Title: Viruses and Viral Diseases
1Viruses and Viral Diseases
2General Structure of Viruses
- Size range
- most lt0.2 µm
- requires electron microscope
- Virion
- fully formed virus able to establish an infection
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4General Structure of Viruses
- Capsids
- All viruses have capsids
- Constructed from identical subunits called
capsomers - made of protein
- nucleoscapsid
- Capsid nucleic acid
- Enveloped
- Naked
5General Structure of Viruses
- Two structural types
- helical
- Continuous helix of capsomers forming a
cylindrical nucleocapsid - icosahedral
- 20-sided with 12 corners
- vary in the number of capsomers
- Each capsomer may be made of 1 or several
proteins - Some are enveloped
6Icosahedral
Helical
7General Structure of Viruses
- Viral envelope
- mostly animal viruses
- acquired when the virus leaves the host cell
- spikes
- exposed proteins on the outside of the envelope
- essential for attachment of the virus to the host
cell
8General Structure of Viruses
- Functions of Capsid/Envelope
- Protects the nucleic acid when the virion is
outside the host cell - Helps to bind the virion to a cell surface
- assists the penetration of the viral DNA or RNA
into a suitable host cell
9Viral morphology (a) poxvirus, (b)
bacteriophage, (c) mumps, (d) herpesvirus, (e)
rhabdovirus, (f) HIV, (g) adenovirus, and (h)
papillomavirus.
10General Structure of Viruses
- Complex viruses atypical viruses
- Poxviruses
- lack a typical capsid
- covered by a dense layer of lipoproteins
- Bacteriophages
- Some have a polyhedral nucleocapsid along with a
helical tail and attachment fibers
11Nucleic acids
- Viral genome
- either DNA or RNA but never both
- Carries genes necessary to invade host cell
- then redirect cells activity to make new viruses
- Number of genes varies for each type of virus
- few to hundreds
12Nucleic Acids
- DNA viruses
- usually double stranded (ds)
- may be single stranded (ss)
- circular or linear
13Nucleic Acids
- RNA viruses
- usually single stranded
- may be double stranded
- may be segmented into separate RNA pieces
- positive-sense RNA
- ssRNA genomes ready for immediate translation
- negative-sense RNA
- ssRNA genomes that must be converted into proper
form
14Naming Viruses
- 3 Orders
- Order name end in virales
- Herpesvirales
- 63 Families
- Family name ends in -viridae
- Herpesviridae
- 263 genera
- Genus name ends in virus
- Simplexvirus, Herpes simplex virus I (HSV-I)
15Naming Viruses
- Family Herpesviridae
- Genus Varicellovirus
- Common name chickenpox virus
- Disease - chickenpox
16Modes of Viral Multiplication
176 Steps in Viral Replication
- adsorption
- penetration
- replication
- assembly
- maturation
- release
181. Adsorption and Host Range
- Virus coincidentally collides with a susceptible
host cell - adsorbs specifically to receptor sites on the
cell membrane - Attachment
- host range
- Spectrum of cells a virus can infect
- hepatitis B human liver cells
- poliovirus primate intestinal and nerve cells
- Rabies various cells of many mammals
192. Penetration/Uncoating
- Flexible cell membrane penetrated by the whole
virus (or its nucleic acid) by - endocytosis
- entire virus engulfed and enclosed in a vacuole
or vesicle - fusion
- envelope merges directly with membrane
- Results in nucleocapsids entry into cytoplasm
203. Replication
- Varies depending on whether the virus is a DNA or
RNA virus - DNA viruses generally are replicated and
assembled in the nucleus - RNA viruses generally are replicated and
assembled in the cytoplasm
214. 5. Assembly and Maturation
- Mature viruses made from various parts
- Capsid laid down first
- Enveloped
- Insert viral spikes
226. Release
- Assembled viruses leave host cell in one of two
ways - budding
- exocytosis
- nucleocapsid binds to membrane which pinches off
and sheds the viruses gradually - cell is not immediately destroyed
- lysis
- nonenveloped and complex viruses released when
cell dies and ruptures - Number of virions released is variable
- 3,000-4,000 released by poxvirus
- gt100,000 released by poliovirus
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24Damage to Host Cell
- Cytopathic effects - virus-induced damage to
cells - Changes in size shape
- Cytoplasmic inclusion bodies
- Nuclear inclusion bodies
- Cells fuse to form multinucleated cells
- Cell lysis
- Alter DNA
