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6/01: Papillomaviruses, polyomaviruses, and adenoviruses (Small DNA viruses) 6/10: Herpesviruses (Large DNA viruses) 6/15: Retroviruses (RNA in virions, integrated viral DNA in chromosomes). 40~50 nm. 70~90 nm. 100~200 nm. >100 kb. 5~40 kb. HPV. EBV, KSHV. HTLV. HBV. HCV.
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6/01: Papillomaviruses, polyomaviruses, and adenoviruses (Small DNA viruses) 6/10: Herpesviruses (Large DNA viruses) 6/15: Retroviruses (RNA in virions, integrated viral DNA in chromosomes)
40~50 nm 70~90 nm 100~200 nm
>100 kb 5~40 kb
HPV EBV, KSHV HTLV HBV HCV • Viruses with oncogenic potential: • Papillomaviruses • Polyomaviruses • Adenoviruses • Herpesviruses • Retroviruses • Hepadnaviruses • Flaviviruses
Viral genome replication in nucleus!
I. Viral particle • Viral genome • Life cycle • Infection and immunity • Diseases • Diagnosis • Treatment and control
Viral particle: nonenveloped icosahedral capsid • (resistant to inactivation!)
II. Viral genome: circular dsDNA (At least 100 types based on DNA sequence homology: very tissue-specific) (bp) E: early genes; L: late genes
III. Life cycle: Tissue/cell-dependent! L1, L2 E1, E2 E6, E7
Infection and immunity: • Transmission:direct contact, sexual contact, birth canal • Targets: skin (cutaneous HPV) or mucosa (mucosal HPV) • Major pathogenesis: warts and tumors • Local infection • Immune control: innate and cell-mediated immunity • Persistent infection and recurrence • Symptomatic and asymptomatic infection and shedding
L1, L2 “Persistent infection” E1, E2 • Low-level Ag expression • Immuno-privileged site E6, E7
Diseases: • Skin warts: HPV 1~4 (3~4 months for development) • Anogenital warts (condylomata acuminata): HPV 6, 11 • Benign tumors (oral or laryngeal papillomas): HPV 6, 11 • Cervical dysplasia and carcinoma: HPV 16, 18 • (1~4 years for development) • Anogenital or oropharyngeal cancers: HPV 16, 18
Progression of HPV-mediated cervical carcinoma:
VI. Diagnosis: • Histological examination of warts • (prickle cell hyperplasia and hyperkeratosis) • Papanicolaou-stained cervical smear (Pap smear) • (Koilocytotic cells) • Detection of HPV DNA • (PCR, in situ hybridization, sequencing/typing) • Immunodetection of viral antigens • No virus culture!
Koilocytosis (vacuolated cytoplasm) in Pap staining of HPV-infected cells
VII. Treatment and control: • Removal of warts • Induction of local inflammation • (imiquimod, interferon) • Local treatment with cidofovir • (selective killing of HPV-infected) • HPV vaccine (L1 viruslike particles of HPV 6, 11, 16, 18) • (reduction of anogenital warts and cervical cancer) • Safe sex and avoiding direct contact of infected tissues
Polyomaviruses BK virus and JC virus in human Simian vacuolating virus 40 (SV40) in monkey
Viral particle: nonenveloped capsid • II. Viral genome: circular dsDNA Early genes: For viral DNA replication Late genes: For virion assembly SV40 5 kb Large T antigen
IV. Infection: • Transmission: maybe respiratory route • Infection of lymphocytes and spread through viremia • Ubiquitous, asymptomatic and persistent infection • (infection before 15 yo) • Latency: BK in kidney; JC in kidney, B cells or myeloid cells • Reactivation during pregnancy (no effect on fetus) • or in immunocompromised patients
Diseases: in immunocompromised patients • BK virus: renal diseases • Ureteral stenosis or hemorrhagic cystitis • JC virus: progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) • Partial transformation of astrocytes (glioblastoma-like) • Lysis of oligodendrocytes (demyelination) • 10% of AIDS patients, dying within 2 years • No human cancer
Diagnosis: • PML: brain lesions with demyelination in white matter • PCR detection of viral DNA in urine or cerebrospinal fluid • Immunodetection of viral antigens in affected tissues • Urine cytologic test: enlarged cells with basophilic inclusions • No virus isolation • VII. Treatment and control? • Prevention from immunosuppression
Viral particle: nonenveloped icosadeltahedral capsid • (resistant to drying, detergents, protease, acid, mild chlorine) Penton bases with fibers: • Viral attachment to cell receptors • (Receptor: CAR) • Virus entry through endocytosis • (Coreceptor: integrin αvβ3/αvβ5) • Serotype-specific antigens • Inhibition of host mRNA transport • and protein synthesis
/PKR • E3 19 kD protein reduces MHC class I to prevent antigen presentation. • E3 14.7 kD protein inhibits TNF-a production.
III. Life cycle: • In permissive cells: • Viral replication, cell death with virion production • In nonpermissive cells: • Latency with viral genomes in the nuclues • Cell transformation in rodent cells
Infection and immunity: • Transmission:aerosol, close contact, fecal-oral routes • Primary targets: mucoepithelial cells (serotype-dependent) • Major pathogenesis: cell lysis and tissue damage • Local infection and spread through viremia • Immune control: antibody and cell-mediated immunity • Persistent infection in lymphoid tissues • Symptomatic and asymptomatic infection and shedding
Diseases: • Children (<14 yo) and people in crowded areas are at risk. • Immunocompromised patients may have more serious diseases • No human cancer (Ad 1, 2, 5, 6) (Ad 4, 7) (Ad 40-42)
VI. Diagnosis: • Virus isolation from affected tissues • (culture in epithelial cells, ~ 6 days) • Detection, typing, and grouping by immunoassay or PCR • VII. Treatment and control: • No approved treatment for adenovirus infection • Live Ad 4 and 7 vaccines for military recruits • Careful handwashing and chlorination of swimming pools
Adenoviral vectors for gene delivery:
Generation of adenoviral vectors: E1 Advantages? Disadvantages?
6/10 6/01 6/15