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Anatomy of a Virus
• The tiniest viruses are
20 nm in diameter.
(smaller than a
ribosome)
• They consist of
nucleic acids enclosed
in a protein coat and
sometimes a
membranous envelop.
• The genomes (sets of genes) maybe
– Double stranded DNA
– Single stranded DNA
– Double stranded RNA
– Single stranded RNA
• They are called either a DNA or RNA virus depending on the type of nucleotide in the make-up.
• They may be linear or circular
• The smallest have only 4 genes and largest have several hundred.
• Capsid – a protein shell that covers the viral genome. They may be
– Rod-shaped
– Polyhedral
– More complex
Capsids are built from large numbers of protein subunits called CAPSOMERES
The most complex capsids are found in viruses that infect bacteria – BACTERIOPHAGES (T1-T7). They have a protein tail piece with tail fibers that attach to the bacterium
Reproduction
• Viruses are obligate
intracellular parasites
that can reproduce only
within a host cell.
• They do not have
– Enzymes for metabolism
– Do not have ribosomes
– Do not have the
equipment to make
proteins
Each type of virus can infect and parasitize
only a limited range of host cells called its
HOST RANGE.
• Some are broad based while others are not.
– Swine flu virus can infect swine or humans
– Rabies can infect may mammals
• Some can parasitize only E. coli
• Eukaryote viruses are usually tissue specific
• Viruses use a “lock and key” fit to identify
hosts.
Naming Viruses
• After the disease it causes
Poliovirus
Naming Viruses
• Organism it infects
Tomato
Mosaic
Virus
(TMV)
Naming Viruses
• Place it was found
Ebola Virus
Naming Viruses
• People who identify it
Epstein-Barr Virus
Reproduction occurs using lytic
or lysogenic cycles
• The Lytic Cycle
– Culminates in the death of the host cell
– Virulent viruses reproduce only by lytic cyle.
– Natural selection favors bacterial mutations with receptor sites that are resistant to a particular phage or that have restriction enzymes to destroy the phages.
• The Lysogenic Cycle
– Replication of the viral
genome without
destroying the host
cell.
– A temperate virus may
reproduce by either
cycle.
– Lambda virus:
resembles T4 but only
has a single short tail
fiber
• While phages have the potential to wipe out a bacterial colony in just hours, bacteria have defenses against phages.
– Natural selection favors bacterial mutants with receptors sites that are no longer recognized by a particular type of phage.
– Bacteria produce restriction nucleases that recognize and cut up foreign DNA, including certain phage DNA.
• Modifications to the bacteria’s own DNA prevent its destruction by restriction nucleases.
– But, natural selection favors resistant phage mutants
• In the lysogenic cycle, the phage genome replicates without destroying the host cell.
• Temperate phages, like phage lambda, use both lytic and lysogenic cycles.
• Within the host, the virus’ circular DNA engages in either the lytic or lysogenic cycle.
• During a lytic cycle, the viral genes immediately turn the host cell into a virus-producing factory, and the cell soon lyses and releases its viral products.
The lambda phage which infects E. coli
demonstrates the cycles of a temperate phage.
Lambda reproduction
• Infects an E. coli cell by injecting its DNA
• The lambda DNA molecule forms a circle.
• Lytic or lysogenic cycles begin
• In a lytic cycle, the cell is turned into a lambda producing factory, the cell lyses and releases its products.
• In a lysogenic cycle, the viral genome is incorporated into by genetic recombination into a specific site on the host cell’s chromosome.
• It is now known as a prophage
• Every time the E. coli divides, it replicated the
phage DNA and passes it along to the daughter
cells.
• This enables the phage to replicate without
destroying the host.
• The phages may at some point in time become
active phages that lyse their host cell and releasing
infectious particles.
• There is usually an environment trigger.
• There may be other prophages released as well and
this may change the phenotype of the host. This is
of medical importance. Examples: diphtheria,
botulism and scarlet fever.
• Regardless of the type of virus, the parasite
diverts the host cell’s resources for viral
production.
• The host cell provides:
• Nucleotides for nucleic acid production
• Enzymes
• Ribosomes
• tRNA
• Amino acids
• ATP
Modes of infection and replication of
animal viruses
• Focus on animals viruses with a viral envelop
– The envelop is outside the capsid and helps the virus enter the host cell.
– Generally a lipid bilayer with glycoprotein spikes
– The envelop fuses with the cell membrane
– The ER of the host cell makes the membrane proteins which are transported to the membrane
– New viruses exits the host in a process similar to exocytosis.
This reproductive cycle
does not kill the host.
• Some viruses have envelopes that are not
derived from the plasma membrane.
• Herpesvirus has an envelop that is derived
from the nuclear membrane.
