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1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions
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1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viruses, Viroids, and Prions

Page 2: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

2

Are Viruses Living or Are Viruses Living or Non-living?Non-living?

Most people say no!They have some properties of

life but not othersFor example, viruses can be

killed, even crystallized like table saltHowever, they can’t maintain a

constant internal state (homeostasis) and aren’t made of cells

Page 3: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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What are What are Viruses?Viruses?

A virus is made of genetic material and protein that can invade living cells.

Page 4: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viewing VirusesViewing VirusesViruses are Viruses are

smaller than the smaller than the smallest cellsmallest cell

Measured in Measured in nanometersnanometers

Viruses couldn’t Viruses couldn’t be seen until the be seen until the electron microscopeelectron microscope was invented in the was invented in the 2020thth century century

Page 5: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Size of VirusesSize of Viruses

Page 6: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viral Viral StructureStructure

Page 7: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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CharacteristicsCharacteristics

Non living structuresNoncellularHave a nucleic acid core

containing DNA or RNAContain a protein coat called

the capsidCapable of reproducing only

when inside a HOST cell

Page 8: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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CharacteristicsCharacteristics

Some viruses are enclosed in an protective envelopeSome viruses may

have spikes to help attach to the host cellMost viruses infect

only SPECIFIC host cells (ex. Plant viruses infect plant cells)

CAPSID

ENVELOPE

DNA

SPIKES

Page 9: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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CharacteristicsCharacteristics

Outside of host cells, viruses are inactive

Lack ribosomes and enzymes needed for metabolism

Use the raw materials and enzymes of the host cell to be able to reproduce

EBOLA VIRUS

HIV VIRUS

Page 10: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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CharacteristicsCharacteristics

Some viruses cause disease

Smallpox, measles, mononucleosis, influenza, colds, warts, AIDS, Ebola

Some viruses may cause some cancers like leukemia

Virus-free cells are rare

MEASLES

Page 11: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Herpes VirusHerpes Virus

SIMPLEX I and II

Page 12: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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AdenovirusAdenovirus

COMMON COLD

Page 13: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Influenza VirusInfluenza Virus

Page 14: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Chickenpox VirusChickenpox Virus

Page 15: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Papillomavirus – Papillomavirus – Warts!Warts!

Page 16: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Bacteriophages

Page 17: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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PhagesPhages

Viruses that attack bacteria are called bacteriophage or just phage

Page 18: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Escherichia Coli Bacterium

T - EVEN PHAGES ATTACK THIS BACTERIUM

Page 19: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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RetrovirusesRetroviruses

Page 20: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Characteristics of Characteristics of RetrovirusesRetroviruses

Contain RNA, not DNAContain enzyme called

Reverse TranscriptaseWhen a retrovirus infects

a cell, it injects its RNA and reverse transcriptase enzyme into the cytoplasm of that cell

Page 21: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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ENZYME

Page 22: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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RetrovirusesRetroviruses

The enzyme reverse transcriptase (or RTase), produces a DNA copy of the virus’s RNA

RTase

Page 23: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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RetrovirusesRetroviruses

HIV, the AIDS virus, is a retrovirus

Feline Leukemia Virus is also a retrovirus

Page 24: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viral Viral ReplicationReplication

Page 25: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viral AttackViral Attack

Humans rarely share viral diseases with other animalsEukaryotic viruses usually

have protective envelopes made from the host cell membraneOnce inside a cell, 2

processes may occur: the lytic cycle or the lysogenic cycle.

Page 26: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Lytic Cycle Lysogenic Cycle

Virus enters cell Virus integrates its DNA into host’s DNA (prophage)

Eliminates host cell’s DNA

Virus replicates along with host cell’s DNA

Makes copies of itself Cell may replicate many times, giving rise to host cells with a prophage

Causes cell to burst (lyse)

Page 27: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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5 Steps of Lytic 5 Steps of Lytic CycleCycle

1. Attachment to the cell2. Penetration (injection) of

viral DNA or RNA3. Replication of new viral

proteins and nucleic acids4. Assembly of the new viruses 5. Release of the new viruses

into the environment (cell lyses--bursts)

Page 28: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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The Lytic Cycle--The Lytic Cycle--AnimationAnimation

Page 29: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Lysogenic CycleLysogenic CyclePhage DNA injected into host cell Viral DNA joins host DNA forming

a prophageWhen an activation signal occurs,

the phage DNA starts replicatingViral DNA (part of prophage) may stay

inactive in host cell for long periods of time

Replicated during each binary fissionOver time, many cells form containing

the prophages

Page 30: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viral LatencyViral LatencySome viruses have the ability

to become dormant inside the cellCalled latent virusesThey may remain inactive for

long periods of time (years)Later, they activate to produce

new viruses in response to some external signal

HIV and Herpes viruses are examples

Page 31: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viral LatencyViral LatencyOnce a prophage cell is activated, host cell enters the lytic cellNew viruses form a & the cell lyses (bursts)Virus said to be virulent (deadly)

INACTIVE STAGEACTIVESTAGE

Page 32: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Latency in Latency in EukaryotesEukaryotesSome eukaryotic

viruses remain dormant for many years in the nervous system tissues

Chickenpox (caused by the virus Varicella zoster) is a childhood infection

It can reappear later in life as shingles, a painful itching rash limited to small areas of the body

SHINGLES

Page 33: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Treatment for Treatment for Viral DiseaseViral Disease

Page 34: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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VaccinesVaccines

A vaccine against a viral disease can be made from an attenuated (weakened), less virulent strain of the virusAttenuated virus is capable of

stimulating an immune response and creating immunity, but not causing illness

Page 35: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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SmallpoxSmallpoxEdward Jenner

(1796) developed a smallpox vaccine using milder cowpox viruses

Smallpox has been eradicated in the world today

Page 36: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Other Viral TreatmentsOther Viral Treatments

Interferons are naturally occurring proteins made by cells to fight viruses

Antiviral drugs (AZT)

Protease inhibitors – prevent capsid formation

Page 37: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Viroids & PrionsViroids & Prions

Page 38: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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ViroidsViroidsSmall, circular

RNA molecules without a protein coat

Infect plantsPotato famine

in Ireland

Page 39: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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PrionsPrionsPrions are

“infectious proteins” They are normal

body proteins that get converted into prions by contact with other prion proteins

They have no DNA or RNA

Page 40: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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Prion Prion DiseasesDiseases

Prions form Prions form insoluble insoluble deposits in the braindeposits in the brain

Damages nerve tissueDamages nerve tissueMad cow diseaseMad cow disease is an is an

exampleexamplePeople in New Guinea People in New Guinea

used to suffer from used to suffer from kurukuru, which they got , which they got from eating the brains from eating the brains of their enemiesof their enemies

Other examples:Other examples:Sheep Sheep scrapiescrapie and and Creutzfeldt-Creutzfeldt-Jacob diseaseJacob disease

Page 41: 1 Viruses, Viroids, and Prions. 2 Are Viruses Living or Non-living? Most people say no! They have some properties of life but not others For example,

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