Title: introduction to virology
1INTRODUCTION TO VIROLOGY
- WHAT IS VIROLOGY
- Virology is the study of viruses and virus-like
agents - their structure,
- classification and evolution,
- their ways to infect and exploit cells for virus
reproduction, - the diseases they cause,
- the techniques to isolate and culture them, and
their use in research and therapy
2What is Virus
- A virus is an invasive biological agent
that reproduces inside the cells of living hosts. - When infected by a virus, a host cell is forced
to produce many thousands of identical copies of
the original virus, at an extraordinary rate. - Unlike most living things, viruses do not have
cells that divide new viruses are assembled in
the infected host cell
3General Characteristics of Viruses
- Viruses are cellular, non-cytoplasmic infectious
agents. - They are smaller than bacteria, and this can pass
through bacteriological filter. - Viruses are transmissible from disease to
healthy organisms. - All viruses are obligate parasites and can
multiply only within the living host cells. - .
4General Characteristics.
- Viruses contain only a single type of nucleic
acid either DNA or RNA. - Viruses are host specific that they infect only
a single species and definite cells of the host
organisms. - Viruses are effective in very small doses. They
are highly resistant to germicides and extremes
of physical conditions
5Generalised Structure of Viruses
- Â Shape and size
- The shape varies considerable.
- They may be spherical or golf ball-like,
- rod-shaped,
- tadpole-like,
- helical or polyhedral.
- Plant viruses are smaller than bacteria
6Chemical structure and function
- Viruses have a very simple structure.
- The core of the viruses is made upon of nucleic
acid, which is surrounded by a protein coat
called capsid. - The nucleic acid always contains only a single
kind of nucleic acid i.e. either DNA or RNA. The
infectious property of a virus is due to its
nucleic acid.
7Capsid or the protein coats
- It is made up of many identical protein sub-units
called capsomeres. - The capsomeres are composed of either one or
several type of proteins. - Capsomeres are arranged in a very symmetrical
manner and give a specific shape to a particular
virus. - The host specificity of virus is due to proteins
of the capsid
8- A simplified diagram of the structure of a virus
9Biological position of viruses
- Viruses lack a cytoplasmic membrane and they do
not have the basic component of a cell. - They can only replicate inside the host cell.
Outside the host cell, they are non-living. - Thus, viruses show characters of both living and
non-living.
10Non-living Characters of Viruses
- They can be crystallized.
- Outside the cell, they behave like inert
chemicals. - They do not show growth, development, nutrition,
reproduction, etc. - They can be precipitated
11Living characters of viruses
- They multiply within host cells.
- They possess genetic material, either DNA or
RNA. - There are definite races or strains.
- They exhibit mutations
- Because of the above reasons, viruses form unique
bridge between living and non-living things.
12Classification of viruses
- Viruses can be classified as the following
- According to the host cell they infect animal
viruses, plant viruses, fungal viruses, and
bacteriophages (viruses infecting bacteria, which
include the most complex viruses). - Another classification uses the geometrical shape
of their capsid (often a helix or an icosahedron)
or the virus's structure (e.g. presence or
absence of a lipid envelope).
13Classification of viruses
- according to the type of nucleic acid they use as
genetic material and the viral replication method
they employ to coax host cells into producing
more viruses - -DNA viruses (divided into double-stranded DNA
viruses and the much less common single-stranded
DNA viruses),
14Classification.
- RNAÂ viruses (divided into positive-sense
single-stranded RNAÂ viruses, negative-sense
single-stranded RNA viruses and the much less
common double-stranded RNA viruses), -reverse
transcribing viruses (double-stranded
reverse-transcribing DNA viruses and
single-stranded reverse-transcribing
RNA viruses including retroviruses).
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16Ways of Virus attacking the human/Virus Life cycle
- Attachment binding of the virus to specific
molecules on the surface of the cell and this is
specific example Plant viruses can only attach to
plant cells and cannot infect animals. This
mechanism has evolved to favour those viruses
that only infect cells in which they are capable
of reproducing
17Ways of Virus
- Penetration viruses penetrate the host cell
by endocytosis or by fusion with the cell. - Uncoating happens inside the cell when the
viral capsid is removed and destroyed by viral
enzymes or host enzymes, thereby exposing the
viral nucleic acid
18Ways of Virus.
- Replication is the stage where a cell uses viral
messenger RNA in its protein synthesis systems to
produce viral proteins. The RNA or DNA synthesis
abilities of the cell produce the virus's DNA or
RNA. - Assembly  takes place in the cell when the newly
created viral proteins and nucleic acid combine
to form hundreds of new virus particles.
19Ways of Virus
- Release occurs when the new viruses escape or are
released from the cell. Most viruses achieve this
by making the cells burst, a process
called lysis. Other viruses such as HIV are
released more gently by a process called budding
20Effect of Virus to the host cell
- Due to bursting there will be death of host cell
(lyisis) - Also death cell can be caused by cessation of
normal activity of the cell due to protein
produced by virus. - alterations to the cell's surface membrane
and apoptosis (cell "suicide
21Effect of Virus to the host cell
- Some viruses cause no apparent changes to the
infected cell. Cells in which the virus
is latent and inactive show few signs of
infection and often function normally. This
causes persistent infections and the virus is
often dormant for many months or years. This is
often the case with herpes viruses - Some viruses, such as Epstein-Barr virus, often
cause cells to proliferate without causing
malignancy but some other viruses, such
as papillomavirus, are an established cause of
cancerÂ
22Effect of Virus..
- When a cell's DNA is damaged by a virus, and if
the cell cannot repair itself, this often
triggers apoptosis. One of the results of
apoptosis is destruction of the damaged DNA by
the cell itself. Some viruses have mechanisms to
limit apoptosis so that the host cell does not
die before progeny viruses have been
produced HIV, for example, does this. - Â
23Spread of viruses
- Viruses cannot exist on their own and for
survival they need to spread to another host.
This is because the original host may either die
or eliminate the infection
24Some important routes of viral transfer include
Route Examples
Skin contact HPV (warts)
Respiratory Cold viruses, influenza, measles, mumps, rubella
Faecal-oral Polio, echo, Coxsackie, Hepatitis A, Rotavirus
Milk HIV, HTLV-1, CMV
Transplacental Rubella, CMV, HIV
Sexually Herpes 1 and 2, HIV, HPV, Hepatitis B
Insect vector Yellow fever, Dengue fever
Animal bite Rabies
25Host resistance
- Innate immunity of animals
- Animals, including humans, have many natural
defenses against viruses. - Some are non-specific and protect against many
viruses regardless of the type - This innate immunity is not improved by repeated
exposure to viruses and does not retain a
"memory" of the infection
26Innate immunity
- The acidity of the contents of the stomach
destroys many viruses that have been swallowed.
When a virus overcomes these barriers and enters
the host, other innate defenses prevent the
spread of infection in the body. - A special hormone called interferon is produced
by the body when viruses are present, and this
stops the viruses from reproducing by killing the
infected cell and its close neighbors. - Inside cells, there are enzymes that destroy the
RNA of viruses. This is called RNA interference.
Some blood cells engulf and destroy other virus
infected cells
27Adaptive immunity of animalsImmune response
- Specific immunity to viruses develops over time
and white blood cells called lymphocytes play a
central role. - Lymphocytes retain a "memory" of virus infections
and produce many special molecules
called antibodies. These antibodies attach to
viruses and stop the virus from infecting cells.
Antibodies are highly selective and attack only
one type of virus.
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