- Transform cells into cancerous cells
25Persistent Infections
- Persistent infections
- cell harbors the virus and is not immediately
lysed - chronic / latent state
- Can last weeks or hosts lifetime
- several can periodically reactivate
- measles virus
- may remain hidden in brain cells for many years
- herpes simplex virus
- cold sores and genital herpes
- herpes zoster virus
- chickenpox and shingles
26Transformation
- transformation of the cell
- Some animal viruses enter host cell and
permanently alter its genetic material - resulting in cancer
- Transformed cells have increased rate of growth,
alterations in chromosomes, and capacity to
divide for indefinite time periods - resulting in tumors
- oncoviruses
- Mammalian viruses capable of initiating tumors
- Papillomavirus cervical cancer
- Epstein-Barr virus Burkitts lymphoma
27Multiplication Cycle in Bacteriophages
- Bacteriophages bacterial viruses (phages)
- Most widely studied are those that infect
Escherichia coli - Multiplication goes through similar stages as
animal viruses - Only the nucleic acid enters the cytoplasm
- uncoating not necessary
- Release is a result of cell lysis induced by
viral enzymes and accumulation of viruses - Lytic cycle
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29Lysogeny
- Not all bacteriophages lyse cells
- Temperate phages
- insert their viral DNA into host chromosome
- viral replication stops there until some later
time - Lysogeny
- bacterial chromosome carries phage DNA
30Lysogeny
- Results in the spread of the virus without
killing the host cell - lysogenic conversion
- Phage genes in the bacterial chromosome cause the
production of toxins or enzymes that cause
pathology - Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- Vibrio cholerae
- Clostridium botulinum
31Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal
Viruses
- Obligate intracellular parasites require
appropriate cells to replicate - In vitro
- In vivo
- Methods used
- cell (tissue) cultures
- bird embryos
- live animal inoculation
32Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal
Viruses
- Cell (tissue) cultures
- cultured cells grow in sheets that support viral
replication - permit observation for cytopathic effect
33Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal
Viruses
- Bird embryos
- incubating egg is an ideal system
- virus is injected through the shell
34Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal
Viruses
- live animal inoculation
- occasionally used when necessary
35Other noncellular infectious agents
- Satellite viruses
- dependent on other viruses for replication
- adeno-associated virus
- replicate only in cells infected with adenovirus
- delta agent
- naked strand of RNA expressed only in the
presence of hepatitis B virus - Viroids
- short pieces of RNA
- no protein coat
- only identified in plants so far
36DNA viruses that infect humans
37Viruses
- Most DNA viruses are budded off the nucleus
- Most RNA viruses multiply in are released from
the cytoplasm - Viral infections range from very mild to
life-threatening - Many viruses are strictly human in origin, others
are zoonoses transmitted by vectors - Most DNA a few RNA viruses can become permanent
resident of the host cell - Several viruses can cross the placenta cause
developmental disturbances
38Survey of DNA Viruses
- Animal viruses are categorized according to
- nucleic acid
- Capsid
- presence / absence of envelope
- 7 DNA families, 14 RNA families
- DNA viruses causing human disease
- enveloped DNA viruses
- nonenveloped DNA viruses
- nonenveloped ssDNA viruses
39Enveloped DNA Viruses
401. Poxviruses
- Produce eruptive skin pustules called pocks or
pox - Largest and most complex animal viruses
- Have the largest genome of all viruses
- dsDNA
- Multiply in cytoplasm in factory areas
- variola cause of smallpox
- vaccinia closely related virus used in vaccines
- monkeypox
- cowpox
41Smallpox
- first disease to be eliminated by vaccination
- exposure through inhalation or skin contact
- infection associated with fever,
- malaise, prostration, a rash
- Variola major
- highly virulent, caused toxemia, shock,
intravascular coagulation - Variola minor
- less virulent
- routine vaccination ended in US in 1972
- reintroduced in 2002
42Molluscum Contagiosum
- caused by unclassified poxvirus
- in endemic areas it is primarily an infection of
