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MICR 306 Applications of Viruses (Part 2) Classification …. Prof. J. Lin University of KwaZulu-Natal Westville campus Microbiology Discipline 2014 School of Life Sciences CLASSIFICATION OF VIRUSES INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF VIRUSES The internationally agreed system of virus classification is based on the structure/composition (Primary characteristics) of the virus particle (virion), in some cases, the mode of replication (Secondary characteristics) is also important in classification. Sometimes a group of viruses which seems to be a single group by the above criteria is found to contain a subgroup of viruses which have a fundamentally different replication strategy - in this case the group will be divided based on the mode of replication. VIRAL CLASSIFICATION RNA or DNA single-stranded or double-stranded Nucleic acid non-segmented or segmented linear or circular If genome is single stranded RNA, can it function as mRNA? whether genome is diploid (it is in retroviruses) Virion structure symmetry (icosahedral, helical, complex) enveloped or not number of capsomers How are viruses classified? A universal system for classifying viruses, and a unified taxonomy, has been established by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) since 1966. The system makes use of a series of ranked taxons with the: •- Order (-virales) being the highest currently recognized. - then Family (-viridae) o- Subfamily (-virinae) - Genus (-virus) - Species ( eg: Tobacco mosaic virus) The Baltimore Classification Replication strategy By convention the top strand of coding DNA written in the 5' - 3' direction is + sense. mRNA sequence is also + sense. The replication strategy of the virus depends on the nature of its genome. Viruses can be classified into seven (arbitrary) groups: The Baltimore Classification Central Dogma The current (2013) taxonomy releases by ICTV lists more than 7,400 viruses in 2827 species, 455 genera, 103 (22) families (sub) and 7 orders. 77 families not assigned to an order • The definition of `species' is the most important but difficult assignment to make with viruses. • Problem for taxonomists: 1) Too small to be seen without EM 2) The high mutation rate of virus: Very small changes in molecular structure may give rise to agents with radically different properties. quasispecies • Classification makes possible predictions about details of replication, pathogenesis and transmission. Transfection • The relative simplicity of virus genomes (compared with even the simplest cell) offers a major advantage - the ability to 'rescue' infectious virus from purified or cloned nucleic acids. Infection of cells caused by nucleic acid alone is referred to as Transfection (although it is about one million times less infectious than virus particles). (+)sense RNA (Baltimore classification group 4) double-stranded DNA (Baltimore group 1) Taxonomic Criteria -- name The most important criteria are: • Host Organism(s): eukaryote; prokaryote; vertebrate, etc. HIV, Phycodnavirus, phage T4 • Particle Morphology: filamentous; isometric; naked; enveloped Rotavirus, Corona virus • Genome Type: RNA; DNA; ss- or ds-; circular; linear Picornavirus (small, RNA), Parva(small)viruses, Hepadnaviruses (Liver, DNA), Other criteria • Disease symptoms Influenza virus, pox virus, Herpesviruses, HIV • Antigenicity N1H1, N1H5 • Protein profile, • Host tissue range, etc. Rhinoviruses, HIV…. • Locations New Castle Disease Virus REPLICATION Viral genomes contain information which: • ensures replication of viral genomes • ensures packaging of genomes into virions • alters the structure and/or function of the host cell to a greater or lesser degree - alter the metabolism of the infected cell so that viruses are produced For a virus to multiply it must obviously infect a cell. Viruses usually have a restricted host range i.e. animal and cell type in which this is possible. Replication of a retrovirus, HIV-1 the main events are common to all viruses although the precise details obviously vary. Viral Replication Pathway • Initiation phase: – – – • Replication phase: – – – • attachment penetration uncoating DNA synthesis RNA synthesis protein synthesis Release phase: – – – assembly maturation exit from cell Initiation phase: The genetic material of the virus is introduced into the cell, often accompanied by essential viral protein cofactors. – attachment – penetration – uncoating Entry Pathway of hepatitis C virus Attachment The virion protein (antireceptor) binds to a cell surface receptor. A classic example of this process is the haemaglutinin anti-receptor of influenza virus. Another intensively studied anti-receptor is the gp120 envelope glycoprotein of HIV vs CCR5 and CD4: Complex viruses such as pox or herpes may have more than one anti-receptor. The expression (or absence) of receptors on the surface of cells largely determines the TROPISM of