Polyoma Virus Flashcards
1
Q
Micro details of Polyoma virus
A
- family papovaviridae
subfamily - papilloma - Circular dsDNA, very small
non-enveloped icosahedral capsid
2
Q
How are polyoma viruses pathogenic?
A
- transform non-permissive cells and lead to tumor formation
- use large and small T antigen to make immortalized cells then the virus uses middle and small T antigen to transform non-permissive cells
3
Q
What are the two types of polyoma virus
A
BK and JC
- 50% of 3-4 yos seropositive for BK
- 50% of 10-14 yr olds seropositive for JC
- infections in healthy kids are unapparent
- they are ubiquitious but aren’t oncogenic in humans
4
Q
Who usually gets diseases w/ polyoma virus?
A
- ICP like transplant patients and AIDs
5
Q
What must polyoma viruses do to be as pathogenic as they can be?
A
- they have overlapping splicing regions to increase the number of proteins they can make to infect cells
- have many types of early T proteins
6
Q
How do JC and BK viruses infect humans?
A
- inoculate in respiratory tract
- multiply here and lead to primary viremia and multiply in kidneys leading to transient secondary viremia
- immunocompetent pts - have latent viruses in kidneys
- ICPS - have reactivation of BK and JC virus
BK - stays in urinary tract and may cause hemorrhagic cystitis
JC - goes to CNS and causes PML, death w/in 3-6 months, reactivated virus infects and lyses oligodendrocytes
7
Q
Dx of JC?
A
cell culture is not practical
- detect white matter lesion by MRI
- PCR amplification of JC DNA from infected brain or spinal fluid
8
Q
Rx for PML
A
- adjust immunosuppression in transplant pts
- adjust HAART in AIDS patients