9. Rhinovirus and Flu Flashcards

1
Q

Rhinovirus is the Major ____ Virus

A

common cold

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2
Q

% of US population experiencing the ‘common’ cold

  • There are nearly 62 million cases of the common cold annually in the US
  • 52.2 million of these cases affect Americans under age ____

62 million infected/309* million total population
= ____% of population or 1 in 5 individuals will have colds.

A

17

20

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3
Q

The “Rhino” in Rhinovirus

is derived from the Greek, meaning ____.

A

nose

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4
Q
Incidence of colds:
Rhinovirus \_\_\_\_%
Influenza 5-15%
Coronavirus \_\_\_\_% Respiratory Syncytial Virus \_\_\_\_% 
Adenovirus < 5%
Parainfluenza \_\_\_\_%
Enteroviruses < 5%
A

30-50
10-15
10
5

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5
Q

Rhinovirus- important features of infection
• There are at least 160 strains.
• There is no ____.
• ____ approaches are constantly being developed.
• Transmitted by ____ or ____contact
• ____ is the cellular receptor.
• Optimal replication is slightly below ____ temperature, explaining why the virus resides in the ____ passages and ____ respiratory airways and not elsewhere in the body.
• Viremia does not occur, i.e., Rhinovirus is not found in ____.

And that it results in difficulty to make a vaccination - polio only had 3 strains, so it was easier to produce a vaccine.

Receptor specificity is the reason we aren’t infected by the majority of the viruses that are around us, only the right match can gain entry. Even an analogue virus to a different species cannot infect us because the receptors vary enough.

IMPORTANT pt: reads bullet 6. This virus cannot cause a systemic infection because of its ____.

A
vaccine
aerosol (sneeze)
direct
ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecule-1
body
nasal
upper
blood

replication limitations

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6
Q

Rhinovirus Shedding
• Viral shedding can occur occur a few days before ____ symptoms.
• Cold symptoms peak on days ____ and may last for 3-4 weeks.
• Virus is shed in large amounts:
a ____ viruses per nasal wash.

A

cold
2-7
million

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7
Q

• Rhinovirus cold symptoms peak on days 2-7 and may last for 3-4 weeks.

A person is most likely to transmit rhinovirus on the ____ day of infection when the amount of virus in nasal secretions is highest.

A

2nd-4th

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8
Q

Rhinovirus Infection Time Course and Viral Shedding
4 KEY POINTS

  • Rhinovirus is shed in large amounts: a ____ virions per nasal washing.
  • Viral shedding can occur occur a few days before ____ symptoms.
  • Rhinovirus can survive on a hard surface ____ hours after being touched.
  • Cold symptoms peak on days 2-7 and may last for 3-4 weeks.
A

million
cold
18

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9
Q

It is amongst the ____ viruses in size
Rhinovirus is the size of a ____, 28 nm.
Compare to paramxyo virus (____)
150 nm or greater.

A

smallest
ribosome
measles

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10
Q

Rhinovirus has protein shell that is ____ Shaped. It contains a ____ strand of mRNA inside.

Have ____ facets
10 facets are facing you

A

icosahedral
+
20

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11
Q

A variety of factors influence survival times
of different viruses outside the body: They include

  • ____ features of virus;
  • Temperature
  • ____
  • Light
  • Type of ____

Example, HIV has a half-life of ____ days, ____ hr, and ____ hr
at temperatures of 4oC, 20oC, and 37oC, respectively.
Survival times for different viruses can range from minutes to months.

Points out that temperature is key on the surface the virus resides on.

