Mm2 Flashcards
Explain the viral life-cycle steps
- Attachment cell-surface specific receptor
- Injection of the viral Gino with the cell and it’s transferred to cytoplasm
- Transcription (makes mRNA)
- Early regulatory proteins
- late structural proteins – make the cell capsule later when the virus is assembled - Genome = replicated
- Virus reassembled + exits cell
What are RNA viruses called
Retroviruses – they use reverse transcriptase
List for types of viruses when classified according to the type of their genetic material
Double-stranded DNA, single-stranded DNA, antisense strand RNA, sense strand RNA
Define tropism
The preference of viruses to affect certain tissues not others
What determines the tropism of a virus
Susceptibility – permissvity – accessibility
List different outcomes of infection by viruses
Acute infection Persistent infection Latent reactivating infection Slow infection Oncogenesis
Name and example of a virus which causes an acute infection
Infection followed by the response of the organism and quick and complete resolution of infection
Rhinovirus, rotavirus, influenza
Name and example of a virus which causes a persistent infection
Persistent infection in a wide group which is not cleared from the organism completely
Papillomaviruses in warts
Chronic carriers Hep B and C
Name and example of a virus which causes a latent reactivating infection
Persistent infection in a wide group which is not cleared from the organism completely
Herpes simplex virus
Chickenpox and shingles
Name and example of a virus which causes a slow infection
Measles, human immuno deficiency virus
Name and example of a virus which causes an oncogenesis infection
May encode oncogenes, interferes with the cell cycle in order to enhance their own replication
Hep B/C
HIV
Define zoonosis
The process of transmission from animals and humans
Can be direct-> vectors such as air or reverse
Define host range
Organisms that can be infected by a disease
Explain how viruses emerge and re-emerge using named examples
Illegal animals, infected mosquitos
West Nile fever, Zika, Ebola, SARS, MERS
Explain why it is difficult to develop drugs which selectively act against viral infections
Viruses use the cells own machinery so therapies can be harmful to the host as well as the virus
Summarise the general strategy of designing drugs which target infectious agents but not the patient’s own cells
- Identify elements of viral life-cycle that differ from the hosts
- Identify the site of drug action
- Design the drug to be highly specific for the site
- Block spread/replication virus
Identify four stages in their life cycle of viruses which could potentially allow therapeutic intervention
- Viral binding and entry
- Viral replication
Transcription, reverse transcription, integration, replication - Viral assembly
- Viral exit
List six examples of classes of drugs which have been used successfully in anti-viral therapy
- Interferons
- Nucleoside analogues eg. Acyclovir
- Fusion/entry inhibitors
- Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
- Integrate inhibitors
- Protease inhibitors
Explain the specific strategy of using acyclovir as an antiviral drug
The strategy is-
Chain termination on the Viral thymidine kinase