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Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS
22

Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Chapter 19

VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS

Page 2: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extratfilterable agent

2) 1898, Martinus Beijerinck called it virus, which means “poison” in Latin.

3) In 1939, electron microscope to capture the first images of tobacco mosaic virus.

Page 3: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

1) Plaques

2) Gene therapy

Page 4: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Tiny, infectious agents that: have a nucleic acid core (RNA or

DNA) have a protein coat (capsid)

composed of capsomers may have an envelope, which is

derived from the host cell membrane

HIV (enveloped virus)

Adenovirus (naked virus)

Viral structure

Page 5: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

various shape…

Page 6: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Basic structural unit is the virion (a single viral particle).

Viruses are NOT cells.[no nucleus, organelles, or cytoplasm]

Viruses are NOT considered to be living.[do not metabolize, respond or reproduce on their own]

Page 7: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Viruses must infect cells (prokaryote or eukaryote) to replicate.

Step 1: Binding to host cellVirus attaches to specific receptors on cell surface.

Viral Infection & Replication

Page 8: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Step 2: Entry into host cell

Bacteriophages inject nucleic acid.

Animal viruses enter by receptor-mediated endocytosis & then uncoat.

Page 9: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Plant viruses enter through mechanical damage (insect bite, mechanical damage by farm equipment, wind, or nibbling animals).

Page 10: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

plasmodesma

cell membrane

cell wall

Within a plant, virions easily spread from cell to cell through the plasmodesma

Page 11: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Step 3: Replication

BindingViral entry

Virus directs host cell to produce viral nucleic acids & proteins

Progeny virions are assembled & released as host cell ruptures

Page 12: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Viruses follow two major strategies to replicate

Page 13: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Lytic lifestyle (most viruses)Virus invades host cell, replicates, and

progeny virions are released.

Lysogenic lifestyle (some bacteriophages)Virus invades host cell and integrates it’s

DNA into host DNA.Virus “hides” in host cell for indefinite

period of time.Virus reverts to lytic lifestyle.

Viral Lifestyles

Page 14: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Replication of HIV

(human immunodeficiency virus)

Page 15: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

- viruses that enter a period of dormancy after invading a host cell.

Ex. Herpesvirus that causes cold sores Epstein-Barr virus is so efficient at

remaining undetected that more than 80% of the human population carries it. Because latent viruses persist by signaling their host cells to divide continuously, they may cause cancer.

Latent Viruses

Page 16: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Viral Pathogenicity

Pathogenicity depends upon the ability of the virus to infect its host, and the condition of host defenses.

Page 17: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Epidemiology

Host ranges

Ex. rabies virus infects many mammals; humans, skunks (臭鼬 ), and bats

Ex. small pox virus infects humans only: can be controlled by vaccination

Ex. Ebola virus causes hemorrhagic fever.

Page 18: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Certain hosts develop illness.

Certain hosts show no symptoms - function as reservoirsEx. pigs & ducks serve as reservoirs for influenza (flu) viruses.Influenza can jump from either animal to humans (zoonosis).

Page 19: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Animal cells employ an immune system: Antibodies coat viral particles so they can’t

adhere to target cells. Certain cells rupture virus-infected cells before

progeny viruses can be released. Virus-infected cells release chemicals that

protect surrounding uninfected cells.

Antiviral drugs like AZT & ddC have been developed to slow viral replication.

Defense against Viral Infection

Page 20: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

Other Infectious Agents

. Viroids (naked RNA) - infectious RNAs that affect plants.

Ex. Avocado sunblotch, Tomato bunchy top, Chrysanthemum stunt disease

Page 21: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

prion protein (PrP)

Prions (proteinaceous infectious particle) - infectious proteins associated with slow-virus spongiform encephalopathy.

Page 22: Chapter 19 VIRUSES AND SIMPLE INFECTIOUS AGENTS. 1) 1892, use porcelain filter to filterize tobacco leaves extrat  filterable agent 2) 1898, Martinus.

A prion disease: bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)= mad cow disease