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Chapter 1 Introduction

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Title: Chapter 1 Introduction


1
Chapter 1 - Introduction
  • The impact of viruses on our view of life

2
Living or Dead?
  • In the strict definition used by virologists, a
    virus is classified as an obligate intracellular
    parasite
  • It is dependent on the metabolic and genetic
    function of living cells
  • Viral genome contains the blueprint for viral
    replication but is decoded by molecular
    machinery of the cell

3
Key Words
  • Pathogenesis effects of virus on host
  • Pathogenicity genetic members of a specific
    virus to cause disease and spread thru the
    population
  • Genotype genetic make up of virus
  • Virulence severity of the viral disease

4
Virulence
  • Dependent on
  • expression of viral genes
  • physiological response of infected individual to
    pathogenic determinants
  • response of population to presence of virus
  • also affected by general health and genetic
    makeup of infected population, societal and
    economic factors

5
More Key Words
  • Avirulent or apathogenic strains viruses that
    have mutations that make genes not able to cause
    symptoms wont cause disease but will lead to
    immunity against virulent strains
  • people and animals may respond differently to the
    same virus dependent on dose, route of
    infection, immune system, etc
  • Epidemiology study of infectious agents in
    humans
  • Epizoology study of infectious agents in animals

6
Interaction between Virus and Host
  • Viruses respond to the environment to become
    wholly or partially resistant
  • Viruses in the host can be influenced by
    location, social and economic factors,
    availability of medical attention and
    technology.
  • HIV if it was 100 years ago, before traveling
    and large mobilization of people, the virus may
    have stayed isolated and been eradicated by
    depleting the population affected by it

7
History of Virology
  • Study of virus is important for more than to
    counteract the discomfort caused by the virus
  • Can be used to understand basic info about
    cellular processes since viruses take advantage
    of these processes
  • Started with the study of bacteriophage (virus of
    bacteria) that killed E.coli
  • Also helpful in determining the immune response
    and immunity to viruses cell-cell signaling
  • Help to develop palliative treatments of
    metabolic and genetic diseases humans, plants
    and animals

8
Impact of Viral Disease on Human History
  • Egyptian mummies have evidence of genital
    papillomas and polio
  • Smallpox now eradicated used to wreak havoc
    in humans, now considered a threat again as an
    agent of bioterrorism
  • Europeans are responsible for spreading measles
    into areas that they conquered
  • Spanish influenza in 1918-1919 killed millions
    world-wide, not sure yet why this virus was so
    virulent

9
Impact of Viruses on the Future
  • A virus may evolve so that it becomes more
    devestating
  • sequela long term effect of the infectious
    disease
  • Viruses that could become more lethal or cause
    more problems are yellow fever, equine
    encephalitis, dengue fever, Ebola, Rift Valley
    fever, hantavirus and the new coronavirus that
    was the causative agent of SARS (severe acquired
    respiratory syndrome)
  • Viruses can also cause decimation in animals and
    plants that lead to severe financial losses

10
Impact of Evolution Impact of the Virus-Host
Interaction
  • Viruses have had an impact on the host evolution
  • Viruses can move genes from 1 host to another
  • Interferon is a cell-based antiviral made in the
    response to the virus, not found in cells that
    are not infected

11
Two Major Examples
  • Parasitic wasps lay eggs in caterpillars and the
    caterpillar kills the wasp egg wasp that is
    infected with a polydnavirus can prevent the
    caterpillar from killing the eggs wasp keeps the
    virus in the ovaries and then pass on with the
    new egg
  • Chlorella virus is found in fresh water and can
    only infect free algae, cant do this because the
    algae is semisymbiotic with a specific
    paramecium, the selective pressure of the virus
    has forced a symbiotic relationship otherwise the
    algae will be killed by virus

12
Origin of Viruses?
  • Cant rely of fossils but some genetic sequences
    are similar to virus, also retroviruses integrate
    into chromosomes and may be part of organism
    forever
  • Can find ancient relics of retroviruses in some
    hosts
  • Viruses have no ribosomal-like genes, no enzymes
    for energy metabolism viruses didnt evolve
    from free living cells no evidence as there is
    for mitochondria and chloroplasts
  • DNA polymerases in viruses are similar to other
    polymerases in gene sequences and function

13
Viruses as Constructive Forces
  • Viruses have driven the understanding of
    biological mechanism
  • Can use viruses of animal and plant pest to
    control them such as myxoma virus used to
    decrease the European rabbit predation in
    Australia
  • Used as therapeutic against against some disease
    and may eventually have a role as prophylactic
    vaccines

14
Smaller than Viruses?
  • Prions are smaller, composed only of protein that
    has an unusual folding pattern
  • Defective viral particles have lost a coat
    protein or replication gene from the genome
  • requires a helper virus to become infective by
    replacing the missing piece
  • Hepatitis D is an example, cant replicate or
    complicate hepatitis without Hepatitis B being
    present
  • RNA pathogen or viriod infects plants but
    doesnt make a protein
  • These may mean that viruses came from cells and
    that viruses had multiple origins
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