most viruses, i.e. the type of cell in which they are able to replicate - important factor in pathogenesis. Penetration • Endocytosis of the entire particle resulting in accumulation of virus particles inside a cytoplasmic vesicle. The receptor bound virus is internalized into the cell by endocytosis. Endocytosed vesicles form bodies called endosomes. • Fusion of the cellular membrane with the virion envelope and direct release of the capsid into the cytoplasm examples include paramyxo and herpes viruses as well as HIV. • Rarely, translocation of the virus particle directly into the cytoplasm. Uncoating: This is the general term applied to events after penetration which allows the virus to express its genome. In poxviruses, host factors induce the disruption of the virus. The release of DNA from the core depends upon viral factors made after entry. In the influenza virus an envelope viral protein called M2 may allow endosomal protons into the virion particle resulting in its partial dissolution and permitting replication. In herpesviruses, adenoviruses and papovaviruses, the capsid is eventually routed along the cytoskeleton to nuclear envelope. Replication phase: • • • DNA synthesis RNA synthesis protein synthesis • The genomic size, composition and organization of virus shows tremendous diversity (look at the Baltimore classification). • In a few instances it is cellular enzymes that replicate the viral genome, assisted by viral proteins e.g. parvovirus. • In most cases the opposite is true, viral proteins are responsible for genome replication although they utilize cellular proteins to aid this. • After entry into the cell, many phage genomes are degraded and destroyed. Since phage are so prevalent in the environment, bacteria have specific mechanisms to protect themselves against infection with phage "restriction/ modification" systems which depend on the recognition and destruction of foreign (unmodified - methylated or glucosylated) DNA. Surviving phage genomes sequester the cellular apparatus for gene expression (transcription and translation) to various extents. • New copies of the viral genome must be replicated and viral proteins must be synthesized in order for viral multiplication to occur. Since all viruses are obligated pathogens. • Despite the diversity of genome structure, viruses must obey the central dogma of molecular biology. All genetic information flows from nucleic acid to protein. In addition, all viruses use the host cell’s translational machinery, and so no matter what genome structure of virus, messenger RNA must be generated that can be translated on the host’s ribosomes. Once viral mRNA is made, viral proteins can be synthesized. The proteins synthesized as a result of viral infection can be grouped into two broad categories: • Proteins (usually enzymes) synthesized soon after infection, called the early proteins, which are necessary for the replication of viral nucleic acid. • Proteins synthesized later, called the late proteins, which include the proteins of viral coat. Retrovirus SIVgsn LTR gag env vpr pol LTR vif rev tat vpu rev tat nef HIV Structure Retrovirus the genome is integrated into host genome. • The outer envelope comes from the host cell plasma membrane. Coat proteins (surface antigens) are encoded by env (envelope) gene. More than one surface glycoprotein in the mature virus. • icosahedral capsid containing proteins encoded by the gag gene (Group-specific AntiGen) nucleocapsid (NCp15) • Two molecules of plus sense genomic RNA per viron with a 5' cap and a 3' poly A sequence. diploid. • a) Reverse transcriptase with RNase H activity b) Integrase c) Protease MECHANISM OF VIRAL GENOME REPLICATION • If host RNA polymerase II is used to copy the DNA back to RNA, there are major problems with having a DNA provirus form but an RNA genome in the mature virus particle • These problems include: 1) RNA polymerase II does not copy the upstream and down stream control sequences of genes. It only copies the information necessary to make a protein 2) The lack of proof reading by RNA polymerase II The structure of the RNA genome of the mature and proviral retrovirus Release phase: • • • assembly maturation exit from cell Assembly • Some viruses make morphogenetic factors which are not structurally part of the virus but whose presence is required for normal assembly. These are sometimes called molecular chaperones. Cellular chaperones may also take part in this process. • Other viruses self-assemble. TMV • Symmetry is important in viral assembly. It reduces ambiguities in the assembly process and makes it easier. • In order for virus to be released from the host by a lysis mechanism, enzymes are required that damage both the cytoplasmic membrane and the cell wall. • In all instances it is viral proteins that are responsible for this third and final stage although host proteins and other factors may still associate with the virus particle. • Cells infected with polio