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Chapter 19 Viruses
43

Chapter 19

Feb 11, 2016

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Chapter 19. Viruses. Overview: A Borrowed Life. Viruses called bacteriophages infect genetically takeover bacteria, like E. coli Viruses have borrowed life- between life-forms and chemicals Molecular biology began w/ study of bacteriophages. Fig. 19-1. 0.5 µm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Chapter 19

Chapter 19

Viruses

Page 2: Chapter 19

Overview: A Borrowed Life

• Viruses called bacteriophages infect genetically takeover bacteria, like E. coli

• Viruses have borrowed life- between life-forms and chemicals

• Molecular biology began w/ study of bacteriophages

Page 3: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-1

0.5 µm

Page 4: Chapter 19

Concept 19.1: A virus consists of a nucleic acid surrounded by a protein coat

• Wendel Stanley – 1935 confirmed hypothesis that tobacco mosaic virus caused by submicroscopic particles

• by crystallizing tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) from infected tobacco leaves– TMV- causes stunted growth in tobacco plants

Page 5: Chapter 19

Structure of Viruses

• Viruses are not cells• Viruses- very small infectious particles consisting of

nucleic acid enclosed in a protein coat and, possibly, a membranous envelope

Page 6: Chapter 19

Viral Genomes

• Viral genomes may be made of– Double- or single-stranded DNA, or– Double- or single-stranded RNA

• Depending on its type of nucleic acid, a virus is called a DNA virus or an RNA virus

Page 7: Chapter 19

Capsids and Envelopes

• A capsid is the protein shell that encloses the viral genome

• Capsids are built from protein subunits called capsomeres

• Capsid structures vary• Viral envelopes help some viruses infect hosts – Seen in influenza viruses and many animal viruses– derived from the host cell’s membrane– contains a combination of viral and host cell

molecules

Page 8: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-3

RNA

Capsomere

Capsomereof capsid

DNA

Glycoprotein18 250 nm 70–90 nm (diameter)

Glycoproteins80–200 nm (diameter) 80 225 nm

Membranousenvelope RNA

Capsid

HeadDNA

Tailsheath

Tailfiber

50 nm50 nm50 nm20 nm(a) Tobacco mosaic virus

(b) Adenoviruses (c) Influenza viruses (d) Bacteriophage T4

Page 9: Chapter 19

• Bacteriophages- viruses that infect bacteria– have an elongated capsid head that encloses DNA– protein tail attaches virus to the host & injects phage

DNA inside

Page 10: Chapter 19

Concept 19.2: Viruses reproduce only in host cells

• Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites- can reproduce only inside a host cell

• Each virus has a host range- a specific kind of cell or organism that it can infect

Page 11: Chapter 19

General Features of Viral Reproductive Cycles

• Once a viral genome has entered a cell, the cell begins to manufacture viral proteins

• The virus makes use of host enzymes, ribosomes, tRNAs, amino acids, ATP, and other molecules

• Viral nucleic acid molecules and capsomeres spontaneously self-assemble into new viruses

Page 12: Chapter 19

Transcriptionand manufactureof capsid proteins

Self-assembly of new virus particles and their exit from the cell

Entry anduncoating

Fig. 19-4VIRUS1

2

3

DNA

Capsid

4

Replication

HOST CELL

Viral DNA

mRNA

Capsidproteins

Viral DNA

Page 13: Chapter 19

Reproductive Cycles of Phages

• Phages – the most studied viruse• Phages- two reproductive mechanisms: the lytic

cycle and the lysogenic cycle

Page 14: Chapter 19

The Lytic Cycle

• The lytic cycle- ends in the death of host cell– produces new phages, digests host cell wall, releasing

progeny viruses– virulent phage - phage that reproduces only by lytic

cycle

• Bacteria have defenses against phages, including restriction enzymes that recognize and cut up certain phage DNA

Page 15: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-5-1Attachment1

Page 16: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-5-2

Entry of phageDNA anddegradation ofhost DNA

Attachment1

2

Page 17: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-5-3

Synthesis of viralgenomes andproteins

Entry of phageDNA anddegradation ofhost DNA

Attachment1

2

3

Page 18: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-5-4

Phage assembly

Assembly

Synthesis of viralgenomes andproteins

Entry of phageDNA anddegradation ofhost DNA

Attachment1

2

4

Head Tail Tail fibers

3

Page 19: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-5-5

Phage assembly

Head Tail Tail fibers

Assembly

Release

Synthesis of viralgenomes andproteins

Entry of phageDNA anddegradation ofhost DNA

Attachment1

2

4

5

3

Page 20: Chapter 19

The Lysogenic Cycle

• lysogenic cycle- copies phage genome without destroying the host– viral DNA molecule is incorporated into host cell’s

chromosome– prophage – integrated viral DNA– Every time host divides, it copies phage DNA and

passes copies to daughter cells• environmental signal triggers virus genome to exit

bacterial chromosome & switch to lytic mode – Phages that use both the lytic and lysogenic cycles are

called temperate phages

Page 21: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-6

PhageDNA

Phage

The phage injects its DNA.

Bacterialchromosome

Phage DNAcircularizes.

Daughter cellwith prophage

Occasionally, a prophageexits the bacterialchromosome,initiating a lytic cycle.

Cell divisionsproducepopulation ofbacteria infectedwith the prophage.

The cell lyses, releasing phages.

Lytic cycle

Lytic cycleis induced or Lysogenic cycle

is entered

Lysogenic cycle

Prophage

The bacterium reproduces,copying the prophage andtransmitting it to daughter cells.

Phage DNA integrates intothe bacterial chromosome,becoming a prophage.

