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Different routes Important factor in common: secretions/tissues from infected individual come into contact with mucus membranes of uninfected individual Minimum environmental exposure for virus Many examples-behavior is primary ecological factor.
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Different routes Important factor in common: secretions/tissues from infected individual come into contact with mucus membranes of uninfected individual Minimum environmental exposure for virus Many examples-behavior is primary ecological factor 4. Blood-borne, urogenital, sexual transmission
The unusual case of Hepatitis Viruses • Viral hepatitis 2 types recognized “infectious” aka Type A (HAV) “serum” aka Type B (HBV) • Tests available for HBV in the 1970s, reveal NANB hepatitis, agent identified in 1989 (HCV) • Hepatitis delta agent (HDV) 1983 • Hepatitis E, 1983, GI virus, (HEV) • Hepatitis F, 1994, (HFV) ?????? • Hepatitis G, 1995, (HGV or GBV) All of these viruses are hepatotropic!!!
Transmission of Hepatitis Viruses • HAV, HEV: contaminated food or water • HBV, HCV, HDV, HFV, HGV: blood and blood products shared needles sexual transmission transplants (nosocomial, iatrogenic)
HBV vs. HDV • HBV is an RNA/DNA virus that is unique among viruses. It is fully functional and often found by itself in patients. • HDV is an RNA-based sub-viral pathogen that shares features with (but is not identical to) plant satellite viruses and viroids. It is never found by itself in patients.
HBV-prototype hepadnavirus • Extracellular form is DNA • Replicates via reverse transcriptase step
HEPATITIS B VACCINE Early vaccine from killed virus-safety? No good experimental models Recombinant DNA vaccine-1980s eg- RECOMBIVAX Produced by recombinant DNA technology in yeast Seroconverts 99% healthy adults 20 to 29 years old Subunit vaccine: HBsAg Vaccine protects against active Hepatitis B, asymptomatic HBV, the carrier state, & HDV Vaccine is 90-95% effective in a wide range of population ages
5. Vector transmission • Intermediate species carries virus from host to host • “biological” transmission • Arthropod vectors for animal viruses • Insects, ticks, etc. • “Arboviruses” are arthropod-borne • “Viruses maintained in nature principally, or to an important extent, through biological transmission between sus-ceptible vertebrate hosts by haematophagous arthropods or through transovarian and possibly venereal transmission in arthropods.”
Arbovirus classification “Arbovirus” is jargon but widely used
Simplest transmission cycle • Urban Dengue fever (Aedes spp.) • Urban yellow fever (Aedesaegypti)
Complex cycles are more common This example involves several vertebrate and vector species
Terms • Reservoir, primary and secondary • Primary host, amplifying host, natural host • Primary, secondary vectors • Propagative vs mechanical transmission • circulative • Venereal, transovarial transmission • Dead-end host • Zoonosis, zoonotic disease • Endemic, enzootic, etc. • Skunks, raccoons, bats etc. are reservoirs of rabies virus (a rhabdovirus) but not vectors.
Flaviviridae-Three Important Genera • Flavivirus (mainly mosquito or tick vectors Central European encephalitis (TBE-W), Japanese encephalitis (JE), St. Louis encephalitis (SLE), West Nile virus (WN), Dengue (DEN), Yellow fever (YF). Symptoms include fever, encephalitis, hemorrhagic fever 2) Pestivirus (not arboviruses) Contact and Saliva transmitted. Bovine viral diarrhea (BVDV), hog cholera or classical swine fever (CSFV), very important animal diseases. 3) Hepacivirus (not arboviruses) blood borne pathogens-Hepatitis C (HCV)-liver disease and liver cancer worldwide.
Flavivirus “tree” Tick-borne Mospquito Vectors No known Vectors For some Viruses In each cluster
Yellow Fever Virus “vomito negro”, “yellow jack” Philadelphia, 1793 Haiti, 1802 New Orleans, Memphis, 1878 Panama, 1880s
Yellow Fever Virus Infection • Yellow fever is a viral haemorrhagic fever. • Incubation period usually is 3 to 6 days. • Mortality rate in severe yellow fever is 50% with death occurring 7 to 10 days after onset. • Infection varies from a mild illness followed by death 2 to 3 days later to a very mild or subclinical infection. • Estimated 200,000 cases worldwide and 3000 deaths annually • Travellers at risk • Vector transmission of yellow fever by mosquitoes was proposed by Carlos Finlay in 1881 and demonstrated Walter Reed and others 1898
Jesse Lazear Died in YF transmission experiments Walter Reed transmission of YF Max Theiler William Gorgas U.S. Surgeon General Developed Broke YF transmission YF vaccine cycle in Cuba and Panama The “Heroes” of Yellow Fever Research Theiler- YFV vaccine
Derivation of a Yellow Fever Virus Vaccine • The original virus isolate was obtained from an African named Asibi. • Passed 53 times in monkeys with intermittent periods in Aedes agyptii. • Passed 18 times in minced mouse embryo tissue culture. • Passed 50 times in minced whole chicken embryo tissue culture. • Passed 152 times in minced chicken embryos. • A marked change in virulence occurred between in vitro passage 89 and 114. Vaccine was called 17D. The 17D vaccine has permitted health authorities to break the cycle of yellow fever and get the disease under control in South America and Africa. But YFV is NOT a good candidate for eradication.
Bunyaviridae • 3 ssRNA genome segments • + or – or +/- • Varies w virus • Envelope • No matrix • Helical capsid • >300 known worldwide • Many diseases
Bunyavirus Diseases and Vectors Genus Disease & Vector Relations OrthobunyavirusCalifornia Encephalitis Group, others. mosquito vectors - bird, rodent, human cycle HantavirusHemorrhagic fever & renal syndrome Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome-(rodents) NairovirusCrimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever- ticks. PhlebovirusRift Valley Fever, plus several rodent & bird viruses-mosquito, sandfly& tick TospovirusBroadest host range known (>360 plant host species-thrips.
LaCrosse virus Now grouped with California serogroup But mainly in Eastern US Treehole (woodland) mosquito Aedestriseriatus Most common in males under 16 Approx. 90 cases per year reported Neurological sequelae
Total US cases through 2010 Most frequent Arboviral infection in US Case frequency
Humans accidental hosts-dead end hosts Transovarial transmission Venereal transmission Vector transmission through blood
Vertical vs. horizontal transmission in animals Vertical transmission is from parent to offspring in some way that is related to reproduction. • Trans-placental-fetal (Rubella) • Maternal-parturition (Herpes simplex) • Maternal-neonatal (HIV) • Germ line (?)
Plant virus transmission The cell wall is a formidable barrier to viruses. Receptors? There is only one known portal of entry for plant viruses. How is it created?
Mechanical transmission of plant viruses • Abrasions of leaves or stems • Field transmission • Laboratory transmission • May require abrasive material such as carborundum
Vector transmission Arthropods-aphids, thrips, leafhoppers, whiteflies Helper component of potyviruses Nematodes (Nepoviridae, Tobraviridae)
Transmission by parasites • Dodder (Cuscuta subinclusa, etc.) • Fungi (e.g. Olpidium brassicae), TNV, STNV, lettuce big vein virus