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Viruses

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Title: Viruses


1
Viruses
2
What do you think this is?
3
What do you Think These Objects are? Are They
Living?
4
Prion, Virus, and Viroid
  • Viroid pathogen causes disease in a plant.
    Protein but no capsid - RNA
  • Prion pathogen made only of a protein. Mutates
    your proteins! No DNA OR RNA

5
2. Plant Viruses(viroids)First plant virus to
be identified was the tobaccomosaic virus400
viruses that infect plants, causing as many as
1000 diseasesCan be beneficial - flower color,
6
Plant Virus Tobacco Mosiac
7
3. Prions Particles composed of proteins and
have no nucleic acids (still infectious)Influence
how proteins fold into their active
shapeExample Mad cow disease (destroys brain
damage).
8
Prions(cause mutations in chromosomes or proteins)
  • Alzheimer's disease
  • Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
  • Down's syndrome
  • Fatal familial insomnia
  • Gerstmann-Straussler syndrome
  • Kuru Leprosy

9
Prion crystalline protein structure
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Viroids
  • So small No real pictures!

12
Viroids Hepatitis D
13
Bacteria Vs Virus
14
VIRUSES
Virus infectious particle that contains DNA or
RNA surrounded by a protein coat that can only
reproduce in a host cell. Latin for poison.
15
Bacteriophage attacking a bacteria!
16
History of viruses
Martinus Beijerinck Dutch scientist who said
that disease is caused by tiny particles in
juice. Called them viruses. Latin for
poison. Wendall Stanley isolated crystals of the
tobacco mosic virus. Dmitri Ivanovski for
tobacco mosiac in liquids extracted from
infected plants.
17
Are viruses alive? Scientists are still
arguing!!!
  • At the boundary of life, between the
    macromolecules (which are not alive) and the
    prokaryotic cells (which are), lie the viruses
    and bacteriophages (phages).
  • These twilight creatures are parasites
    responsible for causing many diseases in living
    things (herpes and HIV in humans, for example).
  • Viruses are found everywhere.

18
  • In isolation, viruses and bacteriophages show
    none of the expected signs of life. They do not
    respond to stimuli, they do not grow, they do not
    do any of the things we normally associate with
    life.

19
Characteristics of Living Things
Respond to stimulus virus respond when a cell
is near and attaches. Cells Not cells as we
know them Adapt The viruses do mutate to become
stronger but only in a host cell. Reproduces
only in a host cell Energy Uses energy of the
host DNA Yes they do have their own Grow and
develops Only in host Viruses are parasites
that can only perform certain characteristics in
host cells. Host The cell that the virus
attaches and uses their DNA and resources.
20
How do They Name Viruses
  1. After the disease they cause.
  2. After the organ or tissue they attack
  3. Today, they are given a genus name ending in the
    word virus. Code numbers are given to similar
    viruses

21
PARTS OF A VIRUS
  • Viruses consist of a core of nucleic acid, either
    DNA or RNA, and a protective coat of protein
    molecules and sometimes lipids(capsid).

CAPSID Protein coat Surrounding the DNA.
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Why is Capsid Important?
  • It is the protein coat around the virus that
    protests its DNA or RNA.
  • IT IS WAY THEY ARE SO HARD TO KILL!!!!!!

24
How Do Viruses Attack Their Host
  • Host - Cell the virus attacks.
  • Attaches to the host cell and interlocks with the
    protein of the host cell. Viruses are very
    specific to the cells they attack. This helps in
    the spread of the disease.
  • The outside envelope matches the cell that it
    attacks. Viruses are specific!

25
Attacking Host
The virus will attach itself to the host cell.
It will then shoot its DNA into the host cell.
The virus is a parasite that uses the host cell
for its energy and reproduction. It is a
little different if it is a bacteria cell or
eukaryotic cell.
26
Attacking the host
The size and shape of a virus determines which
cells or host they can attack.
27
Virus Attached to Host
28
Size and Shape of Viruses
  • Viruses come in all shapes sizes. You can only
  • see them with a microscope.
  • 3 shapes of viruses
  • Enveloped round with spikes( flu viruses)
  • Helical Long narrow coiled shape( rabies)
  • Polyhedral- many sides(foot and mouth disease)

29
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30
The different proteins that make up the capsid
determines the shape of the virus.
31
Difference between a bacteriophage and a virus
  • Bacteriophages attack bacteria (prokaryotes)
  • viruses attack eukaryotic cells(have a
    nucleus).
  • Viruses and bacteriophages invade cells and use
    the host cell's machinery to synthesize more of
    their own macromolecules.

