cells Animation: Phage Lambda Lysogenic and Lytic Cycles AP Biology An environmental signal can trigger the virus genome to exit the bacterial chromosome and switch to the lytic mode Phages that use both the lytic and lysogenic cycles are called temperate phages AP Biology Reproductive Cycles of Animal Viruses • There are two key variables used to classify viruses that infect animals: AP Biology DNA or RNA? Single-stranded or double-stranded? Table 19-1a AP Biology Table 19-1b AP Biology Viral Envelopes Many viruses that infect animals have a membranous envelope Viral glycoproteins on the envelope bind to specific receptor molecules on the surface of a host cell Some viral envelopes are formed from the host cell’s plasma membrane as the viral capsids exit AP Biology Other viral membranes form from the host’s nuclear envelope and are then replaced by an envelope made from Golgi apparatus membrane AP Biology Fig. 19-7 Capsid and viral genome enter the cell Capsid RNA HOST CELL Envelope (with glycoproteins) Viral genome (RNA) Template mRNA Capsid proteins ER Glycoproteins AP Biology Copy of genome (RNA) New virus RNA as Viral Genetic Material The broadest variety of RNA genomes is found in viruses that infect animals Retroviruses use reverse transcriptase to copy their RNA genome into DNA HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is the retrovirus that causes AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) AP Biology Fig. 19-8 Viral envelope Glycoprotein Capsid Reverse transcriptase HIV RNA (two identical strands) HIV Membrane of white blood cell HOST CELL Reverse transcriptase Viral RNA RNA-DNA hybrid 0.25 µm DNA HIV entering a cell NUCLEUS Provirus Chromosomal DNA RNA genome for the next viral generation New virus AP Biology New HIV leaving a cell mRNA Fig. 19-8a Glycoprotein Viral envelope Capsid Reverse transcriptase RNA (two identical strands) HOST CELL HIV Reverse transcriptase Viral RNA RNA-DNA hybrid DNA NUCLEUS Provirus Chromosomal DNA RNA genome for the next viral generation New virus AP Biology mRNA The viral DNA that is integrated into the host genome is called a provirus Unlike a prophage, a provirus remains a permanent resident of the host cell The host’s RNA polymerase transcribes the proviral DNA into RNA molecules The RNA molecules function both as mRNA for synthesis of viral proteins and as genomes for new virus particles released from the cell Animation: HIV Reproductive Cycle AP Biology Concept 19.3: Viruses, viroids, and prions are formidable pathogens in animals and plants Diseases caused by viral infections affect humans, agricultural crops, and livestock worldwide Smaller, less complex entities called viroids and prions also cause disease in plants and animals, respectively AP Biology Viroids circular RNA molecules that infect plants and disrupt their growth AP Biology PRIONS “Misshaped” proteins Change the shape of other proteins they contact Aggregates of proteins accumulate in brain PRIONS Aggregates of proteins accumulate in brain Neurological disorders SCRAPIE in sheep BOVINE SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY (BSE) = “Mad Cow” disease CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE KURU CREUTZFELD-JAKOB