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Ch. 19 Warm-up

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Ch. 19 Warm-up Why do many scientists classify viruses as non-living? Draw the basic structure of a virus. Label and define capsid, viral envelope and nucleic acid. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 19 Warm-up


1
Ch. 19 Warm-up
  1. Why do many scientists classify viruses as
    non-living?
  2. Draw the basic structure of a virus. Label and
    define capsid, viral envelope and nucleic acid.

2
Ch. 19 Warm-up
  1. Draw the lytic/lysogenic cycle.
  2. What stage of the lytic-lysogenic cycle is a
    virus virulent? Temperate?
  3. What determines a host range?

3
Viruses
  • Chapter 19

4
What you must know
  • The components of a virus.
  • The differences between lytic and lysogenic
    cycles.

5
Bacteria vs. Viruses
  • Bacteria
  • Virus
  • Prokaryotic cell
  • Most are free-living (some parasitic)
  • Relatively large size
  • Antibiotics used to kill bacteria
  • Not a living cell (genes packaged in protein
    shell)
  • Intracellular parasite
  • 1/1000 size of bacteria
  • Vaccines used to prevent viral infection
  • Antiviral treatment

6
Viruses
  • Very small (ltribosomes)
  • Components nucleic acid capsid
  • Nucleic acid DNA or RNA (double or
    single-stranded)
  • Capsid protein shell
  • Some viruses also have viral envelopes that
    surround capsid
  • Limited host range (eg. human cold virus infects
    upper respiratory tract)
  • Reproduce within host cells

7
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10
Simplified viral replicative cycle
11
Bacteriophage
  • Virus that infects bacterial cells

12
Video t4 Phage infection
13
Lytic Cycle of T4 Phage
14
Bacteriophage Reproduction
  • Lytic Cycle
  • Use host machinery to make copies of virus
  • Death of host cell by rupturing it (lysis)
  • Virulent phages replicate by this method
  • Lysogenic Cycle
  • Phage DNA incorporated into host DNA and
    replicated along with it
  • Phage DNA prophage
  • Temperate Phage uses both methods of replication

15
Lytic Cycle vs. Lysogenic Cycle
16
Animal viruses have a membranous envelope
  • Host membrane forms around exiting virus
  • Difficult for host immune system to detect virus

17
Retrovirus
  • RNA virus that uses reverse transcriptase (RNA ?
    DNA)
  • Newly made viral DNA inserted into chromosome of
    host
  • Host transcribes viral DNA ( provirus) to make
    new virus parts
  • Example HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)

18
HIV Retrovirus
19
HIV
  • Infects white blood cells
  • HIV provirus (DNA inserted)
  • AIDS active viral reproduction

20
Video HIV Life Cycle
21
Other human viruses
  • Herpes virus
  • Smallpox

Herpes Simplex Virus 1 (HSV-1)
Herpes Simplex Virus 2 (HSV-2)
Eradicated in 1979 due to worldwide vaccination
campaigns
22
Vaccines
  • Weakened virus or part of pathogen that triggers
    immune system response

23
Emerging viruses mutation of existing viruses
24
Viroids
  • Small, circular RNA molecules that infect plants
  • Cause errors in regulatory systems that control
    plant growth
  • Eg. coconut palms in Philippines

25
Prions
  • Misfolded, infectious proteins that cause
    misfolding of normal proteins
  • Eg. mad cow disease (BSE),Creutzfeldt-Jakob
    disease (humans), scrapie (sheep)

26
Diseases caused by prions
  • Prions act slowly incubation period of at least
    10 years before symptoms develop
  • Prions are virtually indestructible (cannot be
    denatured by heating)
  • No known cure for prion diseases
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