Title: Virology
1Virology
2Basics of Virology
- How are viruses transmitted from host to host?
- How does a virus
- Enter the body?
- Enter a host cell?
- Replicate?
- Exit the cell?
- How does the immune system work against a viral
infection?
3Viral entry
4Viruses are very specific
- Species few related organisms
- Rabies only affects mammals
- Polio primates
- Tissue
- Flu lining of respiratory tract
- HIV T-cells
5What determines the host range?
6How are viruses transmitted from host to host?
- Direct contact
- Indirect contact
- Air-born droplets
- Food-born
- Water-born
- Fecal-oral
- Vector
7Reservoirs
- Organisms where virus is abundant
- Probably dont get sick from the virus
- Ex. Wild birds
8Viral life cycle is important to understand
- Virologists study
- Mode of entry
- Integration, replication synthesis
- Method of exit
- Why??
- Interrupt one of these steps
- Prevention
- Treatment
9How does a virus enter the body?
- Respiratory tract
- Flu
- Rhinovirus
- Hantavirus
- GI Tract
- Polio
- Rotavirus
- Skin
- Rabies
- papillomavirus
- Genitals
- Papillomavirus
- HIV
- Herpes
- Blood
- Hepatitis
- HIV
10Many animal viruses are enveloped
11How can the virus enter the cell?
- Injection
- Endocytosis
- Fuse with membrane
- http//darwin.bio.uci.edu/faculty/wagner/hsvbindi
ng.html - Low pH dissolves envelope
- Uncoat genome
- RNA/DNA released
12How do viruses replicate?
- Genome copies
- Method varies depending on type of viruses
- Translation makes viral proteins
- Produce new capsids
- Self-assembly
13Retroviruses
- Single-stranded RNA viruses
- Contain reverse transcriptase
- Enzyme that synthesizes DNA from RNA
- http//www.whfreeman.com/kuby/content/anm/kb03an01
.htm - Ex. HIV
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15Viruses Exit Cell
- Budding
- Doesnt kill host cell
- Bursting
- Kills cell
16Stability of Viruses
17Which types of viruses are most stable?
- DNA ? DNA
- Proofreading mechanisms
- Few errors
- 1/1 billion bp
- DNA ? RNA
- Errors 1 million x greater
- RNA ? DNA
- Errors
18Influenza A
- Has 8 segments of RNA
- Changes frequently
- New version of flu vaccine
- made yearly
19Why does Influenza A change frequently?
- Antigenic drift
- Gradual change
- RNA has high mutation rate
- Minor changes in RNA minor changes in surface
protein - Antigenic Shift
- Major changes based on reassortment of RNA
segments
20Reassortment
- Pigs may serve as a mixing vessel
- Co-infection of host by 2 viruses
- May mix some human segments some bird segments
- Ex. 1957 Flu had 3 avian segments, 5 human
segments
21Since mid-1700s, major shifts in Influenza A have
occurred about every 30 years
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