Introduction to Viruses 2 Flashcards
Describe the possible shapes of a virus
Icosahedral : 20 faces, each an equilateral triangle
Helical : Protein binds around DNA/RNA in a helical fashion
Complex : Neither helical or icosahedral
What are obligate intracellular pathogens?
Can only replicate inside a host cell
Viruses are these
What can virus families be classified according to?
Virion shape / SymmetryPresence or absence of envelope
Genome structure
Mode of replication
Define virion
The complete, infective form of a virus, outside its host cell, with a core RNA and a capsid
What encapsulates the nucleic acid of a virus?
A protein capsid
What surrounds the protein capsid?
A lipid envelope containing spike projections
What are the stages of virus replication?
- Attachment
- Uncoating
- Replication of genomic nucleic acid
- Protein synthesis
- Virion assembly (insertion of virus proteins into a membrane)
- Budding and release
What are the methods of viral transmission?
- Blood bourne
- Sexual
- Vertical
- Faecal - oral
- Droplet
- Airborne
- Close contact
- Vector-borne (indirect transmission of an infectious agent - occurs when a vector bites or touches a person
- Zoonotic ( a disease that normally exists in animals but can infect humans)
What might the coinfection of human and animal or bird strains in one organism lead to?
Recombination and generation of a new strain
What are the syndromes associated with viral infections?
- Respiratory
- Neurological
- Gastroenteritis
- Hepatitis
- Skin infections
- Eye infections
- Congenital abnormalities
- Arthralgia - infection of a joint
- Lymphadenopathy (disease affecting the lymph nodes)
What are the consequences of viral infection?
No, short or long lasting immunity
Chronic infection
Latent infection (lysogenic part of the cell cycle - lies dormant)
Transformation - long term infection with altered cellular gene expression
Describe the status of the viral genome during latency
Retained in host cell - expression is restricted (produces few antigen and no viral particles are produced)
What can does reactivation cause?
May or may not cause disease
When is reactivation most likely to occur?
In the immunocompromisd - also where it is most severe
How can some viral infections lead to cancer?
Modulation of cel cycle control - driving cell proliferation
Modulation of apoptosis - preventing programmed cell death
Reactive oxygen species mediated damage - infections can cause persistant inflammatory processes which lead to cancer via reactive oxygen species