Virophage Flashcards

1
Q

what are virophages

A

small dsDNA viral phages that require the co-infection of another virus and its host (usually giant viruses)

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2
Q

when can virophages replicate / what are the two paths a virophage could take to get there

A

only when the giant virus is in bacteria as well / both viruses could infect the amoeba at the same time OR the phage integrates into giant virus chromosome

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3
Q

what are the two ways for progeny viruses to get out of a host cell

A

lysis and budding

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4
Q

what does lysis do / what is the main way of virus export

A

fills the host cell with virus and pops host cell to release all progeny / lysis

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5
Q

what does budding do / where does it happen / what do all enveloped viruses do to release progeny

A

viruses pass through the membrane of the host - the membrane lipids surround capsid to form an envelope / only happens in animal cells / bud from membrane (either cell membrane or organelle)

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6
Q

what key features of viruses does our body use to detect infection / why

A

nucleic acids because of the double stranded DNA and the double stranded RNA / the double stranded DNA is produced in the cytosol of host cell and we put our DNA in nucleus - we do not create double stranded RNA

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7
Q

what detects the dsRNA and dsDNA

A

pattern recognition receptors detect them in the cytosol and trigger the immune response

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8
Q

what does the binding of PRRs to dsRNA and dsDNA do / what do interferons do

A

initiated the production of cytokines called interferons / they induce Interferon Stimulate Genes (ISGs) on neighboring cells - renders them antiviral

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9
Q

how do interferons work

A

they bind to the interferon receptor which almost all cells in the body have - that expresses between 2-500 proteins (puts cell in antiviral state)

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10
Q

what are some of the proteins expressed by ISGs

A

RNAse (recognizes dsRNA and kills RNA in host cell), Protein kinase R (PKR phosphorylates components in translation to shut down translation in the cell), Cell death proteins (programmed cell death to remove replicative environment), MHC-I (promotes more expression of MHC-I proteins on membrane just in case cell already infected)

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11
Q

how do viruses avoid host recognition

A

keeping their capsid in tact until it contacts the nucleus and can directly deposit genome their AND reorganize the ER membrane to create viral factories that avoid detection in cytosol

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12
Q

what are the two groups of retroviruses / what is the difference

A

simple retroviruses and lentiviruses / simple cause tumors and leukemia, lenti cause infections that progress slowly over many years

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13
Q

what is an inherited virus called / what kind of viruses become inherited

A

an endogenous virus / retorviruses become inherited because they get fixed to parts of our DNA

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14
Q

can endogenous viruses cause infection / what are most cases of retrovirus replication

A

some can be activated and replicate to induce tumors - great majority do not / most are non-cytopathic (don’t kill host) and persistent

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15
Q

what is HIV / what kind of virus is it / how many major types are there

A

the human immunideficiency virus / a retrovirus (lentivirus) / two major types HIV-1 (most widespread) and HIV-2

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16
Q

what does HIV cause / does HIV have an envelope

A

acquired immunodeficiency virus (AIDS) / yes it does because it has to be contracted in such close contact as it cannot survive outside of host

17
Q

what are the 3 key components of HIV

A
  1. spike protein (envelope protein) 2. internal capsid (encoded by GAG) 3. pol gene that encodes reverse transcriptase & integrase
18
Q

what kind of tropism does HIV have / what cells does it infect / how does HIV get into a cell

A

very narrow tropism / only infects CD4 & coreceptor CCR5 / binds those cells and the mebranes fuse

19
Q

what does reverse transcriptase do in the host cell / how does the dsDNA get into host chromosome

A

synthesizes a RNA/DNA hybrid from the sense RNA, degrades the RNA from hybrid via RNAse, synthesis dsDNA from ssDNA / via the viral integrase

20
Q

what does chromosome integration of viral DNA mean

A

cannot get rid of that virus ever

21
Q

what branch of immunity is destroyed by HIV / why does AIDS kill

A

the humoral immunity because the CD4 T-cells are taken out / once the humoral immunity is gone - opportunistic infections can now kill the immunocompromised host