A2.3 Viruses Flashcards

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1
Q

Why are viruses obligate parasites

A

they require living cells to reproduce ( host cell)

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2
Q

What are the features common to all viruses

A

extremely small size (20 - 400nm)
nucleic acid as their genetic material
a capid made of proteins surrounding nucleic acid
no cytoplasm
few or no enzymes

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3
Q

what is advantage of small genome viruses

A

highly adapted for virus replication

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4
Q

What can size of viral genome depend on

A

the type of host cell
Prokaryotic host cells tend to replicate rapidly due to high rate of binary fission

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5
Q

Viruses with an RNA genome can possess:

A

positive sense RNA
Negative sense RNA
retroviruses

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6
Q

What is positive sense RNA

A

they have viral mRNA, which can be directly into virus proteins

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7
Q

what is negative sense RNA

A

They have RNA that must be transcribed into mRNA before protein production

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8
Q

what is retroviruses

A

they have RNA that is reverse transcribed to make DNA which is then transcribed and translated into virus proteins

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9
Q

what is the capsid

A

the protein coat enclosing the viral genome.
The protein subunits are known as capsomeres

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10
Q

What shapes are capsids

A

they are usually helical, icosahedral but sometimes they have complex architecture

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11
Q

why are some viruses classified as enveloped and non enveloped

A

enveloped viruses go through budding from host membranes and the host cell membrane contains viral glycoproteins

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12
Q

what is the effect of non enveloping viruses on the host cell and itself

A

they usually rupture the membrane of the cell, causing cell death and damage to the organism
viruses can be more resistant to extreme pH, heat, dryness and disinfectants

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13
Q

what is the advantage of enveloped viruses

A

they protect the virus from enzymes and other chemicals.
the glycoproteins on envelopes can also help viruses enter cells through receptor binding

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14
Q

what are bacteriophages / phages

A

they are viruses that infect very specific bacteria
they go through lytic or lysogenic life cycle

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15
Q

describe lytic life cycle

A

tail fiber of phage binds to receptors, injecting genome into cell ( penetration)
Viral DNA remains separate and replicates separately using host ribosomes
bacterial DNA broken down while viral DNA replicates and forms new particles
Components assembled to form phage
release of phage into environment involves lysis, resulting in cell death

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16
Q

viruses that undergo lytic life cycle are referred to as?

A

virulent, because they actively infect and damage host cells

17
Q

describe lysogenic life cycle

A

phage infects bacteria by injecting DNA into cell
viral DNA incorporated into host cell’s DNA to form prophage
through incorporation, when the cell divides, the phages DNA is also replicated and passed on ( doesn’t produce new phages)

18
Q

what is a lysogen

A

bacterial host with prophage

19
Q

What happens to phage DNA under stressful conditions in the lysogenic life cycle

A

the phage DNA is removed from the bacterial chromosome and enters the lytic life cycle, leading to lysis, releasing phages into the environment

20
Q

what does it mean that viruses are considered polyphyletic

A

hypothesized that viruses probably arose numerous times in the past by one or more mechanisms

21
Q

What is the virus first hypothesis

A

suggests that viruses evolved before or co evolved with thir current host cells.
Viruses may have come from bits of RNA that had self complementary sequences which allowed it to fold like proteins
Gradually, they became more and more complex and could self replicate

22
Q

What is the escaped genes / progressive hypothesis

A

suggests viruses came from genetic elements that gained the ability to move between cells
A cell could’ve led to two mini cells which were a result of unequal cell division
One of them may have survived because of a protein coat, leading to replication and infection of organisms

23
Q

what is proof behind progressive hypothesis for viruses

A

they are DNA sequences that can move between chromosomes known as transposons

24
Q

What is the regressive/ reduction hypothesis

A

suggests viruses are remnants of cellular organisms
single cell organism forms mutual relationship with another cell
small organism lost its protein building structures
smaller organism able to replicate itself and infect new organisms, becoming a virus

25
Q

What are NCLDV’s

A

nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses which are argued to be the precursors of a group of viruses and were involved in the emergence of eukaryotic cells

26
Q

evidence behind NCLDV

A

newly discovered viruses which have large genome and presence of genes involved in many functions
nucleus in eukaryotic cells may have arisen from endosymbiosis where viral DNA became incorporated in ancestral eukaryotic cells
irreversible succession of gene losses may have been the dominant force in viral evolution

27
Q

why is virus evolution regarded as convergent evolution

A

because possible no single hypothesis is correct and it may have been a combination of all

28
Q

Why do RNA viruses have a higher rate of mutation than DNA viruses?

A

because errors are not corrected by proofreading

29
Q

features of influenza

A

enveloped virus with a genome made of negative sense, single stranded, segmented RNA
they infect epithelial cells of the respiratory tract
they recognize target cells by complementary binding to haemagglutinin in viral envelope and receptors on plasma membrane

30
Q

What is antigenic drifts

A

mutations of genes of viruses that can lead to changes surface proteins of the virus ( haemagglutinin)
the changes happen continually over time, leading to surface antigens that are no longer recognized by immune system

31
Q

what is antigenic shift

A

a sudden major change in viruses, resulting in new haemagglutinin and neuraminidase proteins, resulting in new subtypes
Process results in recombination, DNA from different virus strains are recombined to produce combinations
Possible because two different viruses can infect the same cell

32
Q

What type of virus is HIV

A

retrovirus
Virus RNA is converted into DNA under Reverse Transcriptase which is then integrated into the hosts cell nucleus to form a provirus

33
Q

features of HIV

A

high mutation rate in its genome
Patients often carry many different genetic variants, hard to combat different strains

34
Q

How can viruses with high mutation rates be combatted

A

combination of drugs that target different virus proteins are able to inhibit and prevent replication

35
Q
A