children - in US, most commonly an STD
- transmitted by direct contact and
- fomites
- AIDS patients suffer atypical form
- attacks the skin of the face
- forms tumorlike growths
- Treatment
- freezing, electric cautery, chemical agents
43Other Poxviruses
- Many mammalian groups host some poxvirus
- Humans are susceptible to monkeypox and cowpox
- Monkeypox in humans
- skin pocks, fever, swollen lymph nodes
- Cowpox in humans
- rare, usually confined to hands
- other cutaneous sites can be involved
442. The Herpesviruses
- All members show latency and cause recurrent
infection - more severe with advancing age, cancer
chemotherapy, or other conditions that compromise
the immune defenses - Common and serious opportunists among AIDS
patients - Large enveloped icosahedral dsDNA
- Replicates within nucleus
45Herpesviridae
- large Family 8 infect humans
- HSV-1
- HSV-2
- VZV
- CMV
- EBV
- HHV-6
- HHV-7
- HHV-8
46Herpes Simplex Viruses
- HSV-1
- lesions on the oropharynx, cold sores, fever
blisters - occurs in early childhood
- HSV-2
- lesions on the genitalia
- occurs in ages 14-29
- can be spread without visible lesions
- Humans only reservoir
- Treatment
- acyclovir, famciclovir, valacyclovir
47Epidemiology
- Transmission
- direct exposure to secretions containing the
virus - active lesions most significant source
- genital herpes can be transmitted in the absence
of lesions - HSV multiplies in sensory neurons, moves to
ganglia - HSV-1 enters 5th cranial nerve
- HSV-2 enters lumbosacral spinal nerve trunk
ganglia
48Epidemiology
- Recurrent infection triggered by various stimuli
- fever, UV radiation, stress, mechanical injury
- Newly formed viruses migrate to body surface
- produce a local skin or membrane lesion
49Type 1 Herpes Simplex
- Herpes labialis
- fever blisters, cold sores
- most common recurrent HSV-1 infection
- vesicles occur on mucocutaneous junction of lips
or adjacent skin - itching and tingling prior to vesicle formation
- lesion crusts over in 2-3 days and heals
- Herpetic gingivostomatitis
- infection of oropharynx in young children
- fever, sore throat, swollen lymph nodes
- Herpetic keratitis
- ocular herpes
50Type 2 Herpes Infections
- Genital herpes
- herpes genitalia
- starts with malaise, anorexia, fever, and
bilateral swelling and tenderness in the groin - clusters of sensitive vesicles on the genitalia,
perineum, and buttocks - urethritis, painful urination
- Recurrent bouts usually less severe
- triggered by menstruation, stress, and concurrent
bacterial infection
51Herpes of the Newborn
- HSV-1 and HSV-2
- Potentially fatal in the neonate and fetus
- Infant contaminated by mother before or during
birth - hand transmission by mother to infant
- Infection of mouth, skin, eyes, CNS
- Preventative screening of pregnant women
- delivery by C-section if outbreak at the time of
birth
52Diagnosis, Treatment, and Control
- Vesicles and exudate are typical diagnostic
symptoms - scrapings from base of lesions showing giant
cells - culture and specific tests for diagnosing severe
or disseminated HSV - direct fluorescent antibody tests
- Treatment
- acyclovir, famciclovir, valacyclovir topical
medications
53Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV)
- HSV-3
- chickenpox shingles
- transmitted by respiratory droplets contact
- primary infection
- Chickenpox
- vesicles
54Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV)
- virus enters neurons remains latent
- later reactivation of the virus results in
shingles with vesicles localized to distinctive
areas - dermatomes
- treatment
- acyclovir, famciclovir, interferon
- live attenuated vaccine
- Contagiousness and spread
55Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
- HSV-4
- produce giant cells with nuclear cytoplasmic
inclusions - transmitted in saliva, respiratory mucus, milk,
urine, semen, cervical secretions feces - commonly latent in various tissues
- most infections are asymptomatic
- 3 groups develop a more virulent form of disease
- fetuses, newborns, immunodeficient adults
56CMV
- newborns may exhibit enlarged liver spleen,
jaundice, capillary bleeding microcephaly,
ocular inflammation, may be fatal - perinatal CMV infection
- mostly asymptomatic, or pneumonitis, and a
mononucleosis-like syndrome - transplant patients
- pneumonitis, hepatitis, myocarditis,
meningoencephalitis - Treatment
