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Advanced Biology Chapter 27. Viruses. Nature of Viruses. Viral Basic Structure: DNA or RNA Protein Coat It is not living It is not a cell and has no cellular structures other than having nucleic acid. Viruses vary in shape and Size. More shapes and Sizes. Viruses invade cells.
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Advanced BiologyChapter 27 Viruses
Nature of Viruses • Viral Basic Structure: • DNA or RNA • Protein Coat • It is not living • It is not a cell and has no cellular structures other than having nucleic acid
Viruses invade cells • Viruses cannot replicate on their own, they need a host • Their host vary from bacteria, protists, plants and animals (including humans) • They are usually host specific (host range) and sometimes tissue specific (tissue tropism) • Viruses can remain dormant in cells for years (chicken pox and shingles caused by varicella zostervirus) • Viruses invade the host cell and use the cells protein synthesis processes to make viral proteins and take over the cell
Lytic vs. Lysogenic Cycle • Lytic - When a virus kills an infected host cell by rupturing the cell • Lysogenic - When a virus enters the cell and integrate themselves into the nucleic acids of the host cells. This allows them to be replicated along with the DNA
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HIV • AIDS (Auto Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is caused by Human Immunodeficiency Virus • Thought that HIV might be related to smallpox virus • HIV targets CD4+ cells such as T-helper cells which aids in the immune response system. • HIV is a retrovirus thus it has RNA instead of DNA • HIV enters the cells and goes through reverse transcriptase (DNA made from RNA). • HIV then makes another copy of DNA and incorporates itself into the DNA of the host • This allows them to use hosts protein synthesis to make more viral proteins and more HIV particles.
Other Viral Diseases • See page 532, Table 27.1 • Three basic types of flu: • Type A (causes most serious flu epidemics in humans but can infect other mammals and birds) • Type B (humans only) • Type C (humans only) • Subtypes are based on their protein spikes emerging from their capsid
Various Flu Epidemics • Called the H1N1 killed 20-50 million people • Asian Flu of 1957 (H2N2) over 100,000 Americans • Hong Kong Flu of 1968 (H3N2) 70,000 Americans • Flues are different strains that change/evolve constantly and can sometimes change over from a virus in one species to another (birds to humans)
Emerging Viruses • Any virus that can transfer from one species to the next is considered an emerging virus • Some of these include: • Hantavirus – Deer mouse to humans (pneumonia 1993) • Hemorrhagic fever (filovirus) –causes hemorrhagic fever and death rates over 50% • Ebola virus is one of the worst with 90% death rates in Africa (unknown source) • Summer of 1995 – Zaire – killed 245 out of 316 infected
SARS • SARS (Severe acute respiratory syndrome) • Respiratory infection • Acts like pneumonia • 8% fatality rate • Outbreak in 2003 • Unknown source • Maybe civets (weasel-like) in China • Or bats • Vaccines are becoming available
Cancer • Some viruses can cause cancer • Hepatitis B and liver cancer connection • Human Papillomavirus (HPV) and cervical cancer
Prions • Prions are proteins that cause disease (proteinaceous infectious particle) – Stanley Prusiner – 1970 • Prions can cause diseases such as TSE (transmissible spongiform encephalopathies) • In this case, neurons die out and an empty space makes the brain look like a sponge. • Mad Cow Disease • Chronic Wasting Disease • Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
Viroids • Viroids are small RNA molecules that are circular and they do not have a protein coat. • Viroids somehow replicate without any helper cells • They only infect plants • 10 million coconut palms killed in Philippines • Relatively new infectious agent that is still being studied