Title: Human CytomegaloVirus Characteristics
1Human CytomegaloVirus - Characteristics
- ubiquitous among HerpesViruses
- lymphotrophic
- largest genome of all Herpes Viruses
- replicates only in human cells
- permissive cells include fibroblasts, epithelial
cells, and macrophages - semipermissive cells include mononuclear
lymphocytes, the stromal cells of the bone
marrow, and others basis of latency - Infected cells become significantly enlarged
cytomegaly - Highly species-specific
- Only infected humans
- There are cytomegaloviruses specific for other
animals
2CytomegaloVirus - Pathogenesis
- Replicative Cycle is the same as other
herpeviruses - replication occurs in epithelial cells and virus
is shed into most body fluids - virus then infects cells like lymphocytes and
macrophages - virus is highly cell-associated and is
transmitted by these cells - Envelope glycoprotein protects virus from host
antibody - Binds Fc portion of immunoglobulins
- Virus establishes latent infection in monouclear
cells and in organs such as kidney, liver, heart
fibroblasts and mononuclear cells in these organs - reactivation due to various factors including
imunosuppression - reactivation sheds virus into body fluid
including semen, breast milk, and urine - also reactivation often follows blood transfusion
and organ transplants
3Human CytomegaloVirus Clinical Diseases
- asymptomtic infection
- in most healthy individuals infection may occur
without symptoms - however, virus is shed these people are healthy
carriers - if symptoms develops they appear as mononucleosis
or hepatitis - Mononucleosis-like syndrome
- much like EBV with atypical lymphocytosis
- mild pharyngitis and variable lymphadenopathy
- heterophile antibody negative
- Hepatitis liver dysfunction similar to
hepatitis, but no evidence of classical
hepatitis viruses - Cytomegalic Inclusion Disease
- Congenital
- Perinatal
4CMV Cytomegalic Inclusion Disease
- Congenital
- virus crosses the placenta from mothers blood
during primary infection (occasionally during
reactivation) - Generally affects the nervous and RE systems
- pathology includes microencephaly, growth
retardation, hepatospenomegaly, and retinitis - Intrauterine mortality approx 20
- Full term infants experience significant CNS
defects - unilateral or bilateral hearing loss, blindness
and mental retardation - the mothers of almost all infants who have these
birth defects have had primary infection during
their pregnancy - this virus(CMV) is the most prevalent virus
observed in cased of congenital disease - approx 1/1000 infants with congenital CMV per year
5CMV Cytomegalic Inclusion Disease
- Perinatal
- virus is acquired from cervical secretions during
birth - Results from virus reactivation during pregnancy
- Although they are protected by maternal antibody,
they - begin to secrete virus 3 - 4 weeks after birth
- Are healthy infants with no clinically disease
carriers - Will secrete virus chronically for many years
6Human CytomegaloVirus Risk Factors
- Tranfusion and Transplantation Receipients
- mononucleosis or hepatitis following transfusion
or transplantation - often asymptomatic in healthy recipients
- virus is frequently transmitted and reactivated
in organ transplants - Immunocompromised Patients
- primary and secondary infection may occur in
patients with decreased cellular immunity - may involve the lung, eye, esophagus, or colon
- Susceptible pregnant Female
- Not immune to CMV infection
7CytomegaloVirus - Epidemiology
- Reservoir infected humans, asymptomatic or
symptomatic - Media of Transmission virus has been found in
urine, blood, throat washings, salvia, tears,
breast milk, semen, feces, amniotic fluid,
vaginal and cervical secretions, and various
organs and tissues - Major modes of transmission person-to-person
- vertical, congenital
- 10 of all newborns in the U.S.