- ganciclovir, valvcyclovir, foscarnet
57Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV)
- HSV-5
- infects lymphoid tissue salivary glands
- transmission
- direct oral contact contamination with saliva
- by mid-life 90-95 of all people are infected
- causes mononucleosis
- sore throat, high fever, cervical lymphadenopathy
58Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV)
- 30-50 day incubation
- most cases asymptomatic
- Burkitts lymphoma associated with chronic
co-infections with malaria - nasopharyngeal carcinoma in Chinese African men
59Diagnosis, Treatment and Prevention
- Differential blood count
- serological assays to detect antibodies and
antigen - Treatment directed at relief of symptoms of fever
and sore throat - Disseminated disease may be treated with IV gamma
globulin, interferon, acyclovir, and monoclonal
antibodies
60Human Herpes Virus 6
- HHV-6
- T-lymphotropic virus
- transmitted by close contact
- very common
- causes roseola
- an acute febrile disease in babies 2-12 months
- can cause encephalitis, cancer
61Human Herpes Virus 6
- begins with fever, followed by a faint
maculopapular rash - usually self-limited
- adults may get mono-like symptoms,
lymphadenopathy, hepatitis - over 70 of MS patients show signs of infection
62Human Herpes Virus 7 8
- HHV-7 is closely related to HHV-6 causes similar
diseases - Kaposis sarcoma
- associated virus or HHV-8 is linked with common
tumor of AIDS patients - also may be involved in multiple myeloma
633. The Viral Agents of Hepatitis
- Hepatitis
- an inflammatory disease of liver cells
- may result from several viruses
- Interferes with livers excretion of bile
pigments - bilirubin accumulates in blood and tissues
causing jaundice - 3 principal viruses involved in hepatitis
- hepatitis B
- hepatitis A (RNA virus)
- hepatitis C (RNA virus)
64Hepadnaviruses
- enveloped DNA viruses
- never grown in tissue culture
- unusual genome containing both double single
stranded DNA - tropism for liver
- Hepatitis B virus causes hepatitis can be a
factor in liver cancer - other members cause hepatitis in woodchucks,
ground squirrels, Peking ducks
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66Hepatitis B Virus
- multiplies exclusively in the liver
- continuously seeds blood with viruses
- 107 virions/mL blood
- minute amounts of blood can transmit infection
- sexually transmitted
- high incidence among homosexuals drug addicts
- can become a chronic infection
- increases risk of liver cancer
67Pathogenesis of Hepatitis B Virus
- Enters through break in skin or mucous membrane
or by injection into bloodstream - Reaches liver cells
- multiplies and releases viruses into blood
- average 7 week incubation
- Most exhibit few overt symptoms and eventually
develop HBV immunity - Some experience malaise, fever, chills, anorexia,
abdominal discomfort and diarrhea - Fever, jaundice, rash, and arthritis are common
- Small number of patients develop chronic liver
disease - necrosis and cirrhosis
68Diagnosis and Management of Hepatitis B
- Diagnosis based on
- examination of risk factors
- serological tests to detect viral antibodies or
antigen - radioimmunoassay and ELISA tests for surface
antigens - Screening of blood for transfusion, semen for
sperm banks, organs for transplant, and routine
prenatal testing of all pregnant women - Mild cases managed by treatment of symptoms and
supportive care - chronic infections treated with interferon
69Nonenveloped DNA Viruses
701. Adenoviruses
- nonenveloped, ds DNA
- 30 types associated with human disease
- infect lymphoid tissue, respiratory intestinal
epithelia conjunctiva - oncogenic in animals, not in humans
- spread by respiratory ocular secretions
- causes colds, pharyngitis, conjunctivitis,
keratoconjunctivitis, acute hemorrhagic cystitis - inactivated polyvalent vaccine
712. Papillomavirus
- papilloma
- benign, squamous epithelial growth, wart or
verruca - caused by 100 different strains of HPV
- common seed warts
- Fingers
- plantar warts
- soles of feet
- genital warts
- prevalent STD
- transmissible through direct contact or
contaminated fomites - Incubation
- 2 weeks more than a year
72Genital Warts
- most common STD in US
- over 6 M new cases each year
- 30 M carriers of one of the 5 types of HPV
associated with genital warts - strong association with cervical penile cancer
- type 16 18
- Treatment
