Title: Viruses
1Viruses
- The latin word for poison!!!
2A Virus
- Nonliving particle cosisting of a core of
hereditary material surrounded by a protein coat. - Does not grow
- Does not respond
- Does not eat
- Only reproduces
- Can reproduce only inside a living cell (host
cell)
3Viruses
- Some can be made into crystals and stored in a
jar for years. - If opened, the virus can enter an organism
(host), quickly reproduce, and cause new
infections. - Causes damage to the organism
4Classifying Viruses
- Viruses come in a variety of shapes due to their
protein covering. - They are responsible for many diseases.
- They are classified by shape, the kind of
hereditary material they have, the kind of
organisms they infect, and their method of
reproduction.
5Naming Viruses
- Viruses are often named after the disease they
cause. - Ex polio viruscauses polio disease
- Also named after the organ or tissue they infect.
- Ex adenovirusinfects the adenoid tissues.
6The T4 Virus
- Also called a bacteriophage
- Type of virus that infects bacteria.
- Many sided head attached to a tail.
- Injects its hereditary material into the cell
through the tail, much like a hypodermic needle.
7T4 Bacteriophage
8What do viruses do?
- Once inside a host cell, a virus can do 1 of 2
things. - 1. Be active (Lytic)
- 2. Be latent or be an inactive part of the
cell for a while. (Lysogenic)
9The Active Phase (overview)
10The Active Virus (Step 1)
Attach a specific virus attaches to the surface
of a specific bacterial cell.
11The Active Virus (Step 2)
Invade Hereditary material of the virus injects
itself into the bacterial cell.
12The Active Virus (step 3)
Copy Viral heredity material takes control of
the bacterial cell and the cell begins to make
new virus particles.
13The Active Virus (step 4)
Release Cell bursts open and hundreds of new
virus particles are released. New particles go
on to infect other cells.
14The Latent Virus
- The latent virus enters the cell and becomes part
of the cells hereditary material without
immediately destroying the cell or making new
viruses. - May hide inside cells for many years.
- May become active at any time.
15The Latent Virus (overview)
16Latent Virus (Step 1)
Specific virus attaches to the surface of a
specific bacterial cell. Hereditary mateial of
the virus injects itself into the cell.
17Latent Virus (Step 2)
Virus becomes part of the bacterial cells
chromosomes.
18Latent Virus (Step 3)
Bacterial cell divides.
19Latent Virus (Step 4)
Virus leaves chromosome and becomes active.
20Latent Virus (Step 5)
New viruses are made.
21Latent Virus (Step 6)
Bacterial cell breaks open and releases the
viruses destroying the host bacterial cell.
22Latent Virus Example
- Cold Sore
- From latent phase to the active phase
- Virus enters the cell is remains latent.
- Stress, too much sun or cold makes the virus
become active. - Sores become abundant.
- Sores disappear virus becomes latent again.
- Still present, just not active.
23Viral Diseases
- May cause disease in plants, animals, fungi,
bacteria, and protists. - No antibiotic medications to cure viruses.
- Can be prevented by vaccines.
- Vaccines made from damaged virus that can no
longer cause disease.
24Vaccine Example
- Edward Jenner
- Developed vaccine in 1796 for smallpox.
- Smallpox was a greatly feared disease.
- Prepared the vaccine from using some of the
samples taken from the sores of the milkmaids
that had cowpox. - Injected the material into healthy people.
- Protected them against the smallpox virus.
25The End