- direct, salivary droplet
- direct, sexual
- 13 - 23 of females in venereal disease clinics
shed virus from the cervix - CMV is more concentrated in semen than any other
body fluid - 10 - 15 of adolescents are infected 50 of
adults infected by age 35 - blood transfusion
- tissue/organ transplants
8CytomegaloVirus - Diagnosis
- Cytology
- hallmark of CMV infection is the cytomegalic
cell an enlarged cell in which the nucleus
contains a dense, central, basophilic
intranuclear inclusion body often looks like an
owls eye - infected cells may be found in any tissue and in
urine - Papaicolaou or hematoxylin-eosin stains
- Antigen Detection Rapid and Sensitive Tests
- Antigen detection using enzyme or fluorescent
labeled monoclonal antibody - Nucleic acid detection using similarly labeled
DNA probes - Serology
- Seroconversion,(antibody response) in an
excellent marker for primary infection(IgM) or
recurrent infection(IgG) - Culture
- CMV grows in diploid-fibroblast cell cultures
- characteristic CPE observed in 4 - 6 weeks
- not routinely used for diagnosis much used
epidemiologically
9Human Herpes Virus, Type 6
- like EBV and CMV is lymphotrophic and ubiquitous
- Cellular receptor is CD46 found on T-cells,
B-cells, glial cells, fibroblasts and
megakaryocytes - Also shed from oropharyngeal cells
- Not antigenically related to any other Herpes
Viruses - Except for HHV- 7
- HHV-6 is also a cofactor in AIDS patients causing
mononucleosis and lymphadenopathy - virus is present in salvia of most adults and is
shed to children at a young age in oral secretions
10Human Herpes Virus, type 6 Roseola
- Also known as exanthema subitumor Roseola
infantum - Sometimes called Sixth Disease
- an infection of T- cells where it also becomes
latent - symptoms (fig 51-17)
- rapid onset of fever to 103 - 105 F may last
four days sometimes causing febrile seizures - Fever spike is followed in 24 hours by
generalized macular rash (exanthem) - rash is due to delay hypersensitivity or T -cell
action in skin - T - cells resolve the infection, but virus
remains latent in T -cells during the life the
host - Virus is shed and transmitted in oral secretions
from asymptomatic carriers
11Human Herpes Virus, type 6 - Epidemiology
- Human Reservoir
- Very common herpes virus
- 45 of U.S. children are infected by age 2
- 90 of adults are seropositive
- Asymptomatic shedding of virus is common
- Virus buds from lymphocytes into oral tissues
- Adults are the common source of HHV-6 to their
children
12ParvoViruses - Characteristics
- very small, non-enveloped, icosahedral, DNA
viruses - smallest of DNA viruses (18 - 26 nm)
- one linear, single-stranded DNA molecule
- the small genome(5.5 kilobases) makes these virus
very dependent on the host cell(sometime another
virus) for replication - some virus particles contain the plus() strand,
others the minus(-) strand - only the plus() stranded viruses are infectious
- genome encodes only a few proteins, structural
and non-structural, by an overlapping reading
mechanism - virus does not provide its own DNA dependent DNA
polymerase - must be supplied by a mitotically active cell
- viruses are replicated by mitotically active
cells of the erythroid lineage - bone marrow erythroid precursor cells, fetal
liver, leukemia cells
13ParvoViruses- Virus Cycle
- VAPs bind virus to P blood group receptors on
erythroid precusor cells - penetration via a type of viropexis requires
special pits in cell membrane - virion is uncoated in the nucleus
- mitotically active cells (S phase) polymerize a
complementary (minus) strand of DNA thus
providing a double stranded molecule for
transcription of early and late proteins - m-RNA is translated in the cytoplasm(ribosome)
and protein products are returned to the nucleus
for assembly or action - cellular DNA dependent DNA polymerase replicates
the plus and minus strands of DNA separately - during assembly structural proteins(capsids)
enclose both plus and minus DNA strands
separately thus giving particles with single
stranded DNA - non-structural virus products cause the nuclear
membrane and the cell membrane to degenerate
thus releasing the viruses by lysis
14ParvoViruses - Pathogenesis
- Parvovius, B19
- virus first replicates in the upper respiratory
tract - spreads via viremia to bone marrow and other
erythroid precursor cells - virus is cytolytic for these cells
- killing of cells and release of virus actives
host immune response which forms the basis for
rash and arthralgia - Clinical Symptoms described as
- Erythrema infectiosum also known as fifths
disease
15Human Parvovirus, B19 Erythrema infectiousm
- Parvovirus, B19 etiological agent
- only one consistent human pathogen in this group
- Genus Erythrovirus
- Disease Progression
- Incubation period
- viremia occurs within eight days and leads to
