Title: VIRUSES and prions
1VIRUSES and prions
2Viruses part II - Animals and Plants
Unique challenges. Must evade immune systems
and must cross 2 lipid bilayer barriers. (ie
cross into nucleus)
3Viral Replication Animal Viruses
insert Viral_Rep_Animal.jpg
4RNA Virus Families
- 11 RNA virus families
- Picornaviridae (fmdv, polio)
- Togaviridae (rubella)
- Flaviviridae (hep C, west nile, yellow fever)
- Orthomyxoviridae (flu, influenza)
RNA viruses more prone to mutation
5RNA Virus Families (cont.)
- Retroviridae (hep B, htlv, HIV)-retrovirus
- reverse transcriptase used to make DNA
- from RNA
- Paramyxoviridae (measles, mumps, pneumonia) -
ss strand
6RNA Virus Families (cont.)
7RNA Virus Families (cont.)
- Orthomyxoviridae (all influenza)
Hemaglutinnin H Neuraminidase N
8DNA Virus Families
- Adenoviridae (colds)
- Herpesviridae (varicellovirus, simplex virus)
- affinity for nervous tissue
- Poxviridae (smallpox)
9DNA Virus Families (cont.)
- Papovaviridae (HPV)
- Hepadnaviridae (Hep B virus)
10Viral Replication
- Activities
- Adsorption
- Penetration (virus or chromosome)
- Synthesis
- Maturation
- Release
11Animal Viruses
12Viruslike Agents
Kuru Creutzfeld-Jacob BSE Scrapie
Alpha helix
B-pleated sheet
13Prions Characteristics
insert Prions_Character.jpg
14The PrP protein function in mammals is believed
to ________.
- assist proteins in forming alpha helices.
- assist proteins in forming beta-pleated sheets.
- assist in normal synaptic development and
function. - assist in normal membrane development and
function.
15Which mammals code for PrP?
- humans
- cows
- sheep
- all mammals
- Mammals are not affected by prions.
16Why is the term reproduction not appropriate in
prion multiplication?
- Prions occur only in mammals, so reproduction is
a misnomer. - All mammals have PrP, so no reproduction is
involved. - Prions are acquired only through ingestion, not
by reproduction. - Prions transform normal proteins into the
misfolded configuration therefore, prions
multiply by conversion.
17Prions Overview
insert Prions_Overview.jpg
18How do prions replicate?
- binary fission
- They cause normal proteins to misfold into
infectious proteins. - mitosis
- via DNA replication
19How are prions different from other infectious
agents?
- They cause neurological disease.
- They lack protein.
- They lack nucleic acid.
- They cannot replicate.
20Why are the beta-pleated multimers of PrP
potentially pathogenic?
- They are not detected by other organisms.
- They repress the immune system.
- They are more stable as multimers and resistant
to proteases. - They are found on the surface of immune cells,
resulting in destruction of the immune system.
21Prion Reproduction Diseases
insert Prions_Diseases.jpg
22What is the incubation period of BSE?
- 4 to 5 years
- 3 days
- 6 weeks
- 7 months
23Which of the following human prion diseases is
related to mad cow disease?
- fatal familial insomnia
- variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
- kuru
- Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker syndrome
24Viruses and Cancer
- Mechanism of cancer causation
- HPV
25Viruses and Cancer
- Oncogenes/proto-oncogenes
- V-myc V-ras mimic our cells own control
proteins
Rous Sarcoma Virus RSV
Kaposis sarcoma - appears when immune system
depressed probably by herpes virus 8
26Viruses to know something about
HPV (DNA) HIV (RNA) Flu (RNA)
Adenovirus(DNA) Herpes(DNA)
27Herpes Simplex
After initial infection, the viruses move to
sensory nerves, where they reside as life-long,
latent viruses.
28HPV human papilloma virus
Causes warts and some strains cause cervical
cancer teratogenic
29Viral Replication Temperate Bacteriophages
insert Viral_Rep_Temperate.jpg
30HIV human immunodeficiency virus
RNA retrovirus T-cell host (CD4 T-killer
cells) needs protease to replicate binds to
CCR5 and CD4 receptors
31Adenovirus
Common cold Usually affects respiratory
tract. sometimes engineered for gene therapy
DS DNA virus
32Influenza
H hemaglutinin N neuraminidase
RNA virus mutates rapidly animal
reservoirs can cross species lines