Every virus’ survival capacity is different outside of a host. Rabies can last for ____ minutes. Some viruses can last weeks. Survival capacity is often due to ____ of the virus. (Which also plays a role for survival inside the body, like in our acidic stomachs)

A
physical
humidity
surface
9
30
24

16
protein shell

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12
Q

Adenovirus
Duration of persistance: ____

Rhinovrius
Duration of persistance:
____

A

7 days to 3 months

1 day

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13
Q

Rhinovirus

How is it transmitted?
Transmission of the rhinovirus occurs in one of two ways:
- Touching your skin or environmental surfaces, such as telephones and stair rails, that have the rhinovirus on them and then touching your ____ or ____
- Inhaling drops of ____ full of rhinovirus from the air when a contagious person coughs or ____

A

eyes
nose
sneezes

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14
Q

Rhinovirus can survive on hands for about an ____.

A

hour

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15
Q

Rhinovirus Replication Cycle

____ is the mode of entry. Sheds protein shell. Releases nucleic acid “payload”. Then replicates. Takes place in ____.

Key: However the virus came in, that is what it must look like when it comes out. It comes in as a ____ strand virus, so it must replicate and leave as a ____ strand even though that requires making a intermediary ____ strand.

A
ICAM-1
cytoplasm
\+
\+
-
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16
Q

Infectious agents favor certain anatomical locations

that rhinovirus lives in the ____ cavity, and can get into ____ respiratory

TAKE A LOOK AT ALL OF THESE

A

nasal

upper

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17
Q

Rhinovirus is confined to the cooler environment of the nasal cavity

____ (91-95) is slightly cooler than the rest of the body (98.6). The small temperature difference is very important for rhinovirus since it cannot replicate systemically at ____ temps.

A

nasal cavity

higher

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18
Q

Rhinovirus Infection is NOT ____

  • Rhinovirus causes ____ respiratory tract infections.
  • Since Rhinovirus requires the cooler environment of the nasal cavity (91o-95o F) it does not become ____, i.e., it does not enter the blood stream.
  • As a consequence, Rhinovirus infection is not systemic.
A

systemic
upper
viremic

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19
Q

Treatments for Rhinovirus Infection
• NO vaccine due to larger number of ____ (serotypes).
• New drugs that block viral ____ are being developed.

huge number of strains (160+) that makes a vaccine difficult. Which is why there is no vaccine.

A

strains

entry

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20
Q

The 160 known strains or serotypes of Rhinovirus prevent development of a vaccine.

  • When you are infected with one strain you develop ____ to that strain, which may last for many years.
  • But then there are all the other strains that you have not yet encountered.
  • The elderly may not retain ____ to strains they were infected in the past.

As you get older, you’ve seen more and more rhinovirus since you’ve already seen the virus and developed immunity.

A

immunity

immunity

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21
Q

Example of why a Rhinovirus vaccine has not been developed

Here, antibody against virus strain-____ is useless against virus strain-____

ICAM-1 receptor again. Rhinovirus interacts with the ICAM-1 receptor on the cell. Antibody against strain 17 (that “we have already seen”) doesn’t block strain 14 from entering the cell.

A

17

14

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22
Q

After several days, both the ____ and ____ Immune Responses Clear the Rhinovirus Infection.

Innate immune system is the “raw” immunity that doesn’t need to be educated - NK cell, macrophages etc.

Humoral response requires education and uses antibodies but takes ____ weeks.

Vaccinations don’t work immediately, requires about ____ weeks for the adaptive/humoral response to kick in.

A

innate
adaptive
2-3
2

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23
Q

Rhinovirus binding to the ICAM receptor on the epithelial cells (EC) of the nasal cavity promotes an innate immune response

ECs secrete ____ that attract neutrophils, eosinophils, and lymphocytes.

(Macrophages may also be infected by ____ released from the epithelium).

____ cell and ____ cell (not shown) immune responses also occur.

The epithelial cell that the rhinovirus entered triggers cytokines and innate immune response. Later, the adaptive response will kick in. Slow if first exposure, fast if subsequent. Look at the image and read text.

A

cytokines
rhinovirus
adaptive T
B

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24
Q

There are no ____ to treat Rhinovirus infection.
However, new drugs are being developed that will prevent Rhinovirus from binding to the the ____ receptor expressed on the surface of epithelial cells.

