Lecture 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the genome of retroviruses

A
  • 2 copies of + sense single stranded RNA
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2
Q

Are retroviruses enveloped?

A
  • yes
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3
Q

How are retroviruses replicated

A

Intravirion transcriptase = reverse transcriptase

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4
Q

What is the target of retroviruses?

A

Lymphocytes, monocytes, mesenchymal and epithelial cells

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5
Q

What is the difference between a retrovirus and a lentivirus?

A

Lentiviruses all contain additional accessory genes

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6
Q

How does the retrovirus hiding strategy differ in nature from a herpes virus?

A

The retrovirus hides by embedding itself into the host cells genome. The herpes virus does not do this but still finds a way to hide.

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7
Q

Describe the early and late phases of the retroviruses lifecycle:

A

Early Phase:

  • Attachement
  • Penetration
  • Intravirion reverse transcriptase coverts ss RNA to ss DNA then to ds DNA provirus
  • Provirus then embeds itself into the host cells genome

Late Phase:

  • Host cell transcriptase transcribes mRNA for protein synthesis and viral RNA for packaging
  • Assembly and budding
  • Maturation of virion
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8
Q

What shape are retroviruses typically?

A

Normally an Icosahedral shape

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9
Q

What is the difference between an endogenous and an exogenous retrovirus and what are some of the benefits that are typically offered by endogenous retroviruses?

A

DNA of all investigated species has endogenous retroviruses within them these often contain many similarities to known exogenous retroviruses

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10
Q

What viruses are typically associated with cancer?

A

Oncogenic retroviruses- cancer is typically associated with the over-expression of cellular oncogenes. The retrovirus will typically insert itself upstream, typically affecting the normal control of the transcription of the gene

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11
Q

What is the main difference between cis and trans acting retroviruses?

A

Cis elements act on the same chromosome as the gene that they infect, however trans elements typically act at entirely different sites or different chromosomes

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12
Q

What is a common feature of lentiviruses that differentiates them from other retroviruses?

A

many more genes have been integrated into their genome

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13
Q

Explain how the testing method for FIV differs from FeLV:

A

FIV-tests for the antibody

FeLV- tests for the antigen

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14
Q

Why can’t Feline Sarcoma virus replicate on its own?

A

Feline sarcoma virus is directly oncogenic because it comes from a FeLV that has adopted a c-onc from the host cell that directly makes it into a v-onc. However, the majority of these don’t manage to go through the process without ruining their own genomes and hence it needs a wild FeLV to be able to replicate.

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15
Q

What species does the genus alpharetrovirus normally occur in and what is the most common neoplasm that is observed from it?

A
  • occurs in most chicken flocks

- Most common neoplasm = lymphoid leukosis

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16
Q

What are the main symptoms that are observed in the condition maedi visna?

A

Maedi- progressive weight loss

Visna- weakness in the limbs that progresses to ataxia