- podophyllin chemical treatment, cauterization,
freezing, laser surgery, immunotherapy
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743. Polyomaviruses
- induce tumors
- JC BK viruses
- common throughout the world
- majority of infections are asymptomatic or mild
- BK infection in renal transplants causes
complications in urinary function
754. Parvoviruses
- nonenveloped icosahedral, ssDNA
- small diameter genome size
- causes distemper in cats, enteric disease in
dogs, fatal cardiac infection in puppies - B19
- cause of fifth disease, erythema infectiosum rash
of childhood - Child may have fever rash on cheeks
- Severe fatal anemia can result if pregnant woman
transmits virus to fetus
76RNA viruses
77RNA Viruses
- Assigned to one of 12 families based on envelope,
capsid, and nature of RNA genome
78Enveloped Segmented Single-Stranded RNA Viruses
791. Orthomyxoviruses
- Influenza
- ssRNA
- consists of 10 genes encoded on 8 separate RNA
segments - 3 distinct influenza virus types A, B, C
- Virus attaches to, and multiplies in, the cells
of the respiratory tract - finished viruses are assembled and budded off
80Insert figure 25.1 Influenza cycle
81Influenza Type A
- acute, highly contagious respiratory illness
- respiratory transmission
- causes rapid shedding of cells, stripping the
respiratory epithelium, severe inflammation - fever, headache, myalgia, pharyngeal pain,
shortness of breath, coughing - Treatment
- amantadine, rimantadine, zanamivir oseltamivir
- annual trivalent vaccine
822. Bunyavruses Arenaviruses
- enveloped, segmented ssRNA
- transmitted zoonotically
- cause periodic epidemics
- Lassa fever, Argentine hemorrhagic fever,
Bolivian hemorrhagic fever, Lymphocytic
chroiomeningitis - closely associated with rodent host
- transmission through aerosols contact
- biosafety level 4 viruses
83Enveloped Nonsegmented ssRNA Viruses
841. Paramyxoviruses
- enveloped ssRNA
- Paramyxoviruses (parainfluenza, mumps virus)
- Morbillivirus (measles virus)
- Pnuemonovirus (respiratory syncytia virus)
- respiratory transmission
- virus causes infected cells to fuse with
neighboring cells - syncytium or multinucleated giant cells form
85Parainfluenza
- Paramyxoviruses
- widespread as influenza
- more benign
- respiratory transmission
- seen mostly in children
- minor cold, bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, croup
- no specific treatment available
86Mumps
- Paramyxoviruses
- epidemic parotitis
- self-limited, associated with painful swelling of
parotid salivary glands - humans are the only reservoir
- incubation 2-3 weeks fever, muscle pain
malaise, classic swelling of both cheeks - in 20-30 of infected males, epididymis testes
become infected - sterilization is rare
- live attenuated vaccine MMR
87Measles
- Morbillivirus
- also known as red measles rubeola
- very contagious
- transmitted by respiratory aerosols
- humans are the only reservoir
- sore throat, dry cough, headache, conjunctivitis,
lymphadenitis, fever, Koplik spots - oral lesions
- Rash
88Measles
- most serious complication is subacute sclerosing
panencephalitis (SSPE) - progressive neurological degeneration of the
cerebral cortex, white matter brain stem - 1 case in a million infections
- involves a defective virus spreading through the
brain by cell fusion destroys cells - leads to coma death in months or years
- attenuated viral vaccine MMR
89RSV
- also called Pneumonvirus
- infects upper respiratory tract produces giant
multinucleate cells - most prevalent cause of respiratory infection in
children 6 months or younger - epithelia of nose eye portal of entry
- replicates in nasopharynx
- rhinitis, wheezing, otitis, croup
- Treatment
- synagis, a monoclonal antibody that blocks
attachment, ribavirin
902. Rabies
- Rhabdovirus family
- bullet-shaped virions
- enveloped
- slow, progressive zoonotic disease
91Rabies
- virus enters through bite, grows at trauma site
for a week - enters nerve endings advances toward the
ganglia, spinal cord brain - furious form of rabies
- agitation, disorientation, seizures, twitching,
hydrophobia - dumb form of rabies
- paralyzed, stuporous
92Rabies
- often diagnosed at autopsy
- intracellular inclusions (Negri bodies) in
nervous tissue - treatment
- passive active postexposure immunization
- Days 1, 3, 7, 14, 28, 60
93Other enveloped RNA viruses
941. Coronavirus
- large RNA viruses
