Viruses Flashcards
What is patient zero?
used to refer to the person identified as the first carrier of a communicable disease in an outbreak of related cases
Definition of a virus
- an ultramicroscopic (20 to 300 nm in diameter), metabolically inert, infectious agent that replicates only within the cells of living hosts
- hosts are mainly bacteria, plants, and animals: composed of an RNA or DNA core, a protein coat, and, in more complex types, a surrounding envelope.
How are viruses classifed?
Based on: – The genome (RNA or DNA) – Number and sense of RNA/DNA strands – Morphology (size, symmetry, envelope) – Genome sequence similarity – Ecology
What is the baltimore classification?
a virus classification system that groups viruses into families, depending on their type of genome (DNA, RNA, single-stranded (ss), double-stranded (ds), etc..) and their method of replication
How are viruses controlled?
- Antimicrobials / Antivirals
- Vaccination is the main approach: Live or killed vaccines
- Eradication in some cases (from particular region, country or whole planet (small pox 1980)): FMD, rabies, rinderpest
- Biosecurity: important to minimise contact between virus and host
What 2 things combine to form viral pathogenesis
- Viruses: obligate intracellular parasites that exclusively replicate in cells. Replication may lead to altered cell function
- IMMUNE response: targets viral antigens both within and outside cell, as well as clearing infection responses may damage both infected and uninfected cells
Pathogenesis
“The manner of development of a disease”
1. The mechanism by which the combined effects of virus replication and host immunity may lead to clinical disease
Features of pathogenesis
- rarely completely understood
- • Highly adapted associated with the ecological niche the virus has found for itself.
- Academically it covers a wide area of disciplines and techniques.
- Often highly specific for the host – virus combination as a result of co-evolution
Why study pathogeneiss as a vet?
- unless understand how cause disease = never develop new therapeutics
- Indentification of control points (how a virus gets into host)
- Methods and interpretation of diagnosis. = understand where virus is in host to know how to test for it
How do viruses pass through host?
- Ingestion/ inhalation/ injection
- cross mucosal barriers
- transmitted through blood
- identify target cells
- replicate
- leave target cell
How viruses are transmitted
- trauma, injection, bite, mechanical or biological vector
2. Oral, resp, reproductive tract
What is the main infectious causes of viral resp disease
- influenza
Influenza steucture
- lipid bilayer = wash hands
- surface = viral proteins
3.
How does the emergence of new types of virus come about
- point mutation and genetic reassortment
- mutations
- reassortment - 2 or more viruses infect the same cell and develop new subtypes