If we want to come up with a treatment for rhinovirus, the best method is to target rhinovirus binding to ICAM-1 (my interpretation: probably because it is more constant from one strain to the next since they all interact w/ the same receptor?)

A

drugs

ICAM

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25
Q

____ is the only “door” on the epithelial cell surface

that will allow rhinovirus to enter.

A

ICAM

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26
Q

How the viral canyon binds to cellular ICAM
• The inset on the right shows how a Rhinovirus is about to infect an epithelial cell.
• Below shows in greater detail how the ____ (or crevice) on the outer surface of the virus binds to the cell surface ____ receptor.

IMPORTANT: Rhinovirus recognizes the ICAM receptor because it has a ____. The canyon of the virus wants to meet the receptor.
What if we can block ICAM-canyon interaction?
Can’t see where he points on the slide, but it is labeled where ICAM/rhinovirus/canyon are.

A

canyon

ICAM-1

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27
Q

The ____ drug (being developed) binds the Rhinovirus Canyon.
The WIN will prevent Rhinovirus from
attaching to the cellular ICAM receptor on nasal epithelial cells

They are working on a drug with the geometry and conformation that sits inside the canyon. Goes back to previous slide to clarify that we are not trying to block/cover all ICAM receptors, but we are trying bind to the ____ itself to block the ICAM-canyon interaction.

A

WIN

rhinovirus

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28
Q

WIN binds the Rhinovirus Canyon

  1. To enter cells, Rhinovirus attaches to the cellular protein receptor, ICAM.
  2. For the virus to get into the epithelial cell, the ICAM protein needs to reach deep into a crevice
    on the outer surface of the Rhinovirus, called the ____.
  3. Antibodies against Rhinovirus neutralize the virus, also by binding to the ____.
  4. Drugs like WIN 52053 are being developed to work against the virus when there are no natural
    antibodies to prevent Rhinovirus infection. WIN 52053 binds to the ____ of the viral Canyon to block binding by the cellular ICAM receptor

Understand labels of the receptor and virus surface in the image, this image is zoomed in to part of the virus surface.
Reads slide. WIN is being developed to work against all rhinoviruses, specially when you have no natural antibodies

A

canyon
canyon
floor

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29
Q

Summary Important Facts about Rhinovirus

• There are over160 strains of the virus.
Optimal replication occurs slightly below ____, which
is why rhinovirus replicates in the nasal passages and upper respiratory airway.

The virus is not ____, i.e., it does not enter the blood stream and does not cause a systemic infection.

The virus is transmitted by ____ (sneeze) or ____ contact.

____ is the cell receptor.

The many ____ of the virus have prevented development of a vaccine.

Antiviral approaches (e.g., ____ Drugs) are being developed.

A
body temperature
viremic
aerosol
direct
ICAM-1
strains
WIN
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30
Q

KEY FEATURES of INFLUENZA VIRUS
• ____, minus strand, segmented ____ genome.
• Segmentation allows ____ in mixed infections.
• Pandemics occur several times in a Century due to ____.
• Yearly Epidemics are due to ____.

____ segmented strands, not one long strand.
Pandemic is everywhere, ____.

A
enveloped
RNA
random assortment
antigenic shift
antigenic drift
8
worldwide
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31
Q

Influenza virus has an RNA genome of ____ RNAs
Its envelope contains 2 important proteins: ____ and ____

  • ____ is the only member
  • The genome is made up of 8 RNA segments
  • Each segments encodes either one or two proteins
  • The virus is ____

RNA genome of 8 ____ RNA strands.
Know that the two important proteins of influenza are HA and NA (hemagglutinin and neuraminidase)
HA allows ____ into our cells. NA allows ____ from our cells after replication

A
8
HA
NA
influenza
enveloped
individual
entry
exit
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32
Q

HA and NA are on the ____ of the influenza virus

A

surface

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33
Q

Influenza ranks high amongst the viral respiratory diseases

A

Yay!

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34
Q

The incubation period for influenza is: ____ hours.
Adults with influenza remain infectious for:
____ days after onset of symptoms, and children may remain infectious for up to a ____ after onset.
Flu virus can survive ____ hours on a hard surface.

A

24-72
3-5
week
24

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35
Q

How bad is a flu outbreak?
Terminology used to define the epidemiology

____ - Very few cases
____ - > 2 but less than 50% the regions of a state
____ - > than 50% of the regions of a state
____ - More than 6.7% of deaths attributable to flu ____ - Worldwide epidemic

A
sporadic
regional
widespread
epidemic
pandemic
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36
Q

SEASONAL FLU
Of Note, as will be explained later, Seasonal Flu is due to small changes in the flu HA and NA genes, referred to as
____.

A

genetic drift

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37
Q

Flu is Seasonal: It Peaks from ____

Flu fluctuates with the time of year.
Early theory was that people are indoors more during the winter… probably not true

A

december to march

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38
Q

Why is Flu Infection Seasonal ?

Answer: It is due to low ____ and low ____: In regions that have a winter season, the influenza virus survives
____ in cold, dry air, so it has a greater chance of infecting another person*.

A

humidity
temperature
longer

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39
Q

Flu Map Dec 27, 2014

____ here

A

epidemic

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40
Q

Virus survives better when it is dry and when it is cold. It doesn’t ____ very easily through humid, thick, dense air in the summer.

A

move

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41
Q

Spanish Flu was in ____.
It changed the world, major pandemic.
They actually isolated the virus in the 50s, by going back and analyzing human tissue that had died from Spanish Flu in 1918. ____ was the strain of that year.

A

spanish flu

H1N1

42
Q

American deaths from the 1918 Spanish Flu were higher than the number of American deaths in any ____.

A

conflict

43
Q

Life Expectancy curve: 1900 - 1992

Can see life expectancy curve drop due to ____ (and ____, which contributed to spread of the flu)

A

1918 flue

WW1

44
Q

General Overview of Influenza Virus Replication Cycle

General replication cycle. Don’t need to memorize everything.
The virus gets attached through ____, and exits through ____. (Hemagglutinin and neuraminidase)

A

HA

NA

45
Q

DETAILED VIEW OF INFLUENZA REPLICATION CYCLE

This shows virus getting in. It also shows that the host cell has ____ on the surface. The virus recognizes Salic acid, and uses it + HA to get into the cell.

Once in, creates an ____. Low ____ in the endosome. Virus gets out of endosome and does its replication and packages itself for exit.

Uses ____ to break the Salic acid residues to exit the cell.

A

salic acid
endosome
pH
NA

46
Q

CLASSIFICATION of INFLUENZA VIRUSES - 1

All flu viruses that infect all animals can be separated into ____. Subtypes are ____

A

A, B and C

HA and NA

47
Q

CLASSIFICATION of INFLUENZA VIRUSES - 3

The Type A, Type B, and Type C influenza viruses are distinguished by two of the internal structural proteins, ____ and ____.
These proteins have no ____
amongst the three types.

A

NP
M
cross reactivity

48
Q

CLASSIFICATION of INFLUENZA VIRUSES - 4
Type A is found in humans, ____ and many ____. Type B is found mainly in ____.
Type C is found mainly in ____.

A

birds
mammals
humans
humans

49
Q

CLASSIFICATION of INFLUENZA VIRUSES - 5

SubTypes
• The subtypes are based on the HA and NA proteins that undergo ____ variation.
• From humans, birds and mammals, there are:
____ subtypes of HA (H1 -H14) and ____ subtypes of NA (N1 - N9).
• For humans there are ____ HA (H1 -H3) and two ____ (N1 and N2) subtypes.

A
genetic
14
9
3
2
50
Q

SUMMARY of INFLUENZA SUBTYPES

Humans
HA subtypes: ____
NA subtypes: ____

Birds
HA subtypes: ____
NA subtypes: ____

A

H1, H2, H3
N1, N2

H1-H14
N1-N9

51
Q

A/Hong Kong/156/97 (H5N1)

A: \_\_\_\_
Hong Kong: \_\_\_\_
156: \_\_\_\_
97: \_\_\_\_
(H5N1): \_\_\_\_
A
type
origin
strain ID
year of isolation
neuraminidase
52
Q

HA Hemagglutinin

____ receptor binding sites on HA

A

sialic acid

53
Q

The Role of influenza HA in viral entry

  1. The HA of the virus binds to ____ residues on the cell surface.

“All we need to know about HA is that it gets you in” … and probably also that it interacts w/ sialic acid to get in.

  1. The virus enters the cell by ____
  2. The low pH of the endosome (pH 5) produces a ____ change in HA, exposing a ____ peptide that interacts with the ____ membrane.
  3. The viral ribonucleoproteins are released into the ____ and are then transported to the ____.
A
sialic acid
endocytosis
conformational
hydrophobic
endosomal
cytoplasm
nucleus
54
Q

Influenza NA (Neuraminidase)

Active site for ____ cleavage

A

sialic acid

55
Q

Neuraminidase:
• Functions at the end of the viral cycle by removing ____ residues from viral glycoproteins.
• This prevents viral ____ and release of virus from influenza infected cell.

Virus gets out by binding to the cell surface, interaction between sialic acid residues and NA. NA cuts its way out.

A

sialic acid

self-aggregation

56
Q

Antigenic Shift and Drift

Need to know the difference between shift and drift for our careers. Know that drift is the ____ change and that shift is more ____.

A

mild

drastic

57
Q

Antigenic Drift

Virus A > accumulation of ____ over time > Virus B

Drift means small changes. Small change within a ____ segment on the 8 segments of the RNA genome. With change in a segment you can have a new virus, albeit very ____ to the previous one, which reduces the body’s ability to ____ it.

A

mutations
single
similar
recognize

58
Q

How genetic drift works

The virus is always changing. It’s genome changes in mild ways, and what is responsible for ____, why we need a new vaccine every year.

RNA viruses do not have ____ machinery while polymerizing its RNA genome, so they produce a lot of mutations.

2nd time: This shows how single nucleotide substitutions can alter the AA/codon and the entire protein

A

seasonal flus

corrective

59
Q

An example of Drift:
Specific amino acid changes in NA slightly change its ____ making it difficult to be ____ by pre-existing antibodies.

Flu viruses are always changing and getting mutations in the 8 segments of its DNA.

He pointed out the difference between drift being minor changes within a single segment of influenza’s 8 segments, and shift being like completely trading an entire segment with a different influenza virus.
2nd time: Example: slight change in NA.

A

shape

recognized

60
Q

Genetic drift

Small changes in a 2018 strain will give rise to next years new ____

A

strains

61
Q

Circulating Influenza Strains and Pandemics in the 20th Century

3 big years for the flu. 1918, 1957 (asian flu), 1968 (honk kong flu). Can also see which HA and NA were involved. ____. ____. ____

A

H1N1
H2N2
H3N2

62
Q

Antigenic Shift

Host cell (intermixing of RNA) of virus A and virus B

Two different viral strands mix within the same ____ (the viruses could come from different animals, like ____ and ____) which causes antigenic SHIFT.

One entire segment is swapped into the other virus. Can see in the picture below.
Antigenic shift is what often leads to the ____. There are entirely different strands of RNA as opposed to small changes in the sequence during drift.

A

cell
human
bird
pandemics

63
Q

How antigenic shift works

When 2 different viruses (swine and human), with 8 strands each, mix there are: 2^8 = total of ____ possible combinations

A

256

64
Q

Pandemic years and strains. With every strain you will always see an ____ and an ____. Spanish Flu started in the ____, not Spain.

Goes through table.
Probably the only important part is to know that H and N appear in every strain

A

H
N
US

65
Q

SHIFT occurs when there is co-infection of viruses from two different ____. The genetic segments of flu in once species (e.g., bird) mixes with the genetic segments in a different species ( e.g., human)

Important: Shift is the big change when genetic segments of RNA from influenza of one species mix with another. This is generally a rare event, but it is associated w/ proximity to these other vectors/animals.

A

species

66
Q

INFLUENZA VIRUS VACCINE

Influenza virus is grown in ____ for vaccine development. Thus, the vaccine should not be given if ____ to eggs.

The vaccine contains ____ Virus

Important: The virus is grown in eggs for vaccine development and should not be given if you are allergic to eggs. The grown virus is killed before used as a vaccine.

A

eggs
allergic
killed

67
Q

A small volume of the Seed is injected either ____ or through dedicated automated machinery into the allantoic cavity of the egg.

The eggs are then incubated at ____C at a relative humidity of around ____% for ____ hours to allow the virus to multiply.

A

manually
35-37
65
48-72

68
Q

Who should get the influenza virus vaccine?

  1. Adults and children with chronic ____ and ____ disease.
  2. Persons residing in ____ homes or ____ facilities.
  3. Persons over the age of ____ years.
  4. Persons with chronic conditions, such as ____, cancer and ____ disease.
  5. Persons with ____.
  6. ____ workers.
A
heart
lung
nursing
retirment
65
diabetes
kidney
HIV
healthcare
69
Q

When to get the flu vaccine….

Optimal time for flu shot is ____.
This past year’s attempt for the vaccine was less effective than normal. But still wise to get it even on its less effective years.

A

oct-nov

70
Q

What factors decides which influenza strains are important in making a yearly vaccine?

  • Each year, the influenza vaccine is composed of ____ influenza virus strains that were in circulation in the previous ____ as well as those determined to be a risk for the current ____.
  • The strains to be used in the vaccine are decided between ____ for use in late ____.

They run statistic to determine which strains are most prevalent in a given year, then use it to make the vaccine for the next year.

A
killed
year
year
march and september
fall and winter
71
Q

The benefits of flu vaccination

The estimated number of influenza-associated illnesses prevented by flu vacciantion during the 2013-2014 season: 7.2 million, enough people to form a line from ____

A

maine to oregon

72
Q

The Flu Vaccine (killed virus) produces ____ to protect against this years ____ strains.

Highlights that the vaccine is a ____ VIRUS and that it will protect against the ____ strains.

A

antibodies
predicted
killed
predicted

73
Q

Flu Nasal spray

Flu nasal spray is called LAIV, Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine. Not a ____ virus. You can get very mild symptoms occasionally. The strain is ____ adaptive, can’t even survive in ____ airways (my interpretation: kind of like rhinovirus. So it can’t move systemically). This vaccine also can’t be ____.

READ THE REST!

A

killed
cold
upper
transmitted

74
Q

More about the Flu Nasal Spray

Can people receiving the nasal-spray flu vaccine (LAIV) pass the vaccine viruses to others? In clinical studies, transmission of vaccine viruses to close contacts has occurred only rarely. Because the viruses are attenuated and cold-adapted, infection is unlikely to result in
influenza illness symptoms since the vaccine viruses have not been shown to mutate into typical or naturally occurring influenza viruses.

Who should not be vaccinated with the nasal-spray flu vaccine (LAIV)?
• People less than ____ years of age
• People ____ years of age and over
• People with a medical condition that places them at high risk for complications from influenza, including those with chronic ____ or ____ disease.

Can people who receive this spray pass the vaccine to others? Rarely. It’s attenuated and cold adapted it just doesn’t work well.
This is an alternative to the flu shot.

A

5
50
heart
lung

75
Q

AMANTADINE FLU VIRUS INHIBITOR

Real treatments that are already out there and available (unlike WIN for rhinovirus which is still being developed).
“Amantadine blocks the ____ of the virus from the endosome compartment”…(He later says that it blocks the uncoating of the virus in the cell)

A

uncoating

76
Q

Amantadine:
• This antiviral drug is for prevention of ____ . • The drug blocks uncoating of the virus in the cell
and prevents viral ____
• The drug acts by blocking the acid activated channel by the viral ____ .

