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Medical Virology

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Title: Medical Virology


1
Medical Virology
  • Dept. of Medical Microbiology and Parasitology
  • Shanghai Second Medical University
  • Shanghai, China.
  • E.mail ( xkguo_at_shsmu.edu.cn )

2
General Virology
  • Conception
  • Viruses
  • Virion
  • Size and Shape
  • Structure
  • Replication
  • Viral Variation
  • Classification

3
Conception
  • Virology is the bioscience for study of viral
    nature,and the relationship between viruses and
    hosts. Viruses often cause serious diseases,
    relate to some cancers and congenital
    deformities, also can be used as tool for genetic
    engineering.

4
  • 3000BC

5
History
  • Smallpox was endemic in China by 1000BC. In
    response, the practice of variolation was
    developed. Recognizing that survivors of smallpox
    outbreaks were protected from subsequent
    infection, variolation involved inhalation of the
    dried crusts from smallpox lesions like snuff, or
    in later modifications, inoculation of the pus
    from a lesion into a scratch on the forearm of a
    child.

6
Definition of Virus
  • Viruses may be defined as acellular organisms
    whose genomes consist of nucleic acid, and which
    obligately replicate inside host cells using host
    metabolic machinery and ribosomes to form a pool
    of components which assemble into particles
    called VIRIONS, which serve to protect the genome
    and to transfer it to other cells

7
Viral Properties
  • Viruses are inert (nucleoprotein ) filterable
    Agents
  • Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites
  • Viruses cannot make energy or proteins
    independent of a host cell
  • Viral genome are RNA or DNA but not both.
  • Viruses have a naked capsid or envelope with
    attached proteins
  • Viruses do not have the genetic capability to
    multiply by division.
  • Viruses are non-living entities

8
Consequences of Viral Properties
  • Viruses are not living
  • Viruses must be infectious to endure in nature
  • Viruses must be able to use host cell processes
    to produce their components (viral messenger RNA,
    protein, and identical copies of the genome)
  • Viruses must encode any required processes not
    provided by the cell
  • Viral components must self-assemble

9
Challenges the way we define life
  • viruses do not respire,
  • nor do they display irritability???
  • they do not move
  • they do not grow
  • they do most certainly reproduce, and may adapt
    to new hosts.

10
Size and Shape
  • Methods
  • Size of Viruses
  • Shapes of Viruses

11
Methods of Analysis

Electron microscopy The resolution is 5nm (1nm
10-9 m) X-ray crystallography
12
Size of Viruses
  • A small virus has a diameter of about 20nm.
  • Parvovirus
  • A large virus have a diameter of up to 400nm.
  • Poxviruses

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Shape of Viruses
  • Spherical
  • Rod-shaped
  • Brick-shaped
  • Tadpole-shaped
  • Bullet-shaped
  • Filament

16
Shapes of VirusesSpherical
17
Shapes of Viruses Rod-shaped
18
Shapes of Viruses Brick-shaped
.                                              
                              
19
Tadpole-shaped
20
Shapes of Viruses Bullet-shaped
21
Shapes of Viruses Filament
22
Structure of Viruses
23
Virion
  • the complete infectious unit of virus particle
  • Structurally mature, extracellular virus
    particles.

24
Virion
envelope
Capsid
Viral core
25
Viral core
  • Viral core
  • The viral nucleic acid genome, In the center
    of the virion, Control the viral heredity and
    variation, responsible for the infectivity.

26
Genome
  • The genome of a virus can be either DNA or RNA
  • DNA-double stranded (ds) linear or circular
  • Single stranded (ss) linear or
    circular
  • RNA- sssegmented or non-segmented
  • sspolarity(sense) or polarity
    (non-sense)
  • ds linear (only reovirus family)

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Viral Capsid
  • The protein shell, or coat, that encloses the
    nucleic acid genome.
  • Functions a. Protect the viral nucleic acid. b.
    Participate in the viral infection. c. Share the
    antigenicity

30
Nucleocapsid
  • The core of a virus particle consisting of the
    genome plus a complex of proteins.
  • complex of proteins Structural proteins Non-
    Structural proteins (Enzymes Nucleic acid
    binding proteins)

31
Symmetry of Nucleocapsid
  • Helical
  • Cubic /Icosahedral
  • Complex

32
Helical symmetry
33
  • Helical symmetry

How to assemble
34
Helical
  • California Encephalitis VirusCoronavirusHantavir
    usInfluenza Virus (Flu Virus)Measles Virus (
    Rubeola)Mumps VirusParainfluenza VirusRabies
    VirusRespiratory Syncytial Virus(RSV)