• These become integrated into the host
genome as a provirus. Once these viruses
are acquired they tend to reoccur through
out a person’s life.
RNA as Viral Genetic Material
• The broadest variety of RNA genomes is found among viruses are those that infect animals.
• There are three types of single stranded RNA genomes
• The genome of class IV can directly serve as mRNA and can be translated into viral protein immediately after infection
RETROVIRUSES• Most complicated
• Genetic information flows in the reverse direction
• Have the enzyme reverse transcriptase
– Transcribes DNA from an RNA template
• The newly made DNA than integrates as a provirus into the nucleus of the animal cell
• The host’s RNA polymerase transcribes the virual DNA into RNA molecules.
Viral Diseases in Animals
• The damage caused by a viral disease depends on
the ability of the tissue infected to regenerate by
cell division.
– Cold virus – we recover from
– Poliovirus - attacks
• Vaccines are harmless variants of pathogenic
microbes that stimulate the immune system to
defenses against the pathogen.
• The link between viral infection and the
symptoms it produces is often obscure.
– Some viruses damage or kill cells by triggering the
release of hydrolytic enzymes from lysosomes.
– Some viruses cause the infected cell to produce
toxins that lead to disease symptoms.
– Other have molecular components, such as envelope
proteins, that are toxic.
• In some cases, viral damage is easily repaired
(respiratory epithelium after a cold), but in
others, infection causes permanent damage
(nerve cells after polio).
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• The first vaccine was developed in the late 1700s by Edward Jenner to fight smallpox.
– Jenner learned from his patients that milkmaids who had contracted cowpox, a milder disease that usually infects cows, were resistant to smallpox.
– In his famous experiment in 1796, Jenner infected a farmboy with cowpox, acquired from the sore of a milkmaid with the disease.
– When exposed to smallpox, the boy resisted the disease.
– Because of their similarities, vaccination with the cowpox virus sensitizes the immune system to react vigorously if exposed to actual smallpox virus.
• Effective vaccines against many other viruses exist.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Vaccines can help prevent viral infections, but
they can do little to cure most viral infection
once they occur.
• Antibiotics which can kill bacteria by inhibiting
enzyme or processes specific to bacteria are
powerless again viruses, which have few or no
enzymes of their own.
• Some recently-developed drugs do combat some
viruses, mostly by interfering with viral nucleic
acid synthesis.
– AZT interferes with reverse transcriptase of HIV.
– Acyclovir inhibits herpes virus DNA synthesis.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Plant viruses can stunt plant growth and diminish
crop yields.
• Most are RNA viruses with rod-shaped capsids
produced by a spiral of capsomeres.
6. Plant viruses are serious
agricultural pests
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Fig. 18.9a
• In recent years, several very dangerous
“emergent viruses” have risen to prominence.
– HIV, the AIDS virus, seemed to appear suddenly in
the early 1980s.
– Each year new strains of influenza virus cause
millions to miss work or class, and deaths are not
uncommon.
– The deadly Ebola
virus has caused
hemorrhagic fevers
in central Africa
periodically since
1976.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Fig. 18.8a
• Viroids, smaller and simpler than even viruses,
consist of tiny molecules of naked circular RNA
that infect plants.
• Their several hundred nucleotides do not encode
for proteins but can be replicated by the host’s
cellular enzymes.
• These RNA molecules can disrupt plant
metabolism and stunt plant growth, perhaps by
causing errors in the regulatory systems that
control plant growth.
7. Viroids and prions are infectious
agents even simpler than viruses
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Viruses are in the semantic fog between life and
nonlife.
• An isolated virus is biologically inert and yet it
has a genetic program written in the universal
language of life.
• Although viruses are obligate intracellular
parasites that cannot reproduce independently, it
is hard to deny their evolutionary connection to
the living world.
8. Viruses may have evolved from
other mobile genetic elements
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Because viruses depend on cells for their own propagation, it is reasonable to assume that they evolved after the first cells appeared.
• Most molecular biologists favor the hypothesis that viruses originated from fragments of cellular nucleic acids that could move from one cell to another.
– A viral genome usually has more in common with the genome of its host than with those of viruses infecting other hosts.
– Perhaps the earliest viruses were naked bits of nucleic acids that passed between cells via injured cell surfaces.
– The evolution of capsid genes may have facilitated the infection of undamaged cells.Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Candidates for the original sources of viral
genomes include plasmids and transposons.
– Plasmids are small, circular DNA molecules that are
separate from chromosomes.
– Plasmids, found in bacteria and in the eukaryote
yeast, can replicate independently of the rest of the
cell and are occasionally be transferred between cells.
– Transposons are DNA segments that can move from
one location to another within a cell’s genome.
• Both plasmids and transposons are mobile
genetic elements.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings