Title: T4 bacteriophage infecting an E. coli cell
1T4 bacteriophage infecting an E. coli cell
2Science as a Process
- Research into tobacco mosaic disease led to the
conclusion that the pathogen was smaller than a
bacterial cell - The pathogen was named virus
- Characteristics of viruses
- Smaller than bacteria
- Not cellular
- Composed of nucleic acid and protein
- Obligate intracellular parasites
3Comparing the size of a virus, a bacterium, and
an animal cell
4Infection by tobacco mosaic virus
5Figure 18.4 Viral structure
6Capsids and Envelopes
7Capsids and Envelopes
- Capsid protein coat that surrounds the viral
genome - viral envelope
8Capsids and Envelopes
- Capsid protein coat that surrounds the viral
genome - viral envelope derived from host cell or
nuclear membranes, it helps the virus invade
9Viral Genome
- Double stranded DNA
- Single Stranded DNA
- Double stranded RNA
- Single stranded RNA
- A virus has only one of these types of nucleic
acids
10Viral Replication
- What are the possible patterns of viral
replication? - DNA --gt DNA
- RNA --gt RNA, where viral genes code for viral RNA
and proteins (class IV and V) - RNA --gt DNA --gt RNA where viral gene uses
reverse transcriptase to create a provirus in
the nucleus that does not leave host cellviral
RNA and protein is also made - (class VI)
11Bacterial Viruses
- Which scientists used bacteriophages to prove
that DNA was the hereditary material? - Hershey and Chase
- What are the two mechanisms of phage infection?
- Lytic and Lysogenic cycles (of DNA viruses)
12Lytic Cycle
- Virulent phage example T4 phage
- Steps
- Attachment
- Entry of phage DNA and degradation of host DNA
- Synthesis of viral genome and protein
- Assembly
- Release (host cell dies while releasing
100-200 phages)
13Lysogenic Cycle
- Temperate phage example?lambda phage
- Steps
- Entry
- Integration of viral DNA into bacterial
chromosome creating a prophage - Bacterium reproduces normally copying prophage
and transmitting it to daughter cells - Under certain environmental conditions, a
switchover to lytic cycle is triggered - Other prophage genes may alter hosts phenotype
and have medical significance - Ex. bacteria causing diphtheria is harmless
unless infected by a phagephage experiences a
lysogenic cycle and prophage causes host cell to
make a toxin that causes illness!
14Bacterial Defense
- What defense do bacteria have against phage
infection? - Restriction enzymes (a.k.a. ? restriction
endonucleases) - What do restriction enzymes do?
- They cut up DNA. The bacterial DNA is modified to
protect it from the restriction endonucleases.
15Animal Viruses
- What is the viral envelope?
- An outer membrane (outside of the capsid) that
helps the virus to invade the animal cell. - The invasion of the virus has the following
stages ...
16 1. Attachment 2. Entry 3. Uncoating 4. RNA
and protein synthesis 5. Assembly and release
17Herpes virus
- Consists of double stranded DNA
- Envelope derived from host cell nuclear envelope
not from plasma membrane - It, therefore, reproduces within the nucleus
- May integrate its DNA as a provirus (becoming
like mini-chromosomes in nucleus) - Tends to recur throughout lifetime of infected
individual. Often triggered by environmental
situations.
18RNA Viruses
- Different classes of RNA viruses single stranded
range from class IV to class VI - Class IV invades as mRNA, is ready for
translation - Class V RNA serves as template for mRNA
synthesis - Class VI Retrovirus ? RNA ? DNA (using enzyme
reverse transcriptase)? RNA
19The structure of HIV, the retrovirus that causes
AIDS
20The reproductive cycle of HIV, a retrovirus
21Reasons for success of HIV
- Has an envelope
- Creates a provirus which stays in the nucleus of
the host cell - Is an RNA virushigh rate of mutation
22Viral Disease
- Some viruses have toxic components
- Some cause infected cells to release enzymes from
lysosomes - Recovery involves ability to repair damaged
region of the body.
23Vaccines / Drugs
- What are vaccines and how do they work?
- Introduce body to harmless or weakened strain of
the virus, so that your immune system learns to
recognize the virus prior to invasion - Few drugs around to fight viruses, most interfere
with DNA, RNA or protein synthesis - Often mimic nucleosides that would allow for
nucleic acid synthesis - Ex. AZT ? HIV replication
- acyclovor ? herpes
24Emerging Viruses
- HIV, Ebola, SARS, West Nile Virus, Influenza,
Hantavirus - From where do these viruses emerge?
- From mutated versions of current viruses
- Jump from current host to new host
- Move from a previously isolated region of the
world
25SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome)
(a) Young ballet students in Hong Kong
wear face masks to protect themselves from
the virus causing SARS.
(b) The SARS-causing agent is a coronavirus
like this one (colorized TEM), so named for the
corona of glycoprotein spikes protruding
from the envelope.
26Viroids and Prions
- Viroids are naked circular RNA that infect plants
- Prions are proteins that infect cells (cause
tangles of proteins in brain) - Examples of prions seen in scrapies in sheep,
mad-cow disease, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(CJD) in humans - Timeline of Mad Cow Disease Outbreaks
- How can a prion spread infection?
- Altered versions of proteins that can alter other
proteins (altered protein is thought to be a
result of a mutated gene) - Or can be ingested by eating contaminated meats
27Figure 18.13Â Model for how prions propagate
28Viral Evolution
- How did viruses evolve?
- Because viruses depend on cells for their own
reproduction, they most likely evolved after the
first cells appeared. - Possible link to mobile genetic elements.
(transposons, plasmids) - Much debate about viral evolutionlots to learn
about viruses!