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Viral disease

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Title: Viral disease Author: SCGS Last modified by: Garvey Created Date: 2/8/2005 8:31:24 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Viral disease


1
Viral disease
  • Learning objective
  • To be able to describe the structural features of
    a virus.

2
What diseases do viruses cause?
  • Diseases caused by viruses include chickenpox,
    smallpox, common cold, influenza, measles, mumps,
    rabies, polio, yellow fever.

3
Viruses
  • Viruses are the smallest and simplest of the
    microbes.
  • They are acellular (not made of cells)
  • Viruses are obligate parasites who can only
    reproduce inside host cells which get damaged in
    the process, leading to disease.
  • Viruses are thought to have arisen from lengths
    of DNA that became separated from their cells.

4
Living or not?
  • Viruses lack the mitochondria necessary to derive
    energy and they cannot reproduce on their own.
  • They are dependent on their host cells and are
    only classed as living organisms when they infect
    host cells.
  • After reproducing, viruses cause their host's
    destruction. Viruses are described as obligate
    intracellular parasites.

5
  • Outside the host cell viruses are inert and
    called virons.
  • By taking over the host cells metabolic machinery
    they are able to replicate.
  • Reproduction is the only common characteristic
    that viruses have with other living organisms

6
  • 1. Why can viruses be classified as living and
    non living?
  • 2. Explain why all viruses are considered to be
    parasites.

7
Size does matter..
  • Viruses are smaller than bacteria about 20
    400 nm

8
Morphology
  • Viruses consist of
  • A core of nucleic acid which can be DNA or RNA
  • A protein coat or capsid
  • There is no protoplasm or cytoplasm.
  • The capsid is a protein coat on the very outside
    to protect the genetic material.
  • It is made up of protein units called capsomeres
    which link together to form a very geometrical
    shape.

9
Function of capsid
  • Protects the nucleic acid when the virus is not
    in a host cell.
  • Helps the virus to gain entry into a host cell
    and introduce the viral nucleic acid.
  • Viruses may also possess an envelope and that
    would have come from a previous host its not
    their own.

10
Function of envelope
  • Binds to the host cell membrane.
  • It helps the viro-particles to fuse with a new
    cell., (a disguise) e.g. HIV

11
Structure
  • Viruses have distinct structures and they
    identify the cells which they attack by
    recognising specific cell surface receptors.
  • Viruses will usually only infect one species.
  • Viruses which infect bacterial cells are called
    bacteriophages, those that infect animals and
    plants are called animal and plant viruses.

12
  • A complete virus particle is called a virion.
  • A virion is the dormant form of a virus that is
    transmitted between cells.
  • Virions are too small to see with a light
    microscope and were first seen in the 1930s using
    the electron microscope.
  • Once inside a host cell virions dismantle into
    their separate parts, and the virus can be
    reproduced.

13
All virions contain
  • Nucleic acid, which can be DNA or RNA, and single
    or double-stranded.
  • Viruses are classified according to the type of
    nucleic acid they contain.
  • The nucleic acid typically codes for 5-100
    proteins (by comparison, the bacterium E. coli
    has about 4000 genes).
  • A protein coat called a capsid, made of subunits
    called capsomeres.
  • If the capsid proteins are closely bound to the
    nucleic acid, then the combination is called a
    nucleocapsid.
  • Because capsids are composed of many repeating
    subunits, they tend to have simple geometrical
    shapes, such as helix or icosahedron (20
    triangular faces).

14
  • Some virions have very simple structures
    containing nothing else, but many virions have
    morecomplex structures, including
  • Enzymes, required to replicate the viral nucleic
    acid or incorporate it into a host.
  • A lipid envelope, not made by the virus itself,
    but derived from a host cell membrane.
  • Matrix proteins to attach the capsid to the
    envelope.
  • Glycoproteins to allow the virus to attach to
    host cells.

15
Some examples of virion structures
  • Discovered in 1852 by Ivanovsky when
    investigating tobacco mosaic disease in tobacco
    plants.
  • He found that sap from a diseased plant could
    still cause infection even after being put
    through a bacterial filter so he concluded there
    was a disease-causing organism smaller even than
    a bacterium.
  • Named from the Greek word meaning poisonous fluid.

16
3 types of capsid
  • helical e.g. TMV
  • icosahedral e.g. HIV
  • complex which has a polyhedral head and a
    helical tail e.g. T2

17
Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)
  • A coil of RNA surrounded by a helical capsid.

18
Adenovirus
  • A single stranded DNA surrounded by an
    icosahedral capsid.

19
Bacteriophage
  • Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria
  • An example is the T2 virus which has complex
    structures that combine icosahedral and helical
    capsids.

20
HIV
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is an
enveloped retrovirus. It comprises 2 copies
of single-stranded RNA together with some
enzymes, surrounded by an icosahedral capsid,
which is in turn surrounded by a sphere of matrix
proteins attached to a lipid envelope.
Protein coat
Nucleic acid strand
21
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22
VIRAL DISEASE
  • What is a virus?
  • What characteristics of living things do viruses
    show?
  • Do you consider viruses to be alive?
  • Give reasons to justify your answer.
  • What does obligate intracellular parasite mean?
  • Roughly what size are viruses?
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