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Viruses

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Title: Viruses


1
Viruses
  • What is a virus?
  • Terminology
  • Characteristics of a virus
  • How are viruses structured?
  • Structures and Shapes
  • Retroviruses

2
What is a virus?
  • An agent that causes disease in plants and
    animals
  • Segments of nucleic acids (genetic material like
    DNA or RNA) contained in a protein coat

3
What is a virus?
  • Viruses are generally considered to be non-living
    because they DO NOT have all the characteristics
    of life.
  • Viruses are different from living things in 3
    ways
  • DO NOT grow
  • CANNOT maintain homeostasis
  • DO NOT metabolize

4
What is a virus?
  • Viruses are similar to living things in 2 ways
  • 1. They contain nucleic acid (DNA or RNA)
  • 2. They contain proteins (the capsid)

5
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6
Vocabulary
  • Pathogen- agent that causes disease
  • Host- an organism that shelters and nourishes a
    virus or another organism
  • Capsid- the protein coat of a virus
  • Envelope- surrounds the capsid and helps viruses
    enter cells

7
Vocabulary cont
  • Bacteriophage - a virus that
  • attacks a bacteria
  • (word parts - phage to eat)
  • Prophage/Provirus - a viral DNA
  • segment inserted into a bacterial cell

8
Vocabulary Cont
  • Retrovirus - a virus that replicates by first
    transcribing RNA into DNA (HIV)

9
Vocabulary Cont
  • Lysis - the breaking apart of the cell to release
    new viruses (word parts! lyse to burst)
  • Viroid - a single strand of viral RNA that causes
    plant diseases (TMV)
  • Prion - protein that infects animals

10
Characteristics of a Virus
  • When trying to find the cause of tobacco mosaic
    disease (disease that stunts the growth of
    tobacco plants) scientists discovered something
    other than bacteria was causing TMD
  • Concluded it was smaller than a bacterium and
    named it virus after the Latin word meaning
    poison

11
Characteristics of a Virus
  • 1935, Wendell Stanley concluded that TMD was a
    chemical rather than an organism/cell
  • Today we know that Stanley had discovered the
    first virus

12
  • Viruses have the following characteristics
  • Smaller than prokaryotic cells (like bacteria)
  • Not normally classified (debate over living vs.
    nonliving)
  • Live and reproduce ONLY inside other living cells
  • Cause diseases such as colds, influenza (flu),
    AIDS, smallpox, measles, chicken pox, rabies,
    mumps, and mononucleosis

13
How are Viruses Structured?
  • Viruses have an outer layer called a capsid that
    is made of proteins
  • Inside the capsid is genetic material such as DNA
    or RNA (but it never contains both as the same
    time)

14
How are viruses structured?
  • Some viruses have an envelope outside of their
    capsid as well as proteins that stick out to aid
    in entering host cells (similar to marker or
    receptor proteins on cells)

15
Structure and Shapes
  • 5 basic shapes of a virus
  • Helical
  • Spherical
  • Polyhedral
  • Binal
  • Filovirus

16
Structures and Shapes
  • Helical
  • RNA or DNA is coiled in a long narrow capsid
  • Ex. Tobacco Mosaic Virus

17
Structures and Shapes
  • Spherical
  • Typically studded with receptors, may be
    enveloped
  • Ex. Influenza Virus (Flu)

18
Structures and Shapes
  • Polyhedral
  • Geometric in appearance
  • Ex. Adenovirus (causes the common cold)

19
Structures and Shapes
  • Binal
  • Polyhedral capsid
  • Helical tail
  • Ex. Bacteriophage

20
Structures and Shapes
  • Filovirus
  • No distinct uniform shape
  • Threadlike loops
  • Ex. Ebola virus

21
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22
HIV a Retrovirus
  • HIV- Human immunodeficiency virus
  • Structure
  • Spherical
  • Contains RNA
  • Retrovirus
  • Exterior wall made of glycoprotein

23
HIV Retrovirus
  • Function
  • causes AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome)
  • binds to human immune cells at specific receptor
    sites
  • is a special type of virus called a retrovirus
  • virus that gets its genetic information copied
    backward from RNA to DNA
  • when a retrovirus infects a cell, it produces a
    DNA copy of its RNA
  • retroviruses are responsible for some types of
    cancer in animals, including humans

24
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25
Human Diseases Caused by Viruses
Category Disease
Sexually transmitted disease AIDS (HIV), genital herpes
Childhood diseases Measles, mumps, chicken pox
Respiratory diseases Common cold, influenza (flu)
Skin diseases Warts, shingles
Digestive tract diseases Gastroenteritis
Nervous System diseases Polio, viral meningitis, rabies
Other diseases Smallpox, hepatitis, Avian Bird flu, Ebola, SARS, West Nile
26
How Viruses Spread
  • Viruses are transmitted from one host organism to
    another by many different vectors.
  • transmit to pass along
  • vector the substance or path used to pass the
    virus along

27
  • Viruses, like other pathogens, are commonly
    transmitted through body fluids, including the
    spittle in your sneezes and coughs, mucus
    produced by many parts of your body such as your
    nose and lungs, and even the ear wax in your
    ears. They can be transmitted through
    contaminated food and drinks as well. Some
    require contact with body fluids such as blood,
    semen, or vaginal secretions that you do not
    usually encounter.

28
  • SOME viral infections can be prevented through
    vaccines, such as the flu vaccine available each
    year and the HPV vaccine available from your
    doctor. A vaccine is often a weakened form of
    the virus injected to prevent infection.
    Children in the United States are also commonly
    vaccinated against measles, mumps, chicken pox,
    and polio. There are vaccines available for some
    forms of meningitis, rabies, smallpox, and some
    forms of hepatitis, but they are only given to
    people at risk of getting the diseases such as
    first responders, medical personnel, soldiers,
    and even some teachers.

29
  • Unfortunately, viruses mutate rapidly and
    vaccines lose their ability to be 100 effective
    in preventing disease. This is why we have a new
    flu vaccine every year. It takes over a year to
    manufacture flu vaccine, therefore scientists
    have to predict what will be most effective in
    the future. Sometimes they have excellent
    predictions and almost everyone who gets the
    vaccine stays well. Sometimes, they dont have
    excellent predictions and many people get sick.
    Its still important to get the vaccine because
    there is often more than one flu virus going
    around and protection against at least some of
    the virus is better than none at all.

30
  • Once we do get sick with a viral infection, we
    dont have many effective ways to cure the
    infection. We do have some antiviral medications
    which help prevent viruses from replicating as
    rapidly as they would without it, and interferons
    which mimic molecules naturally produced by your
    body in response to viral infections.
    Antibiotics DO NOT have any effect on viruses and
    should never be given or taken for an infection
    such as influenza (which is a respiratory
    illness, NOT a digestive system illness) or a
    cold.

31
  • Our inability to vaccinate against and to cure
    viral infections is why it is so important that
    you always cover your mouth when you sneeze or
    cough, dont share drinks or eat after someone
    else, wash your hands frequently, and even avoid
    sharing earbuds!
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