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The Genetics of Viruses and Bacteria Ch 18

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Title: The Genetics of Viruses and Bacteria Ch 18


1
The Genetics of Viruses and BacteriaCh 18
2
Discovery of the virus (Mayer)
  • 1883 tobacco plants stunted or mottled leaves.
  • Contagious disease through sap contact
  • Pathogen not seen through microscope
  • Ivanowsky filtered sap to remove bacteria, still
    sap is contagious.
  • 1897 Beijerinck discovered agent could
    reproduce
  • 1935 Wendell Stanley crystallized agent now
    known as TMV (Tobacco Mosiaic Virus)

3
Viral Structure
  • Virus only 20nm diameter, smaller than ribosome.
  • Genetic Material
  • Either DNA or RNA
  • Single strand or double strand
  • Single linear or circular genetic material
  • 4-100 genes
  • Capsid
  • Protein shell surrounding genetic material
  • Various shapes
  • Envelope (Influenza virus)
  • Membranes surrounding the capsid
  • May be host or virus derived
  • Proteins and glycoproteins (some have enzymes w/i)

4
Reproduction Overview
  • Viruses needs a host cell to reproduce
  • Obligate intracellular parasites
  • Limited host range (receptor recognition of host)
    and can be tissue specific
  • Zoonotic jumps/crosses species (HIV)
  • Viral DNA reprograms host cell to make viral
    proteins and DNA/RNA (hostile takeover)

5
Two Reproductive Cycles
  • Lytic Cycle
  • Last stage of infection
  • Host cell death
  • Virulent Virus/phage
  • Virus or phage that only goes through the lytic
    cycle
  • T4 phage infect bacteria using lytic cycle

6
  • Lysogenic Cycle
  • Replicates virus DNA w/I hosts
  • Temperate viruses
  • Insert DNA into host forming a Prophage
  • Each time host cell undergoes mitosis, viral DNA
    is also replicated.
  • Eventually enters lytic cycle
  • Prophage leaves host DNA causing lytic cycle to
    occur
  • Some of prophage DNA may be expressed w/i host
    cell
  • Diptheria, botilism, scarlet fever would be
    harmless to humans if prophage genes did not make
    toxins in host bacteria.

7
Viral Envelopes
  • Lipid bylayer w/ glycoproteins
  • Glycoproteins act as receptors for binding to
    host cell
  • Fuses with host cell
  • Herpes Virus (viral envelope)
  • Remains latent in host cells nuclei
    (provirus)(lysogenic)
  • Stress (emotional or physical) causes to go lytic
  • Blister are active form of virus

8
Retroviruses (RNA)
  • Types
  • ssRNA serves as mRNA
  • ssRNA template for mRNA
  • ssRNA template for DNA (retroviruses)
  • Reverse Transcriptase
  • Enzyme transcribes DNA from RNA
  • Inserted into hosts DNA
  • Lysogenic Cycle (eventually lytic (AIDS))

9
Emerging Viruses
  • HIV (1980, California)
  • Ebola (1976) Central Africa, hemorrhagic fever
  • Smallpox (eradicated by WHO in 1977)
  • Worlwide vaccination
  • Measles
  • Polio

10
Virus and Cancer
  • 1911 Rous discovered that some viruses cause
    cancer
  • Tumor Viruses
  • Hepatitis B causes liver cancer
  • Oncogenes in viruses affect mitosis of host cell

11
Viroids and Prions
  • Prions
  • Protein molecules
  • replication unknown
  • yet is transmissible
  • Mad Cows Disease/Creutzfeldt Jakob
  • Converts normal proteins to the prion version
  • Normal Cow
  • Cow w/ Creutzfeldt Jakob
  • Viroids
  • Naked circular RNA
  • Infect plants
  • Several hundred nucleotides
  • No proteins
  • Replicates in host cells
  • Disrupts metabolism of plants

12
Bacteria
13
Genetics
  • ds DNA, circular
  • Forms dense region in cell called Nucleoid
  • No membrane
  • Binary Fission preceded by duplication of DNA
  • Asexual forming daughter cells identical to parent

14
Recombinations
  • Recombination generates diversity (natural
    selection)
  • Transformation
  • Changing of genotypes by uptake or foreign naked
    DNA
  • Bacteria recognizes specific fragments of DNA
    that MAY contain alleles needed.
  • Transduction
  • Phages carry bacterial genes from one host to
    another
  • Generalized
  • Specialized

15
Conjugation
  • Direct transfer of genetic material b/w two
    bacteria
  • F-Factor DNA segment that codes for the
    formation of a sex pilus (male)
  • Can exist as either
  • w/i bacterial chromosome or
  • As a plasmid
  • Episome genetic section that can exist as either
    a plasmid or w/i chromosome

16
F Plasmid
  • 25 genes that control production of sex pilus
  • F has F plasmid and is inheritable
  • F- has no F plasmid
  • F condition is contagious
  • Hrf cell has incorporated the F plasmid into the
    bacterial genome

17
R plasmids
  • Plasmids that contain genes that confer
    resistance to antibiotics
  • Has genes that encode for sex pilus
  • Can carry multiple genes for many antibiotics

18
Transposons
  • Jumping Genes
  • Genes that can move locations w/i
    chromosome/plasmids
  • Allows for multiple genes in the R plasmid
  • Has inverted sequence on either side of gene
  • Needs transposase enzyme to transpose gene.

19
Composite Transposons
  • Inverted repeats surround hitchhiker genes
  • Antibiotic resistance genes are often these
    hitchhikers

20
Gene Therapy
  • Uses transposons to cure genetic disorders
  • Insert working gene to replace damaged ones
  • Controversial

Space Doctor. Test your Gene Therapy Skills Try
this at home
Treatment of SCID in humans
21
Hyperlink for more information
  • HIV Statistics
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