Title: Medical Virology
1Medical Virology
2Reference
- Medical Microbiology Murray?Rosenthal fourth
edition - Principles of VirologyMolecular Biology,
Pathogenesis, and Control 2000 Flint - Field's Fundamental Virology 4/e 2001 Knipe
3Topics
- Definition
- Structure
- Classification
- Replication
- Methods of study
- Sterilization and disinfection
4DEFINITION OF A VIRUS
- Viruses are organized associations of
macromolecules-nucleic acid (which carries the
blueprint for the replication of progeny virions)
contained within a protective shell of protein
units. - On its own, a virus may be considered as an inert
biochemical complex since it cannot replicate
outside of a living cell. Once it has invaded a
cell it is able to direct the host cell machinery
to synthesize new intact infectious virus
particles (virions). Because viruses are
non-motile, they are entirely dependent on
external physical factors for chance movement and
spread to infect other susceptible cells.
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7Structure 1components
- Viruses are very small in size (20 - 300
nanometers) and contain either DNA or RNA (not
both as in higher forms of life) - The genome ( DNA or RNA) codes for the few
proteins necessary for replication. - Some proteins are non-structural, eg. nucleic
acid polymerases - Some are structural, ie. they become incorporated
and form part of the virion. -
8Structure 2 building block
- Protein building blocks are assembled according
to general Principles of virus architecture to
form a tight "shell" (capsid) inside which the
nucleic acid genome lodges for protection. This
shell may take the form of a polyhedron (usually
icosahedral) or it may be spiral (helical
symmetry), or it may be more complex.
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10Structure 3
- Some viruses acquire an outer lipoprotein coat by
"budding" through the host cell membranes
(nuclear membrane or cytoplasmic membrane) and
are thus called enveloped viruses. - All the viral proteins have reactive epitopes
which are important for interaction with cellular
components during the process of infection and
replication. The host's defence mechanisms
(cellular and humoral mediated responses) are
directed against the viral antigenic epitopes.
11Structure
- Identical subunits
- Cubic symmetry
- Icosahedral symmetry
12- An ICOSAHEDRON
- is composed of 20 facets, each an equilateral
triangle, and 12 vertices, and because of the
axes of rotational symmetry is said to have532
symmetry - There are, in fact, six 5-fold axes of symmetry
passing through the vertices, ten 3-fold axes
extending through each face and fifteen 2-fold
axes passing through the edges of an icosahedron.
13DNA viruses
adenovirus
Papillomavirus
Parvo virus
Hepatitis B virus
Molluscum contagiosum
(Pox virus)
Herpesvirus
14RNA viruses
Rift valley fever
Enterovirus
Rotavirus
Influenza viruses
Paramyxovirus
15CLASSIFICATION
- Viruses are broadly classified primarily upon the
type of genomic nucleic acid, eg. DNA or RNA - The number of strands of nucleic acid (eg.
double-stranded DNA, double-stranded RNA or
single-stranded RNA, with a positive or negative
"sense" of that single strand) - Retroviruses are a special category of RNA
viruses that require reverse transcription of
their RNA to DNA and then integration of that DNA
into the host cell genome before replication can
take place. They carry a reverse transcriptase
enzyme as part of the virion.
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17RNA-dependent RNA polymerases Protein assembly
required to carry out RNA synthesis, not just
the polypeptide that just catalyzes chain
elongation Synthesis of viral RNA in the
presence of actinomycin D (a drug inhibits
cellular DNA-dependent RNA polymerase) Animal
virus RNA-dependent nucleic acid polymerases that
are purified and characterized polioviral
3Dpol, vesicular
stomatitis virus L protein,
and retroviral reverse transcriptase
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21Replication 1
- 1. Adsorption
- Viruses have reactive sites on their surface
which interact with specific receptors on
suitable host cells. - This is usually a passive reaction (not
requiring energy) and the specificity of the
reaction between viral protein and host receptor
defines and limits the host species as well as
the type of cell that is infected (although
transfected nucleic acid can by-pass this
limitation and extend the host range). - Damage to these binding sites (eg. by
disinfectants or heat), or blocking by specific
antibodies (neutralizing antibodies) can render
virions non-infectious.
