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Viruses and Viral Like Agents. HIV. Influenza virus. Aeromonas virus 31. Smallopx virus. Herpes simplex virus. Orf virus. Electron micrographs of viruses. . What is a virus? . Organism that causes diseases Common cold Flu AIDS Bird flu Polio. Viruses are non-living.
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HIV Influenza virus Aeromonas virus 31 Smallopx virus Herpes simplex virus Orf virus Electron micrographs of viruses. What is a virus? • Organism that causes diseases • Common cold • Flu • AIDS • Bird flu • Polio
Viruses are non-living • In the 1930s, it was discovered that viruses are nonliving agents composed of nucleic acids and proteins. FIGURE 2: Size relationships among microorganisms and viruses
What are viruses??? • About 5, 000 viruses have been identified, but there is believed to be around 400, 000 different viruses. • Believed to be the most abundant biological entity on Earth!! • Viruses are very small- they do not “grow,” just reproduce • They cannot reproduce on their own (obligate, intracellular particles) • Most can only be seen with the electron microscope, to survive they must infect and take over a host cell in order to reproduce. • They lack the chemical machinery to generate energy and synthesize large molecules. • Viruses do not have organelles, have no cytoplasm, and no cell nucleus or nucleoid. • They do have: nucleic acid core and a protein coat.
What are Viruses??? • The viral genome contains either DNA or RNA, but does not have both (like we do). • They have a protein coat called a capsid that gives shape to the virus. • The capsid is what provides protection to the cell. • The amino acids make it resistant to temperature, pH and other environmental fluctuations. • Some capsids have special proteins called spikes, that help the virus attach to host cells and penetrate cell membranes. • Most viruses have a membrane that surrounds the nucleocapsid that is flexible called an envelope.
Viral Shape • Viruses are grouped by the shape of their nucleocapsid symmetry FIGURE 6: Various viral shapes
Structures compared From Medical Microbiology, 5th ed., Murray, Rosenthal & Pfaller, Mosby Inc., 2005, Fig. 6-4.
Properties of Viruses • Various morphologiespolyhedralhelicalsphericalfilamentouscomplex Ebola virus Rabies virus Poliovirus Herpes virus Coronavirus Lassa virus
Viral Structure • Nucleic acid core • the genetic material of the virus. • instructions to make all the viral parts and viral enzymes. • either DNA or RNA. 2) Capsid layer • made of protein that surrounds and protects the nucleic acid core. • can also be involved in attaching the virus to the cell membrane of its host.
Structure Continued • 3) Envelope • not seen in all viruses. • made of lipid or fat. • surrounds the capsid layer. • can also be used to attach to the CM of the host cell. • 4) Spike proteins • not seen in all viruses. • embedded in the envelope of the virus. • have a specific shape. • used to attach the virus to the host’s CM.