- distinctively spaced spikes on their envelopes
- common in domesticated animals
- 3 types of human coronaviruses have been
characterized - HCV causes a cold
- an enteric virus
- Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
- airborne transmission
- 10 of cases fatal
95SARS
- Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-Associated
Coronavirus - Newly emerging disease 2002
- Transmitted through droplet or direct contact
- Fever, body aches, and malaise
- severe cases can result in respiratory distress
and death - Diagnosis relies on exclusion of other likely
agents - Treatment is supportive
962. Rubella
- Caused by Rubivirus, a Togavirus
- ssRNA with a loose envelope
- German measles
- Endemic disease
- Most cases reported are adolescents and young
adults - Transmitted through contact with respiratory
secretions
97Rubella
- Two clinical forms
- Postnatal rubella
- generally mild
- malaise, fever, sore throat, lymphadenopathy,
rash - lasting about 3 days
- Congenital rubella
- infection during 1st trimester most likely to
induce miscarriage or multiple defects - Diagnosis based on serological testing
- No specific treatment available
- Attenuated viral vaccine MMR
98Arboviruses
99Arboviruses
- viruses that spread by arthropod vectors
- mosquitoes, ticks, flies, gnats
- 400 viruses
- togaviruses, flaviviruses, some bunyaviruses
reoviruses - most illnesses caused by these viruses are mild
fevers, some cause severe encephalitis - dengue fever, western- eastern equine
encephalitis, yellow fever
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101The Influence of the Vector
- Vectors and viruses tend to be clustered in the
tropics and subtropics - many temperate zones have periodic epidemics
- life cycles are closely tied to the ecology of
the vectors - peak incidence when the arthropod is actively
feeding and reproducing - Humans can serve as dead-end, accidental hosts or
they can be a maintenance reservoir - Controlling the vector controls the disease
102Characteristics of Arbovirus Infections
- Viral encephalitis
- brain, meninges, and spinal cord are involved
- convulsions, tremor, paralysis, loss of
coordination, memory deficits, changes in speech
and personality, coma - survivors may experience permanent brain damage
- Treatment is supportive
- Vaccine for yellow fever, those traveling to
tropics, those in high risk occupations
103N.A.Viruses
- Colorado tick fever (CTF)
- most common tick-borne viral fever in U.S.
- Rocky Mountain states
- Western equine encephalitis (WEE)
- western U.S. and Canada
- extremely dangerous to infants and small children
- Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE)
- eastern U.S. and Canada
104N.A. Viruses
- California encephalitis 2 different strains
- California strain
- western states
- little human impact
- LaCrosse strain
- eastern U.S. and Canada
- prevalent cause of viral encephalitis
- St. Louis encephalitis (SLE)
- most common of all in America
- epidemics in midwestern and southern states
- inapparent infections are very common
105N.A. Viruses
- West Nile encephalitis
- 1999
- 2000
- 2001
106Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Yellow fever
- eliminated in U.S.
- Two patterns of transmission
- urban cycle
- humans and mosquitoes, Aedes aegypti
- sylvan cycle
- forest monkeys and mosquitoes
- South America
- Acute fever, headache, muscle pain
- may progress to oral hemorrhage, nosebleed,
vomiting, jaundice, and liver and kidney damage - significant mortality rate
107Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Dengue fever
- flavivirus carried by Aedes mosquito
- not in U.S.
- usually mild infection
- dengue hemorrhagic shock syndrome, breakbone
fever - extreme muscle and joint pain
- can be fatal
108HIV and AIDS
109Retroviruses
- enveloped, ssRNA viruses
- encode reverse transcriptase enzyme which makes a
DNA copy of their RNA genome - Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
- cause of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
(AIDS) - HIV-1 HIV-2
- T-cell lymphotropic viruses I II - leukemia
110Epidemiology of HIV Infections
- Transmission occurs by direct and specific routes
- mainly through sexual intercourse and transfer of
blood or blood products - babies can be infected before or during birth,
and from breast feeding - HIV does not survive long outside of the body
111Facts.