35
Cubic or icosahedral symmetry
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Icosahedral
  • Herpes Simplex Virus 1 (HHV1)Herpes Simplex
    Virus 2 (HHV2)Human Immunodeficiency Virus
    (HIV)Human T-lymphotrophic Virus (HTLV)Norwalk
    VirusPapilloma Virus (HPV)Polio
    virusRhinovirusRubella VirusSaint Louis
    Encephalitis VirusVaricella-Zoster Virus
    (HHV3)Western Equine Encephalitis Virus
    (WEEV)Yellow Fever Virus
  • Adeno-associated Virus (AAV)AdenovirusB19Coxsac
    kievirus - ACoxsackievirus - BCytomegalovirus
    (CMV)Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus
    (EEEV)EchovirusEpstein-Barr Virus
    (EBV)Hepatitis A Virus (HAV)Hepatitis B Virus
    (HBV)Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)Hepatitis Delta
    Virus (HDV)Hepatitis E Virus (HEV)

39
Complex Virus Structures
  • A well known example is the tailed bacteriophages
    such as T4.
  • The head of these viruses is cubic with a
    triangulation number of 7. This is attached by a
    collar to a contractile tail with helical
    symmetry.

40
T4 Bacteriophage
41
Properties of naked viruses
  • Stable in hostile environment
  • Not damaged by drying, acid, detergent, and heat
  • Released by lysis of host cells
  • Can sustain in dry environment
  • Can infect the GI tract and survive the acid and
    bile
  • Can spread easily via hands, dust, fomites, etc
  • Can stay dry and still retain infectivity
  • Neutralizing mucosal and systemic antibodies are
    needed to control the establishment of infection

42
Naked viruses( Non Enveloped )
  • Adeno-associated Virus (AAV)AdenovirusB19Coxsac
    kievirus - ACoxsackievirus - BEchovirusHepatiti
    s A Virus (HAV)Hepatitis E Virus (HEV)Norwalk
    Virus

43
Envelope
  • A lipid-containing membrane that surrounds some
    viral particles.
  • It is acquired during viral maturation by a
    budding process through a cellular membrane,
    Viruses-encoded glycoproteins are exposed on the
    surface of the envelope.
  • Not all viruses have the envelope, and viruses
    can be divided into 2 kinds enveloped virus and
    naked virus.

44
Functions of envelope
  • Antigenicity
  • some viruses possess neuraminidase
  • Infectivity
  • Resistance

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Envelope
47
Properties of enveloped viruses
  • Labile in dry , arid environment
  • Damaged by drying, acid, detergent, and heat
  • Pick up new cell membrane during multiplication
  • Insert new virus-specific proteins after assembly
  • Virus is released by budding

48
Consequences of Properties for enveloped viruses
  • Must stay moist
  • Must not infect the GI tract for survival
  • Must be transmitted in the protective, droplets,
    secretions, blood and body fluids
  • Must reinfect another host cell to sustain
  • Humoral and cell-mediated immunity are needed to
    control the infection

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Enveloped
  • Herpes Simplex Virus 2 (HHV2)Human
    Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)Human
    T-lymphotrophic Virus (HTLV)Influenza Virus (Flu
    Virus)Molluscum contagiosumPapilloma Virus
    (HPV)Polio virusRhinovirusVaricella-Zoster
    Virus (HHV3)Venezuelan Equine Encephal. Vir.
    (VEEV)Western Equine Encephalitis Virus
    (WEEV)Yellow Fever Virus
  • California Encephalitis Virus
  • Coronavirus
  • Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
  • Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus (EEEV)
  • Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV)
  • HantavirusHepatitis B Virus (HBV)Hepatitis C
    Virus (HCV)Hepatitis Delta Virus (HDV)Herpes
    Simplex Virus 1 (HHV1)
  • Rotavirus
  • Rubella Virus
  • Saint Louis Encephalitis VirusSmallpox Virus
    (Variola)Vaccinia Virus

51
Spike or Peplomere
52

53
summarize
54
Virion structure
  • Nucleocapsid(Naked Virus) DNA or RNA
    Structural proteins Enzymes Nucleic acid
    binding proteins
  • Enveloped Virus Nucleocapsid Viral specific
    glycoproteins and Host Membrane

55
Helical
Cubic
Naked Virus
Enveloped Virus
56
CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF VIRUSES
  • Viral Protein
  • Viral Nucleic Acid
  • Viral Lipids
  • Viral carbohydrate

57
Viral Nucleic Acid
  • DNA-double stranded (ds) linear or circular
  • Single stranded (ss) linear or
    circular
  • RNA- sssegmented or non-segmented
  • sspolarity(sense) or polarity
    (non-sense)
  • ds linear (only reovirus family)