virus can yield more than 100,000 copies of virus per infected cell. • Particle/infectivity ratio in picornaviruses is as low as 0.1% i.e. only 1 in 1000 virion particles are infectious. Virus can be defective for innumerable reasons but it makes the study of replication difficult because so many infections are abortive Information about the reproductive cycle of viruses has come from the study of synchronously infected cells • Shortly after infection and for a time period of minutes to hours depending on the virus being studied only low amounts of parental infectious material can be identified, this is the eclipse phase. Genome replication has been initiated but progeny viruses have not yet formed. There is then a maturation phase when viral material accumulates exponentially in the cell or surrounding medium. After a few hours cells infected with lytic viruses become metabolically disordered and then die, viral production ceases. HIV - EM Replication of a retrovirus, HIV-1 Nucleocapsid protein NCp15 Gp120 Reverse Transcriptase Integratase HIV Protease Adenovirus Episomal elements The virally coded terminal protein (TP) acts as a primer Adenovirus One Step Growth Curve the early period in which no infective virions are found even inside the infected host cells is called the eclipse period. Outcomes of viral infection 1) productive, i.e. entry into permissive cells followed by virion formation; 2) abortive, i.e. entry into a non permissive cell which does not result in virion formation; there can be many reasons for non-permissiveness: restringent or restrictive, the cell is transiently permissive and a few virus are produced. Thereafter virus production stops but the genome remains present in the cell, examples include Epstein Barr Virus and herpes simplex virus. This kind of infection may still have serious consequences e.g. cell transformation and cancer. Lysogenic or Temperate Phage Either multiply via the lytic cycle or enter a quiescent state in the cell. In this quiescent state most of the phage genes are not transcribed; the phage genome exists in a repressed state. The phage DNA in this repressed state is called a prophage because it is not a phage but it has the potential to produce phage. In most cases the phage DNA actually integrates into the host chromosome and is replicated along with the host chromosome and passed on to the daughter cells. The cell harboring a prophage is not adversely affected by the presence of the prophage and the lysogenic state may persist indefinitely. The cell harboring a prophage is termed a lysogen. Pathogenesis, Biofilm formation of bacteria Events Leading to Lysogeny 1 2 3 Events Leading to Termination of Lysogeny Anytime a lysogenic bacterium is exposed to adverse conditions, the lysogenic state can be terminated. This process is called induction. Conditions which favor the termination of the lysogenic state include: desiccation, exposure to UV or ionizing radiation, exposure to mutagenic chemicals, etc. Adverse conditions lead to the production of proteases (recA protein) which destroy the repressor protein. This in turn leads to the expression of the phage genes, reversal of the integration process and lytic multiplication. Lytic vs Lysogenic Cycle The decision for lambda to enter the lytic or lysogenic cycle when it first enters a cell is determined by the concentration of the repressor and another phage protein called cro protein in the cell. The cro protein turns off the synthesis of the repressor and thus prevents the establishment of lysogeny. Environmental conditions that favor the production of cro will lead to the lytic cycle while those that favor the production of the repressor will favor lysogeny. Bacteriophage replication TRANSDUCTION Lysogeny plays a significant role in bacterial genetics. On rare occasions, lysogeny permits the transfer of bacterial genes between cells by TRANSDUCTION. There are two forms: Generalized Transduction: bacterial rather than phage DNA is packaged into a phage head. When another cell is infected, the bacterial DNA is injected and in a proportion of cases, may be incorporated into the chromosome by homologous recombination, replacing the existing genes (frequency 105-108 per cell). More than one gene may be co-transduced (limit: packaging size = ~50kbp = ~1% of bacterial chromosome). Abortive transduction occurs when the new DNA does not integrate into the chromosome - may affect the phenotype transiently but is not replicated and is eventually lost. Specialized Transduction: Results from inaccurate excision of an integrated prophage; some phage DNA is lost and some bacterial genes are picked up and carried to the next host - therefore phage are usually defective (non-infectious) and require replicationcompetent helper phage to replicate, depending on which phage genes are lost. Significance of Lysogeny Model for animal virus transformation - Lysogeny is a model system for virus transformation of animal