32
  • Once inside the host the bacteriophage or virus
    will either go into a Lytic Cycle -
  • destroying the host cell during reproduction.
  • or
  • It will go into a Lysogenic Cycle - a
  • parasitic type of partnership with the cell

33
Lytic Cycle
In the lytic cycle, the virus takes over the
hosts DNA and grows its own. It grows its own
DNA and new viruses. The virus uses the energy of
the host cell. When it is full, the host cell
explodes and releases new viruses.
34
Lysogenic Cycle
The virus COMBINES its DNA with the host DNA
producing a Prophage. The cell is not destroyed.
As new cells are made, it will be the virus and
not host cell. Cell not destroyed.
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36
The Lytic Cycle
37
The Lysogenic Cycle
38
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39
4 types of Viruses
Retroviruses Viruses that contain RNA as their
nucleic acid Once inside a host cell, the
retrovirus makes DNA from its RNA Use reverse
transcriptase (enzyme) to do this- located inside
capsid The double-stranded DNA is then inserted
into the host cells chromosome and becomes a
provirus Example HIV (Human Immunodeficiency
Virus) infects white blood cells, which are used
in fighting off infections and disease
40
A retrovirus injects the enzyme, reverse
transcriptase into the cell to copy viral RNA
into DNA.
41
HIV Virus
42
  • HIV is a retrovirus injecting the enzyme, reverse
    transcriptase into the cell to copy viral RNA
    into DNA.

43
  • HIV doesnt target just any cell, it goes right
    for the cells that want to kill it. Helper" T
    cells are HIV's primary target. These cells help
    direct the immune system's response to various
    pathogens.

44
  • HIV undermines the body's ability to protect
    against disease by depleting T cells thus
    destroying the immune system.
  • The virus can infect 10 billion cells a day, yet
    only 1.8 billion can be replaced daily.

45
  • After many years of a constant battle, the body
    has insufficient numbers of T-Cells to mount an
    immune response against infections. At the point
    when the body is unable to fight off infections,
    a person is said to have the disease AIDS.
  • It is not the virus or the disease that
    ultimately kills a person it is the inability to
    fight off something as minor as the common cold.

46
Viruses are host specific a protein on the
surface of the virus has a shape that matches a
molecule in the plasma membrane of its host,
allowing the virus to lock onto the host cell.
47
How Do Vaccines WorkA vaccine contains a killed
or weakened part of a germ that is responsible
for infection. Because the germ has been killed
or weakened before it is used to make the
vaccine, it can not make the person sick. When a
person receives a vaccine, the body reacts by
making protective substances called "antibodies".
The antibodies are the body's defenders because
they help to kill off the germs that enter the
body. In other words, vaccines expose people
safely to germs, so that they can become
protected from a disease but not come down with
the disease.
48
  • Jenner was operating on the now widely accepted
    principle that once a person catches a certain
    disease, he or she is immune to it for the rest
    of their life. For example, once you've had the
    chickenpox, it's extremely unlikely that you'll
    ever catch it again. This is because your body,
    when exposed again, will recognize the disease
    and fight it off. The beauty of vaccines is that
    they help the body develop disease-fighting
    abilities without making you sick. Vaccines
    accomplish this amazing feat by tricking the body
    into believing it already has the full-blown
    disease. Here are the steps in this process,
    known as the "immune response"

49
  • Vaccine-preventable Diseases
  • Anthrax
  • Cervical Cancer
  • Diphtheria
  • Hepatitis A
  • Hepatitis B
  • Haemophilus influenzae type b
  • Human Papillomavirus
  • Influenza
  • Japanese encephalitis
  • Lyme disease
  • Measles
  • Meningococcal
  • Monkey pox
  • Mumps
  • Pneumococcal
  • Polio
  • Rabies

50
  • Rotavirus Bird Flu
  • Rubella
  • Shingles
  • Smallpox
  • Tetanus
  • Typhoid
  • Tuberculosis
  • Varicella
  • Yellow Fever
  • Common Cold
  • Swine Flu

51
  • Bacteria Virus
  • Organelles DNA
  • Kill with antibiotic Reproduces
  • Reproduces on own Energy from
  • Needs energy host
  • Cell Mutates
  • Responds hard to kill
  • Adapts Capsid
  • Grows
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