A

influenza A
replication
M protein

77
Q

Amantadine

The drug is useful for those who cannot take the flu ____.
Drug resistant____ of the virus are generated when abused

A

vaccine

mutants

78
Q

The M ion Channel

This is inside of an endosome. The M channel runs between the inside of the ____ to the ____ compartment. Due to the high acidity of the endosome, H ions move into the ____ which triggers its release into the cytoplasm to replicate. M protein = ____.

A

virus
endosome
virus
M ion channel

79
Q

Amantadine blocks the viral M ion Channel

Amantadine inserts into the channel. This blocks the virus from moving outside of the ____ and replicating. (Because the ____ ions can’t move into the virus and trigger its exit from the endosome)

A

endosome

H+

80
Q

RELENZA and TAMIFLU FLU VIRUS INHIBITORS

Relenza & Tamiflu block ____ of flu virus so that the virus cannot be ____.

Relenza and Tamiflu are NA inhibitors. NA usually cuts the sialic acid residues to allow the viral egress.

A

NA

released

81
Q

TAMIFLU
(oseltamivir phosphate)
Influenza Virus Neuraminidase Antiviral

Oseltamivir phosphate is an ____.
The ester group needs to ____ to convert into the active form. The Mechanism of Action is to block neuraminidase.
This results in viral ____.

A

ethyl ester prodrug
hydrolyzed
aggregation

82
Q

RECENT CONCERN OVER A NEW POTENTIAL PANDEMICS
The so called Bird-Flu of our times.
____ is used as an example

A

H5N1

83
Q

The story begins….
In 1961 a strain designated H5N1 was discovered in some terns (birds) from ____. This strain was found to be devastating to ____ but harmless to humans. This avian flu didn’t infect people. ….or so we thought…

A

south africa

chickens

84
Q

Then……
In May 1997, a three year old boy in Hong Kong began suffering from severe respiratory distress and died.

From this boy. specialists isolated ____, avian flu. This was the first time this strain had been found in a human! It wasn’t until late November, when several more cases turned up, that it made the news.
Millions of raised chicken with H5N1 have been killed.

A

H5N1

85
Q

Why should this be a concern?
Because…….
____ has never appeared in humans !

There was a major concern because of the risk if this started spreading from human to human that it would be a major pandemic. Ultimately that didn’t happen, but there was reason to be concerned about the risk.

A

H5

86
Q

Avian influenza is an infectious disease of birds caused by type ____ strains of the influenza virus.
The disease occurs ____.
Many wild bird species carry these viruses with no apparent signs of ____.

Many wild birds are unaffected because they have evolved with the virus, but ____ chickens have much less immunity

A

A
worldwide
harm

domesticated

87
Q

Do avian influenza viruses infect humans?

Bird flu viruses do not usually infect humans,
but almost ____ confirmed cases of human infection with bird flu viruses have occurred since 1997.

600 could have exploded into the millions, but it didn’t and hasn’t yet.

A

600

88
Q

Spread of Avian Flu Virus
Apart from being highly contagious among poultry, avian influenza viruses are readily transmitted from farm to farm by the movement of live ____,
____ (especially when shoes and other clothing are contaminated), and contaminated ____, equipment, feed, and cages.

Highly pathogenic viruses
can survive for long periods in the environment, especially when temperatures are ____.

For example, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus can survive in bird faeces for at least ____ days at low temperature (4 oC). At a much higher temperature (37 oC), H5N1 viruses have been shown to survive, in faecal samples, for ____ days.

A
birds
people
vehicles
low
35
6
89
Q

Where is H5N1

Yay!

A

yay

90
Q

1918 Spanish flu was the mixing of ____ and ____. Same thing in 1957 - ____ and ____. Hong Kong was also ____ and ____.
The “next pandemic” is a different scenario because there has been little mixing of the viral DNA in these select cases, the little boy received an entire dose of avian virus.