cells Lysogenic conversion - When a cell becomes lysogenized, occasionally extra genes carried by the phage get expressed in the cell. These genes can change the properties of the bacterial cell. This process is called lysogenic or phage conversion. This can be of significance clinically. e.g. Lysogenic phages have been shown to carry genes that can modify the Salmonella O antigen, which is one of the major antigens to which the immune response is directed. Toxin production by Corynebacterium diphtheriae is mediated by a gene carried by a phage. Only those strains that have been converted by lysogeny are pathogenic. Genetic control in prokaryotes during infection Anti-termination: To promote the synthesis of longer transcripts encoding additional genetic information. Modification of RNA polymerase: Several bacteriophages, e.g. phage SP01 of Bacillus subtilis, encode proteins which function as alternative sigma factors, sequestering RNA polymerase and altering the rate at which phage genes are transcribed. Phage T4 of E. coli encodes an enzyme which carries out a covalent modification (ADP-ribosylation) of the host cell RNA polymerase. Genetic control in prokaryotes At a post-transcriptional level, regulated by control of translation. Bacteriophages of the family Leviviridae, such as R17, MS2 and Qbeta the secondary structure of the singlestranded RNA phage genome regulates both the quantities of different phage proteins which are translated, but in addition, also operates temporal control of a switch in the ratios between the different proteins produced in infected cells. DNA Virus Genomes • Bacteriophages small • Bacteriophage M13 7.2 kb Molecular cloning • Parvovirus 5 kb contains only two genes, rep, which encodes proteins involved in transcription & cap, which encodes the coat proteins. The ends of the genome have palindromic sequences of about 115nt, which form 'hairpins'. These structures are essential for the initiation of genome replication, once again emphasizing the importance of the sequences at the ends of the genome. RNA Virus Genomes • size of single-stranded RNA genomes small the fragility of RNA & the tendency of long strands to break. • tend to have higher mutation rates than those composed of DNA because they are copied less accurately towards smaller genomes. • Viruses with negative-sense RNA genomes are a little more diverse than positive-stranded viruses. Possibly because of the difficulties of expression, they tend to have larger genomes encoding more genetic information. Because of this, segmentation is a common though not universal feature of such viruses. Some RNA viruses are not strictly 'negative-sense' but ambisense, since they are part (-) sense & part (+)sense. – This type of virus particles all contains a virus-specific polymerase. – are inherently non-infectious. Segmented virus genomes • Segmented virus genomes are those which are divided into two or more physically separate molecules of nucleic acid, all of which are then packaged into a single virus particle. • Multipartite genomes are those which are segmented & where each genome segment is packaged into a separate virus particle. These discrete particles are structurally similar & may contain the same component proteins, but often differ in size depending on the length of the genome segment packaged. • There are many examples of segmented virus genomes, including many human, animal & plant pathogens such as orthomyxoviruses, reoviruses & bunyaviruses. There are rather fewer examples of multipartite viruses, all of which infect plants. Viral Genetics GENERAL • Viruses grow rapidly usually a large number of progeny virions per cell. • More chance of mutations occurring over a short time period. • The nature of the viral genome (RNA or DNA; segmented or non-segmented) Viruses may change genetically due to mutation or recombination Outcomes of Viral Mutations (Individual) • Conditional lethal mutants: e.g. Temperature sensitive (ts) mutants e.g. Change of host range • Plaque size: alter pathogenicity • Drug resistance: antiviral agents • Enzyme-deficient mutants: • "Hot" mutants: host fever may have little effect on the mutants but may slow down the replication of wild type virions • Attenuated mutants: cause much milder symptoms (or no symptoms) compared to the parental virus role in vaccine development and useful tools in determining why the parental virus is harmful Outcomes of Viral Mutations (Infections) • COMPLEMENTATION • MULTIPLICITY REACTIVATION: reactivation if cells are infected with the inactivated virus at a very high multiplicity of infection • DEFECTIVE VIRUSES: Defective viruses lack the full complement of genes necessary for a complete infectious cycle and so they need another virus (a helper virus) to provide the missing functions. • DEFECTIVE INTERFERING PARTICLES Re-assortment • If a virus has a segmented genome and if two variants of that virus infect a single cell, progeny virions can