22Replication 2
- 2. Uptake
- After adsorption, the coat of enveloped
viruses may fuse with the host cell membrane and
release the virus nucleocapsid into the host
cytoplasm. Other viruses may enter the cell by a
process of "endocytosis" which involves
invagination of the cell membrane to form
vesicles in the cell cytoplasm.
23Replication 3
- 3. Uncoating
- The release of the viral genome from its
protective capsid to enable the nucleic acid to
be transported within the cell and transcribed to
form new progeny virions.
24Replication 4
- 4. Genomic activation
- Messenger RNA (m-RNA) is transcribed from
viral DNA (or formed directly from some RNA
viruses) and codes for viral proteins that are
translated by the host cell. - " Early" proteins are usually non-structural
(eg. DNA or RNA polymerases) and later proteins
are structural, eg. capsid proteins, ie.
building blocks of the virion. Nucleic acid
replication produces new viral genomes for
incorporation into progeny virions. - In general, DNA viruses replicate mainly in
the nucleus and RNA viruses mainly in the
cytoplasm, but there are exceptions, eg. Pox
viruses contain DNA but replicate in the
cytoplasm of the host cell.
25Replication 5
- 5. Assembly
- Assembly of viral nucleocapsids may take place
in the nucleus (eg. herpes virus, adenovirus) in
the cytoplasm (eg. polio virus) or at the cell
surface, eg. "budding" viruses such as influenza. - Accumulation of virions at sites of assembly may
form "inclusions" that are visible in stained
cells with the light microscope.
26Release 6
- 6. Release
- Release of new infectious virions is the
final stage of replication.This may occur by by
budding from the cell surface, as occurs with
many enveloped viruses. In this case capsid
proteins and nucleic acid condense directly
adjacent to the cell membrane and viral-coded
envelope proteins, introduced into the cell
membrane, concentrate in the vicinity of capsid
aggregates. The membrane surrounding the
nucleocapsid then bulges out and becomes "nipped
off" to form the new enveloped virion. - Some viruses utilize the cellular secretory
pathway to exit the cell. Virus particles
enclosed within Golgi-derived vesicles are
released to the outside of the cell when the
transport vesicle fuses with the cell membrane. - Disintegration or lysis of the infected cell
can also result in the release of intact
infectious virions.
27A general scheme of viral replication
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30A single-cycle growth curve of a virus
31METHODS OF STUDY OF VIRUSES
- Diagnosis of viral infections
- Viruses can be studied in a number of direct
and indirect ways and all these methods can be
applied in a diagnostic situation, ie. is this
patient infected with a particular virus? - There are two approaches
- 1. detection and demonstration of the virus
itself - 2. the study of the host's response to that
virus
32Methods
- "in vitro" cell cultures
- "non-cultivable" viruses have been extensively
studied by molecular techniques ("genetic
engineering") - Electron microscopy
- Negative staining, using transmission electron
microscopy - only electrons which pass through the
specimen are involved in the formation of the
final image. - Serological techniques
- precipitation, agglutination,
immunofluorescence, ELISA, complement fixation
and radio immuno assays - haemagglutination (causing red blood cells
to stick together ) which can be used to detect
and quantitate the virus (by haemagglutination)
or specific antibodies to that virus
(haemagglutination inhibition) - neutralization
- Molecular techniques
33Molecular Techniques
- Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) of
protein - Western blotting identification of specific
proteins with labelled probes - Polymerase chain reaction (PCR), to amplify
specific segments of viral nucleic acid - Southern blotting, and DNA hybridization with
labelled probes - Sequencing of portions of the viral genome
- Restriction fragment length polymorphisms of
viral nucleic acid