New phage DNA and proteinsare synthesized andassembled into phages.

Page 22: Chapter 19

Reproductive Cycles of Animal Viruses

• Two key variables used to classify viruses that infect animals:– DNA or RNA?– Single-stranded or double-stranded?

Page 23: Chapter 19

Table 19-1a

Page 24: Chapter 19

Table 19-1b

Page 25: Chapter 19

Viral Envelopes

• Many viruses infecting animals have membranous envelope

• Viral glycoproteins on envelope surface bind to specific receptor molecules on host cell surface

• Some are formed from the host cell’s plasma membrane as the viral capsids exit

• Other from the host’s nuclear envelope (Later replaced by envelope from Golgi apparatus)

Page 26: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-7

Capsid

RNA

Envelope (withglycoproteins)

Capsid and viral genomeenter the cell

HOST CELL

Viral genome (RNA)

Template

mRNA

ER

Glyco-proteins

Capsidproteins Copy of

genome (RNA)

New virus

Page 27: Chapter 19

RNA as Viral Genetic Material

• The broadest variety of RNA genomes is found in viruses that infect animals

• Retroviruses use reverse transcriptase to copy their RNA genome into DNA

• HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is the retrovirus that causes AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome)

Page 28: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-8Glycoprotein Viral envelope

Capsid

RNA (twoidenticalstrands)Reverse

transcriptase HIV

HIVMembrane ofwhite blood cell

HIV entering a cell

0.25 µm

Viral RNA

RNA-DNAhybrid

HOST CELLReversetranscriptase

DNA

NUCLEUS

ProvirusChromosomal

DNA

RNA genomefor the next viralgeneration

mRNA

New virusNew HIV leaving a cell

Page 29: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-8b

HIVMembrane ofwhite blood cell

HIV entering a cell0.25 µm

New HIV leaving a cell

Page 30: Chapter 19

• The viral DNA integrated into host genome is called provirus

• Unlike prophage, a provirus remains a permanent resident of the host cell

• Host’s RNA polymerase transcribes the proviral DNA into RNA molecules

• The RNA molecules function both as mRNA for synthesis of viral proteins and as genomes for new virus particles released from the cell

Page 31: Chapter 19

Evolution of Viruses

• Viruses don’t fit our definition of living organisms• Since viruses can reproduce only within cells, they

probably evolved as bits of cellular nucleic acid• Possible sources of viral genomes-– plasmids, circular DNA in bacteria and yeasts– transposons, small mobile DNA segments

• Plasmids, transposons, and viruses are all mobile genetic elements

• Mimivirus, a double-stranded DNA virus, is the largest virus yet discovered

• There is controversy about whether this virus evolved before or after cells

Page 32: Chapter 19

Concept 19.3: Viruses, viroids, and prions are formidable pathogens in animals and plants

• Diseases caused by viral infections affect humans, agricultural crops, and livestock worldwide

• Smaller, less complex entities called viroids and prions also cause disease in plants and animals, respectively

Page 33: Chapter 19

Viral Diseases in Animals

• Viruses may damage or kill cells by causing the release of hydrolytic enzymes from lysosomes

• Some viruses cause infected cells to produce toxins that lead to disease symptoms

• Others have envelope proteins that are toxic

Page 34: Chapter 19

• Vaccines are harmless derivatives of pathogenic microbes that stimulate the immune system to mount defenses against the actual pathogen

• Vaccines can prevent certain viral illnesses• Viral infections cannot be treated by antibiotics• Antiviral drugs can help to treat, though not cure,

viral infections

Page 35: Chapter 19

Emerging Viruses

• Emerging viruses are those that appear suddenly or suddenly come to the attention of scientists

• Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) recently appeared in China

• Outbreaks of “new” viral diseases in humans are usually caused by existing viruses that expand their host territory

Page 36: Chapter 19

• Flu epidemics are caused by new strains of influenza virus to which people have little immunity

• Viral diseases in a small isolated population can emerge and become global

• New viral diseases can emerge when viruses spread from animals to humans

• Viral strains that jump species can exchange genetic information with other viruses to which humans have no immunity

Page 37: Chapter 19

• These strains can cause pandemics, global epidemics

• The “avian flu” is a virus that recently appeared in humans and originated in wild birds

Page 38: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-9

(a) The 1918 flu pandemic

(b) Influenza A H5N1 virus

(c) Vaccinating ducks

0.5 µm

Page 39: Chapter 19

Viral Diseases in Plants

• More than 2,000 types of viral diseases of plants are known and cause spots on leaves and fruits, stunted growth, and damaged flowers or roots

• Most plant viruses have an RNA genome• Plant viruses spread disease in two major modes:– Horizontal transmission, entering through damaged

cell walls – Vertical transmission, inheriting the virus from a

parent

Page 40: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-10

Page 41: Chapter 19

Viroids and Prions: The Simplest Infectious Agents

• Viroids are circular RNA molecules that infect plants and disrupt their growth

• Prions are slow-acting, virtually indestructible infectious proteins that cause brain diseases in mammals

• Prions propagate by converting normal proteins into the prion version

• Scrapie in sheep, mad cow disease, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans are all caused by prions

Page 42: Chapter 19

Fig. 19-11

Prion

Normalprotein

Originalprion

Newprion

Aggregatesof prions

Page 43: Chapter 19

You should now be able to:

1. Explain how capsids and envelopes are formed2. Distinguish between the lytic and lysogenic

reproductive cycles

3. Explain why viruses are obligate intracellular parasites

4. Describe the reproductive cycle of an HIV retrovirus

5. Describe three processes that lead to the emergence of new diseases

6. Describe viroids and prions