result with some segments from one parent, some from the other. This is an efficient process - but is limited to viruses with segmented genomes - so far the only human viruses characterized with segmented genomes are RNA viruses e.g. orthomyxoviruses, reoviruses, arenaviruses. • Reassortment may play an important role in nature in generating novel reassortants and has also been useful in laboratory experiments. It has also been exploited in assigning functions to different segments of the genome. For example, in a reassorted virus if one segment comes from virus A and the rest from virus B, we can see which properties resemble virus A and which virus B. Reassortment is a non-classical kind of recombination. Life cycle and reassortment of a segmented positive-sense RNA plant virus Phenotypic Mixing • If two different viruses infect a cell, progeny viruses may contain coat components derived from both parents and so they will have coat properties of both parents. IT INVOLVES NO ALTERATION IN GENETIC MATERIAL. • Phenotypic mixing may occur between related viruses Pseudotype formation (pseudovirion) e.g. a retrovirus nucleocapsid in a rhabdovirus envelope. This results in pseudotypes having an altered host range/tissue tropism on a temporary basis. Phenotypic Mixing HIV Exponential epidemic growth 45 40 35 30 Millions of infections WHO: 25 40 M infected 2000 Series1 20 Expon. (Series1) 15 < 2k 10 < 300k 5 0 1920 origin-5 1930 1940 1950 1960 Year 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Bushmeat market photograph by Karl Ammann Polio Vaccine in 1960s? Mutations of HIV !!! Since the roll-out of antiretroviral therapy (ART) almost ten years ago, drugresistant HIV has increased significantly in parts of Sub-Saharan Africa in 2012. In 2004, polio outbreaks in China were not caused by an imported wild poliovirus, but by a circulating vaccinederived poliovirus that had mutated from the OPV used to prevent polio. Applied genetics • NEW VACCINE influenza virus. contains 3 strains of attenuated influenza strains The vaccine technology uses reassortment to generate reassortant viruses which have six gene segments from the attenuated, coldadapted virus and the HA and NA coding segments from the virus which is likely to be a problem in the up-coming influenza season. Viruses in the act of speciation If a full complement of genes arrives in a new host from the genomes of two different parental viruses, a new virus can be assembled Tobravirus strains I6 and N5 = RNA 1 from Tobacco rattle virus + RNA 2 sequences from Pea early browning virus. Cooperation of viruses in mixed infections When viruses in a mixed infection share genetic information or gene products, they are in symbiosis, or cooperation. Synergy (disease symptoms can be exacerbated) -- Potato virus Y (PVY, genus Potyvirus) and Potato virus X (PVX, genus Potexvirus) Attenuation Some viruses are totally dependent on other viruses for parts of their life cycles, making them obligate symbionts. Interdependence Several plant virus diseases are caused by viruses that are in obligate symbiotic relationships with other viruses. umbraviruses + luteoviruses, which enable the umbraviruses to be transmitted by insects. In groundnut rosette disease, an umbravirus, a luteovirus and a satellite-like RNA are all required for successful transmission by aphids. In some cases, the umbravirus also assists the luteovirus in tissue invasion, forming a completely mutualistic symbiosis. Helper Viruses; Satellites Competition in plant viruses Studies indicated that an exclusion mechanism was functioning, whereby a cell that was already infected with a virus could not be superinfected by a related virus. potyviruses; mixed infection of Wheat streak mosaic virus strains and strains of Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). Other viruses vs HIV? The aphid-borne cucumber mosaic virus causes infected plants to release higher levels of volatile compounds than uninfected plants, thus attracting more aphids. The aphids then emigrate from the infected plants more quickly than from healthy plants, so increasing the chance of virus spread. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA doi:10.1073/ pnas.0907191107 (2010) Forming a long-term relationship with a virus involves a tricky decision for the host. A strong immune response might lead to better control of the pathogen, but, at the same time, such responses can potentially cause substantial tissue damage, so sometimes a little tolerance is required. co-evolution between the host and virus. Summary • There is more genetic diversity among viruses than in all the rest of the Animal, Plant & Bacterial kingdoms, all of whose genomes consist of d/s DNA. • The expression of virus genetic information is dependent on the structure of the genome of the particular virus concerned, but in every case, the genome must be recognized & expressed using the mechanisms of the host cell. Viral roles in Ecology?