58
Viral Protein
  • Structural protein (Capsomere)
  • Enzyme
  • glycoproteins (spike/viral attachment protein,
    VAP)

59
Culture of Viruses
60
System for the propagation of viruses
  • People
  • Animals cowschickens mice rats suckling
    mice
  • Embryonated eggs
  • Organ and tissue culture
  • Organ culture
  • primary tissue culture
  • cell lines diploid
  • Tumor or immortalized cell line

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  • Cytopathic effect, CPE
  • Inclusion Bodies

65
CPEViral Cytopathological Effects
  • Cell death
  • Cell rounding/Degeneration/Aggregation
  • Lass of attachments to substrate
  • Inclusion bodies in the nucleus or cytoplasm,
    margination of chromatin
  • Syncytia multinucleated giant cells caused by
    virus-induced cell-cell fusion
  • Cell surface changes
  • Viral antigen expression
  • Hemadsorption (hemagglutinin expression)

66
Normal cell and CPE
67
Inclusions
Negri body
68
TCD50,LD50,ID50
  • PFU plaque forming units

69
Replication of Viruses
70
Replicative cycle
  • As obligate intracellular parasites, Virus must
    enter and replicate in living cells in order to
    reproduce themselves. This growth cycle
    involves specific attachment of virus,
    penetration and uncoating, nucleic acid
    transcription, protein synthesis, matureation and
    assembly of the virions and their subsequent
    release from the cell by budding or lysis

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Initiation Phase
  • Attachment
  • Penetration
  • Uncoating

75
Attachment/Adsorption
  • Virus attaches to the cell surface. Attachment is
    via ionic interactions which are
    temperature-independent.
  • Viral attachment protein recognizes specific
    receptors on the cell surface (These may be
    protein or carbohydrate or lipid components of
    the cell surface).
  • Cells without the appropriate receptors are not
    susceptible to the virus.

76
PENETRATION (Virus enters the cell)
  • Virions are either engulfed into vacuoles by
    endocytosis or the virus envelope fuses with
    the plasma membrane to facilitate entry
  • Enveloped viruses
  • Non-enveloped viruses

77
Fusing
  • (A) Entry by fusing with the plasma membrane.
    Some enveloped viruses fuse directly with the
    plasma membrane. Thus, the internal components of
    the virion are immediately delivered to the
    cytoplasm of the cell.

78
HIV
79
Endocytosis
  • (B) Entry via endosomes at the cell surface

 
80
influenza virus
81
Enveloped viruses
  • Some enveloped viruses require an acid pH for
    fusion to occur and are unable to fuse directly
    with the plasma membrane. These viruses are taken
    up by invagination of clathrin coated pits into
    endosomes. As the endosomes become acidified, the
    latent fusion activity of the virus proteins
    becomes activated by the fall in pH and the
    virion membrane fuses with the endosome membrane.
    This results in delivery of the internal
    components of the virus to the cytoplasm of the
    cell

82
Non-enveloped viruses
  • Non-enveloped viruses may cross the plasma
    membrane directly
  • may be taken up via clathrin-coated pits into
    endosomes. They then cross (or destroy) the
    endosomal membrane.

83
unenveloped viruses
84
UNCOATING
  • Nucleic acid has to be sufficiently uncoated that
    virus replication can begin at this stage. When
    the nucleic acid is uncoated, infectious virus
    particles cannot  be recovered  from the cell -
    this is the start of the ECLIPSE phase - which
    lasts until new infectious virions are made
  • Uncoating is usually achieved by cellular
    proteases opening up the capsid

85
BIOSYNTHESIS
  • genome synthesis
  • mRNA production
  • protein synthesis

86
Flow of events during the replication of Hepadna
viruses
87
Flow of events during the replication of
herpesviruses
88
Flow of events during the replication of
reoviruses.
89
Flow of events during the replication of
togaviruses
90
Flow of events during the replication of
orthomyxoviruses and paramyxoviruses.
91
Flow of events during the replication of
retroviruses
92
Maturation assembly release
93
Maturation
  • The stage of viral replication at which a virus
    particle becomes infectious nucleic acids and
    capsids are assembled together.

94
ASSEMBLY
  • The stage of replication during which all the
    structural components come together at one site
    in the cell and the basic structure of the virus
    particle is formed.

95
RELEASE
  • Disintegration naked virus cause the host
    cell lysis
  • Budding enveloped viruses
  • Budding viruses do not necessarily kill the cell.
    Thus, some budding viruses may be able to set up
    persistence

96
Assembly
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Products of viral replication
  • Virion
  • DEFECTIVE VIRUS
  • ABORTIVE INFECTION
  • integration

99
  • DEFECTIVE VIRUS
  • deficiency in some aspects of replication,
    but interfering the replication of normal
    viruses 
  • ABORTIVE INFECTION
  • When a virus infects a cell (or host), but
    cannot complete the full replication cycle ( not
    biosynthesize their components or not assemble
    virions.), i.e. a non-productive infection.