- First nationally notifiable in 1984
- 6th most common cause of death among people aged
25-44 years in the U.S. - Men account for 70 of new infections
- IV drug abusers can be HIV carriers
- significant factor in spread to heterosexual
population - In 2006, the number of infected individuals
worldwide is estimated to be 45 million - 1 million in the U.S.
112Risk Categories
- homosexual or bisexual males 45
- intravenous drug users 30
- heterosexual partners of HIV carriers 11
- blood transfusions blood products since
testing, no longer a serious risk - inapparent or unknown risk 9 - (due to denial,
death, unavailability) - congenital or neonatal can be reduced with
antiviral drugs - medical dental personnel 1/500 needlestick
113Pathogenesis and Virulence Factors of HIV
- Enters through mucous membrane or skin
- travels to dendritic phagocytes beneath the
epithelium - multiplies and is shed
- Virus taken up and amplified by macrophages in
the skin, lymph organs, bone marrow, and blood - HIV attaches to CD4 and coreceptor
- HIV fuses with cell membrane
- Reverse transcriptase makes a DNA copy of RNA
- Viral DNA is integrated into host chromosome
(provirus) - Can produce a lytic infection or remain latent
114Effects of HIV infection
- Primary effects
- extreme leukopenia
- lymphocytes in particular
- formation of giant T cells and other syncytia
- allows the virus to spread directly from cell to
cell - Infected macrophages release the virus in central
nervous system - toxic effect, inflammation
- Secondary effects
- Destruction on CD4 lymphocytes
- allows for opportunistic infections and
malignancies
115Signs and Symptoms of HIV Infections and AIDS
- Initial infection
- mononucleosis-like symptoms that soon disappear
- Asymptomatic phase 2-15 years (avg. 10)
- Antibodies are detectable 8-16 weeks after
infection - When T4 cell levels fall below 200/mL AIDS
symptoms appear
116Diagnosis of HIV Infection
- Testing based on detection of antibodies specific
to the virus in serum or other fluids - Initial screening
- ELISA
- rapid results but may result in false positives
- Follow up with Western blot analysis to rule out
false positives - False negatives can also occur
- persons who may have been exposed should be
tested a second time 3-6 months later
117Diagnosis of AIDS
- Made when a person meets the criteria
- Positive for the virus, and
- They fulfill one of the additional criteria
- They have a CD4 count of fewer than 200 cells/ml
of blood - Their CD4 cells account for fewer than 14 of all
lymphocytes - They experience one or more of a CDC-provided
list of AIDS-defining illnesses
118Nonenveloped Nonsegmented ssRNA Viruses
119Picornaviruses and Caliciviruses
- Picornaviruses
- Enterovirus poliovirus, HAV
- Rhinovirus - rhinovirus
- Cardiovirus
- Caliciviruses
- Norwalk agent (Norovirus) common cause of viral
gastroenteritis (cruise ships)
1201. Poliovirus and Poliomyelitis
- naked capsid
- can survive stomach acids when ingested
- Poliomyelitis (polio)
- acute enteroviral infection of the spinal cord
- can cause neuromuscular paralysis
- Worldwide vaccination programs have reduced the
number of cases - eradication is expected
121Hepatitis A Virus and Infectious Hepatitis
- Cubical picornavirus
- relatively resistant to heat and acid
- Not carried chronically
- principal reservoirs are asymptomatic, short-term
carriers or people with clinical disease - Fecal-oral transmission
- Most infections subclinical or vague, flu-like
symptoms occur - No specific treatment once the symptoms begin
- Inactivated viral vaccine
- Pooled immune serum globulin for those entering
into endemic areas
122Human Rhinovirus (HRV)
- More than 110 serotypes associated with the
common cold - Sensitive to acidic environments
- optimum temperature is 33oC
- Unique molecular surface makes development of a
vaccine unlikely - Endemic with many strains circulating in the
population at one time - acquired from contaminated hands and fomites
1232. Caliciviruses
- Cruise ship virus
- Norwalk agent best known
- believed to cause 1/3rd of all viral
gastroenteritis cases - Transmitted by fecal-oral route
- Infection in all ages at any time of year
- Acute onset, nausea, vomiting, cramps, diarrhea,
chills - Rapid and complete recovery