POLIO Flashcards
What is the structure of polio virus?
-non-enveloped, (+)ssRNA, iscosahedral capsid
How does polio get into epithelial cells?
Binds to CD155, which induces endocytosis into cell’s cytoplasm as well as a conformational change in VP1 so it can insert into the lipid bilayer of the host cell
- enters through a pore that is formed
How does polio get into the blood stream?
GI track— interstitial tissue— lymphatic system— blood
What is the Salk vaccine? What are the advantages and disadvantages of it?
- Inactivated virus
- injected
- advantages: antibody mediated immunity, no potential for reversion, immunosuppressed people can use it
- disadvantages: requires boosters, does not induce antibody mediated immunity in the gut, vaccinated people could still transmit through the gut, expensive,
What is the Sabin vaccine?
- attenuated virus (not completely inactivated, but decreased infectivity)
- given orally
- advantages: gut immunity, can immunize an entire household, no booster shot, cheaper
- disadvantages: not good for immunocompromised people, chance of mutation to virulent form, can infect others by shedding a mutated strand through feces
What are the four categories of response to a polio infection?
- Abortive- illness for a few days (95% of cases)
- Non-paralytic- illness and stiffness in neck for 2-10 days
- Paralytic- flaccid paralysis following possible illness
- Post poliomyelitis muscle atrophy- a reappearance of paralysis and muscle wasting decades later
Where does paralytic polio attack?
Lower motor neuron
How many serotypes are there for polio? What does it bind to?
3; the unique antibody for the serotype
What is the epitope that is responsible for neutralizing antibodies?
Sequences on the structural proteins VP1, VP2, VP3
What is the arrangement of the virus’ envelope?
60 protomers: each made of three subunits: VP0, VP1, VP3 (180 molecules of protein)
What happens when the capsid undergoes a maturation process?
VP0–> VP2 (int) and VP4(ext)
What does the genome look like?
- (+)ssRNA, uncapped, VPg is attached to the 5’ end, polyA tail is attached at the 3’ end
- UTR at 5’ end and 3’ (this one is involved in synthesis of (-) strand)
What cleaves VPg that was attached to the RNA after entry into the cell?
Cellular enzyme
How does polio translate the RNA?
- cells ribosome assembles onto the virus’ RNA using the IRES to initiate translation (instead of the 5’ cap)
- starts 741 nucleotides from the 5’ end
- one ORF is translated to make one large polyprotein
- part of the polyprotein turns into a protease and cleaves it into 20 different proteins
- elF4G cleaves a translation factor needed to make cellular mRNA
What are the steps of transcription/replication of RNA?
- VPg and RDRP replicate the genome and synthesize more viral mRNA (replication complex)
- replication complex associates with the membrane structure derived from the ER (replication compartment)
- VPg = primer RDRP for synthesis
- RDRP synthesizes a new (+) strand
- some (+) genomic RNA is used for its proteins, some goes into the virus