100
INTERFERENCE
  • Interferon, IFN
  • Defective interfering particle, DIP

101
Viral Genetics
102
Genome
  • The genome of a virus can be either DNA or RNA
  • DNA-double stranded (ds) linear or circular
  • Single stranded (ss) linear or
    circular
  • RNA- sssegmented or non-segmented
  • sspolarity(sense) or polarity
    (non-sense)
  • ds linear (only reovirus family)

103
Virus Genomes
104
The Structure Complexity of Virus Genomes
  • The nucleic acid comprising the genome may be
    single-stranded or double-stranded, in a
    linear, circular or segmented configuration.
    Single-stranded virus genomes may be
  • positive ()sense, i.e. of the same polarity
    (nucleotide sequence) as mRNA
  • negative (-)sense
  • ambisense - a mixture of the two.

105
The Structure Complexity of Virus Genomes
  • any virus genome will usually include the
    following
  • Composition - DNA or RNA, single-stranded or
    double-stranded, linear or circular.
  • Size number of segments.
  • Terminal structures.
  • Nucleotide sequence.
  • Coding capacity - open reading frames.
  • Regulatory signals - transcription enhancers,
    promoters terminators.

106
The Structure Complexity of Virus Genomes
107
Transfection
  • Infection of cells caused by nucleic acid alone

108
Variation
  • There are two important variation which relate
    well with medical practices
  • Antigenicity variation In most viruse the
    antigenicity is stable but in some viruses such
    as influenze virus the antigenicity may vary and
    cause the disease to epidemic.
  • Virulence variation(Virulent viruses) Less
    virulent viruses always used in prevention.

109
Mutation
  • Mutant
  • Variant
  • temperature sensitive(ts) mutant

110
Interactionswhen two genetically distinct
viruses infect a cell 3 different phenomena can
ensue
  • Recombination /Reassortment
  • Complementation
  • Phenotypic mixing

111
  • Recombination
  • dsDNA viruses
  • Reassortment ( segmented genomes)
  • RNA viruses influenza virus

112
Complementation
113
Phenotypic mixing
  • The genome of virus A can be coated with the
    surface protein of virus type B

114
Classification of Viruses
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CLASSIFICATION OF VIRUSES-------basis of
classification
  • Virion morphology
  • Physicochemical properties of the virion
  • Virus genome properties
  • Virus protein proteries
  • Genome organization and replication
  • Antigenic properties
  • Biologic properties

117
CLASSIFICATION OF VIRUSES
  • By 1995
  • --71 families, 11 subfamilies
  • --164 genera
  • For humans and animals
  • --24 families,
  • --DNA 7 RNA 17 for humans

118
Survey of DNA-containing Viruses
  • Parvoviruses human parvovirus B19
  • Papovaviruses papillomaviruses
  • Adenoviruses 47 types infect humans
  • Herpesviruses human herpesvirus 1-8
  • Poxviruses smallpox vaccinia
  • Hepadnaviruses HBV

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Survey of RNA-containing Viruses
  • Retroviruses
  • Bunyaviruses
  • Othomyxoviruses
  • Paramyxoviruses
  • Rhabdovirusesrabies virus
  • Bornaviruses BDV
  • Filoviruses
  • Other viruses
  • Viroids
  • Picornaviruses
  • Astroviruses
  • Caliciviruses
  • Reoviruses
  • Arboviruses
  • Togaviruses
  • Flaviviruses
  • Arenaviruses
  • Coronaviruses SARS

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DNA and RNA Viruses
  • ?????(Headnasviridae)
  • ?????( Retroviridae )

129
Viroids(???)
  • Viroids are small (200-400nt), circular RNA
    molecules with a rod-like secondary structure
    which possess no capsid or envelope which are
    associated with certain plant diseases. Their
    replication strategy like that of viruses - they
    are obligate intracellular parasites.

130
Dependovirus /Virusoids????
  • Viroids are small (200-400nt), circular RNA
    molecules with a rod-like secondary structure
    which possess no capsid or envelope which are
    associated with certain plant diseases. Their
    replication strategy like that of viruses - they
    are obligate intracellular parasites.

131
?? (Prions)
  • Prions are rather ill-defined infectious agents
    believed to consist of a single type of protein
    molecule with no nucleic acid component.
    Confusion arises from the fact that the prion
    protein the gene which encodes it are also
    found in normal 'uninfected' cells. These agents
    are associated with diseases such as
    Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, scrapie in
    sheep bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in
    cattle.
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