banfield review 2 Flashcards
Describe orthomyxovirus gene expression
- single stranded RNA genomes, multipartite with all segments of the (-) polarity
- has pH dependent entry (endosome) where hemoglutanin changes and flips out the fusion peptide (coiled coil with protein refolding) and releases the 8 nucleocapsids through here into the cytoplasm
- these are imported to the nucleus and serve as templates for the production of mRNAs
- they also steal cellular mRNA caps for their viral mRNAs
- since this virus replicates in the nucleus, it has access to splicing machinery, so it can splice its RNA and make different proteins
- also, some RNAS have two different start codons on the 5’ end of the RNA, meaning ribosome can produce two different proteins when it starts at one over the other
What are 3 different ways one can get a protein out of a small piece of RNA?
- Splicing (only for viruses that replicate in the nucleus, the cytoplasm has no splicing machinery)
- different reading frames
- making a polyprotein (makes a whole bunch of protein out of one mRNA)
Describe the process of PKR, and what it is triggered by
when PKR encounters dsRNA, it phosphorylates eif2a meaning that it can’t exchange GDP for GTP.
Without GTP, eif2a cannot bind to initiator tRNA and bring it to the small ribosomal subunit, meaning translation stops.
Describe the different growth curves of enveloped viruses from the plasma membrane vs the golgi apparatus
Plasma membrane:
- intracellular and extracellular infectious occurs at the same time
Golgi:
- intracellular infectious occurs before extracellular (because it matures once it gains its envelope, and since its getting it from the golgi it would mature inside the cell)
Describe what would happen if you degraded STAT 1
Normally, a cytokine binds to the receptor, brings the receptor chains together, jaks get phopshorylated.
IF you just degrade STAT 1 this will still happen, receptor will get phosphorylated, if there’s no stat 1 then it will be a stat 2 homodimer.
However, without STAT 1 the ISGF3 (STAT 1 + STAT 2 + iRF9) can’t form (so you don’t make interferon stimulated genes; PKR, OAS, RNAse L) but it WONT prevent the signal transduction events that occur upstream.
ie, STAT 2 homodimers could form but they have different targets, not necessarily ISGs
Why is it important to sequester or protect dsRNA?
Because it can bind to proteins (rig I and md45?) that signal the production of interferon and pro-inflammatory cytokines.
- if the cell has been exposed to interferon already, the dsRNA activates PKR and now all protein synthesis stops inside the cell, and activates OAS which activates RNAse L which degrades all mRNA
- therefore super important to protect it
Movement of the virion components in the cell would be slow, since the cytoplasm is very densely packaged and protein rich.
What helps overcome this?
To get around this, viruses have to move their components around, to do that efficiently microtubules and microtubule motors and actin filaments and actin motors speed up this process.
Which viruses did he mention that specifically use actin and myosin filaments + motor to get out of the cell?
Poxviruses
What do natural killer cells recognize?
They Natural killer cells are NOT going to recognize class I MHC peptides.
They DO recognize an absence of class I MHC, as well as antibodies bound to cells (through Fc domain)
where do orthomyxoviruses replicate?
in the nucleus of infected cells
how do polydnaviruses help the replicative cycle of the wasp
injects its eggs into the worm, also injected a virus at the same time (virus is carried within the eggs)
the virus infects some of the worms immune cells, causes immunosuppression enabling the wasp eggs to develop
wasp eggs develop, using the nutrients from the worm. they virus also alters the worm to make it mushy in order to support the development of the eggs of the wasp.
Describe the geometric features of an icosahedron.
20 sided
Contains 3 types of axis
- Threefold (center of triangular face) = 120
- Fivefold (12 vertices)= 72
- Twofold (edges of triangular faces) = 180
Icosahedral capsid packaging of genome vs helical
Icosahedral:
- capsid assembles around the virus genome OR genome is fed into preformed capsids
Helical:
- viral genomic RNA is generally coated with nucleocapsid protein during its synthesis
What are the steps that all viruses must complete to replicate? Is the order in which these steps are performed important? Why or why not?
- attach/absorb to the cell
- penetrate into the cell
- uncoat the viral genome
- viral gene expression
- virus genome replication
- assembly of new viruses and egress or release of virus from the cell
What is the role of coiled-coils in the fusion of virion envelopes with a cellular membranes?
they are important in membrane fusion
they bring the two membranes of the virus and the cell close together and allow for their leaflets to mix together. this allows for entry of the viral genome into the cytoplasm