3 scenarios for change in the virus. Seasonal ____, occasional ____ with mixing in an entire new strand, and this scenarios where we receive all 8 strands of an avian virus.

A
bird
human
bird
human
bird
human
drift
shift
91
Q

Avian Influenza/Bird Flu

  • Type A influenza virus principally found in, and occurs naturally among birds
    • seasonal flu among birds
  • H5N1 spreads rapdily among birds, but rarely in humans
    • Wild birds carry the virus in their ____, but rarely get ____
    • ____ birds - chickens, ducks, turkeys can get very sick and die
    • 1997, public health officials detected the strain in SE asia, 170 people infected, 50% (85) died
  • In affected countries, the virus has spread to other mammals like ____, cats, and ____
A
intestines
sick
domestic
pigs
tigers
92
Q

How do people become infected with avian influenza viruses?

Most cases of avian influenza infection in humans has resulted from direct or close contact with infected ____.

A

poultry

93
Q

What are the symptoms of avian influenza in humans?
Symptoms of avian influenza in humans have ranged from typical human ____-like symptoms to acute ____ syndrome and other severe and life-threatening complications.

Seasonal flu vaccine does not protect you from ____ flu

A

influenza
respiratory distress
avian

94
Q

The ____ can directly
jump from chicken to man. This H5N1 can be fatal in some people.
But, there is no evidence that a human with H5N1 can transmit this virus from ____ to ____ .
Also, as of yet, there is no evidence to date of ____ between avian H5N1 and human influenza strains (____).

The avian flu cases have not been able to move from one human to another thus far. It is more severe than a regular flu infection, respiratory, unable to breathe.

A
H5N1
person
person
recombination
antigenic shift
95
Q

Comparing: Drift, Shift, and Bird Flu

____ is a small change
e.g., it results in single ____ change in HA

Human + swine
____ is a big change
e.g., results in a completely new swine ____ in human due to re-assortment

Flu inside bird lung > human contact (i.e. with chickens) > Humans (mostly poultry workers) infected with a completely new ____ virus never encountered.

A
drift
AA
shift
HA
non-human
96
Q

Avian Flu Becoming More Resistant To Antiviral Drugs

The avian flu, an Influenza A subtype ____, is evolving resistance to ____ drugs used to prevent and treat flu symptoms. The rise of resistance to nonprescription drugs such as ____ appeared to be linked to Chinese farmers adding the drugs to chicken ____ as a flu preventative.

A

H5N1
antiviral
amantadine
feed

97
Q

The concern is that if the avian H5N1 and a human influenza virus recombine, the new ‘antigenic-shift virus’ will be transmitted
easily from ____ to ____.

Because the human population has never been exposed to H5, there will no ____.

A

human
human
immune-protection

98
Q

____ Bird Flu has appeared recently in humans

  • Not as dangerous as ____
A

H7N9

H5N1

99
Q

Persons infected with Bird Flu have not yet transmitted the virus to other humans.

Thus, for the moment there is no human to human spread, which could lead to a ____.

A

pandemic

100
Q

Remember, the famous Influenza Pandemics all involved ____.

1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic: ____
____ flu virus recombined with ____ flu virus. Archived from ____ frozen in Alaska permafrost.

1957 Asian Flu Pandemic ____
____ flu virus recombined with ____ flu virus

1968 Hong Kong Flu Pandemic ____
____ flu virus recombined with ____ flu virus

A
antigenic shift
H1N1
swine
human
inuits

N2N2
avian
human

H3N2
avian
human

101
Q

H5N1 HUMAN Vaccines

A new H5N1 vaccine for ____ was developed by GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) that received FDA approval in Dec 2013.

Note: GSK will make H5N1 vaccine available in the U.S. only if directed to by the Biomedical Advanced Development and Research Authority (BARDA) in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ for Preparedness and Response.

A

humans