Viral Pathogens: Classification, Biology, Diseases - I Flashcards

1
Q

The structure of viral genomes

A

`Configuration of viral genomes;

Single-stranded RNA (ssRNA)

Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)

Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)

Double-stranded RNA (dsDNA)

Double-stranded genomes have complementary base pairing

RNA genomes can be linear and segmented i.e. more than one RNA per capsid

DNA genomes can be linear or circular.

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2
Q

Describe encoding of genome

A

Genomes can encode information (genes) in positive or negative sense; 5’-3’ or 3’-5’ respectively.

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3
Q

HIV structure

A
SU = surface
TM
Protease
Matrix
Nucleocapsid
Capsid
RT
\+ strand mRNA
Integrase
Lipid bilayer
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4
Q

Describe outer envelope of HIV

A

The outer envelope of HIV consists of a lipid bilayer with protruding Env spikes (heterotrimers of SU3TM3).

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5
Q

Describe inside envelope of HIV

A

Inside the envelope lie shells of Gag proteins. In the immature particle, Gag itself forms a single shell.

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6
Q

Describe coating of viral genome in HIV

A

MA associates with the membrane CA forms the conical capsid

NC coats the viral RNA genome.

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7
Q

Describe the core of HIV

A
The core contains two genomic 
RNA strands (plus strand), tRNALys3, and ~50 copies of each viral enzyme (PR, RT, and IN).
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8
Q

Retroviruses synthesise 3 polyproteins:- List and give examples

A

Retroviruses synthesise 3 polyproteins:-
Gag; group specific antigen; viral core proteins; MA (matrix), CA (capsid), NC (nucleocapsid)

Pol; viral enzymes; protease (PR), reverse transcriptase (RT) and integrase (IN)

Env; envelope glycoprotein; gp120 SU (surface); gp41 TM (transmembrane)

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9
Q

HIV-1 Regulatory / Accessory Proteins - list 6 and describe function

A

Tat - potent activator of viral transcription
Rev - mediates unspliced RNA nuclear export
Vif - critical regulator of virus infectivity
Nef - immune modulator, T-cell activation, virus spread (?)
Vpu - immune modulator, virus release
Vpr - cell cycle, virus nuclear import (?)

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10
Q

Entry at HIV cell surface is triggered by

A

Entry at cell surface that is triggered by conformation changes driven by Env/receptor interactions contrasts with the pH-dependent entry of adenovirus, influenza virus, etc

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11
Q

Describe membrane fusion of HIV

A

Native trimer is present,
CD4 binds + T20 binding site exposed
CoR binds, fusion peptide insertion
6-helix bundle formation = membrane fusion

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12
Q

HIV-1 entry requires two membrane proteins:

A

HIV-1 entry requires two membrane proteins: CD4 and a chemokine receptor (CCR5/CXCR4)

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13
Q

Describe RT and significance of its subunits

A

RT is a heterodimer of p66 and p51 subunits.

Catalytic properties are in p66 subunit, p51 serves structural role and lacks RNAse H domain

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14
Q

RT displays three distinct enzymatic activities:

A

RT displays three distinct enzymatic activities:

  1. RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
  2. RNAse H (cleaves RNA from RNA/DNA hybrid)
  3. DNA-dependent DNA polymerase
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15
Q

The HIV-1 promoter contains binding sites for

A

The HIV-1 promoter contains binding sites for transcription factors that are present in T-lymphocytes

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16
Q

The HIV DNA genome (provirus) is integrated into what

A

The HIV DNA genome (provirus) is integrated into the host chromosomes

The viral integrase enzyme binds both host and viral DNA

17
Q

LEDGF/P75 binds what and describe its function

A

LEDGF/P75 binds HIV-1 integrase and facilitates targeting to chromatin

18
Q

The HIV-1 Rev protein functions

A

The HIV-1 Rev protein mediates nuclear export of unspliced and singly spliced viral RNA

HIV Rev is essential for the nuclear export of intron-containing viral mRNAs

The HIV-1 Rev protein interacts with Crm1 and the RRE RNA

19
Q

The unspliced HIV-1 RNA use

A

The unspliced HIV-1 RNA is the mRNA for Gag and Gag-Pol proteins

20
Q

Dimerisation of the unspliced viral RNA allows

A

Dimerisation of the unspliced viral RNA allows packing of two genomes

21
Q

Gag and Gag-Pol proteins function

A

Gag and Gag-Pol proteins assemble viral particles

22
Q

Gag-pol protein is generated by

A

Gag-pol protein is generated by -1 ribosomal frameshifting induced by a ‘slippery’ sequence and an RNA hairpin structure

23
Q

Myristoylation of Glycines function

A

Myristoylation of Glycines in the MA domain of Gag mediates association with the plasma membrane

24
Q

Myristoylation define

A

lipidation modification where a myristoyl group, derived from myristic acid, is covalently attached by an amide bond to the alpha-amino group of an N-terminal glycine residue.

25
Q

The HIV-1 PT(S)AP motif is required

A

The HIV-1 PT(S)AP motif is required for virus budding

and mediates binding of the host Tsg101 protein

26
Q

The ESCRT machinery relation to HIV

A

The ESCRT machinery is hijacked by HIV to perform membrane abscission during viral release

27
Q

Protease releases what in membrane interactions of HIV

A

Protease releases the individual proteins from

Gag and Gag-Pol polyproteins

28
Q

Gag processing generates what

A

Gag processing generates mature virions