prodromal period - patient is infectious
- Prodromal period
- mild influenza-like symptoms
- fever, sore throat, malaise, myalgia and slight
drop in hemoglobin - this is also the initial febrile period during
which - erythrocytes production stops for one week
- viremia releases more virus into oral and
respiratory secretions - thus patient is still infectious for up to 14
days
16Erythrema infectiosum Fifths Disease
- Disease Progression
- Symptomatic stage
- as antibody (IgM) resolves the viremia in creates
immune complexes that precipitate out in the skin
and joints - thus the rash which appears on the face (slapped
cheeks) and spreads to the extremities may last
1 - 2 weeks in children - in adults the rash may or may not occur, but is
followed by polyarthritis of the hands, wrists,
knees and ankles
17ParvoViruses Other Clinical Diseases
- Polyarthrits
- Aplastic crisis
- occurs in patients suffering with chronic
hemolyic anemia - results from transient reduction in
erythropoiesis - which leads to reticulocytopenia last 7 - 10 days
- decrease in hemoglobin levels
- crisis accompanied by fever, malaise, myalgia
chills, and the maculopapular rash with
arthralgia - Hydrops fetalis
- aplastic crisis in the fetus of pregnant females
who are seronegative - results in fetal anemia and congestive heart
failure in utero
18ParvoVirus, B19 - Diagnosis
- mostly based upon clinical presentation
- laboratory confirmation
- ELISA test for B19 IgM or IgG
- PCR coupled with gene probes are very sensitive
in B19 genome detection
19ParvoVirus, B19 - Epidemiology
- Erythrovirus is the only Parvovirus which infects
humans - Infections occur throughout the year
- Outbreaks are common in school age children
- Most infection occur between ages of 5 -19
- Mode of transmission
- Person-to-person, direct, respiratory droplet
- Person-to-person, indirect, fomites
- Virus is non-enveloped and is very stable in the
environment in air and contaminated surfaces - Pregnant females often acquire virus from their
infected children
20ParvoVirus- Control
- Stringent hygiene
- Hand-washing
- Not sharing drinking devices
- Disinfection
- There is no vaccine against human parvoviruses
- There is a vaccine against animal parvoviruses
genus Parvovirus - Canine parvovirus
- Feline panleukopenia virus
21PoxViruses - Characteristics
- Largest viruses which infect humans and
animals(300 -350 nm) - Particle structure is most complex of all viruses
- core which contains double stranded DNA and many
enzymes/proteins - two membranes surround the core complex
envelope - Virus provides for most of its own requirements
- only DNA viruses in which the complete
replicative cycle occurs in the cytoplasm
complex cycle - Thus, the virus must encode most all of the the
enzymes needed for it replication with little,if
any, assistance from the host cell - the includes a viral encoded DNA dependent RNA
polymerase - inclusiong bodies (Guarnieri Bodies) form in the
cytoplasm and serve as sites of DNA replication - infected cells release about 10,000 virus
particles upon lysis
22PoxViruses Clinical Diseases
- Small pox
- Variola major and Variola minor Orthopoxvirus
- acquired by respiratory droplets, spreads by
viremia to infected many tissues including the
skin where the lesion develop to the pustule
stage - Cowpox
- Vaccinia Orthopoxvirus
- Molluscum contagiosum
- Molluscipoxvirus Genus
- currently the only poxvirus disease of humans
appears as papules and nodules on the skin virus
is transmitted by direct contact, both sexual and
non-sexual
23Molluscum contagiosum Clinical Disease
- Benign epidermal tumors
- Small, pink, wart-like, often umbilicated tumors
- Non-STD lesions on face, arms, back, buttock
- STD any moist genital area
- Contain semisolid caseous material
- Containing Molluscipoxvirus DNA
- Long incubation period 3-6 months
- Persistent lesions lasting up to 2 years
- Spontaneous regression
- Person-to-Person, direct, contact/sexual
- Person-to-Person, indirect, fomites (towels,
toys)
24Small Poxvirus - Epidemiology
- Human Reservoir
- Respiratory droplets
- Scabs from lesions
- Most common mode of transmission
- Person-to-Person, direct, respiratory droplet
25Smallpox - Control
- Active Attenuated Vaccine chemically stabilized
- Vaccinia Virus naturally attenuated zoonotic
strain - Obtained from vesicular lesion of calves
- Later virus were grown in chicken embryos
- From early experiment conducted by Edward Jenner
-1796 - First microbial disease to be eradicated via herd
immunity from a vaccine - Routine vaccination in the U.S ceased in 1971
- Routine vaccination in the World ceased in 1978
- Epidemiology/Control
- The importance of smallpox today is that it is
and example of the disease which was eradicated
by producing herd immunity through the process
of vaccination( use of active vaccinia virus)