Viruses
Obligate intracellular parasitic molecules; replication can only occur within another living cell, considered non-living; 5,000 known to man
Central Core of a Virus
Capsid
Outer protein coat found on all viruses; constructed from identical building blocks (capsomeres) which are composed of smaller protein molecules
Capsomeres
Form viral capsids spontaneously, forming viruses into nearly perfect geometric shapes; rod-shaped form a helical capsid
Icosahedron
Capsid shape; 3-dimensional, 20-sided polygon with 12 evenly spaced corners
Spikes
Proteins that project outward into the environment and are essential for viruses to attach to a host cell
Enveloped Viruses
Viruses that have a bilayer surrounding their capsid
Naked Virus
Type of virus that does not have an envelope
Functions of Capsids and Envelopes
Host Range
The organisms or cell types a virus can infect; usually limited to only a few cell types or species or even strains
Productive State
New viruses are being produced by the host cell:
Latent State
No new viruses are produced by host cell:
Superfamilies
Broadest category into which viruses are divided into:
Characteristics Used to Classify Viruses into Families
Bacteriophages
Viruses that infect bacteria
Adsorption (Bacteria)
The bacteriophage’s spikes on the capsid (all are naked) attach to bacterial receptor proteins; viruses are not capable of locomotion, they must collide with a host cell by chance; this must occur before any other productive phase of infection can occur
Penetration (Bacteria)
Entrance of viral nucleic acids into cytoplasm of bacterial host cell:
Transcription of Viral DNA and Production of New Viral Parts (Bacteria)
Phage-Induced Proteins
Contain new genes that are unique to the virus and not the host cell; code for the production of proteins that perform specific viral functions
Nuclease
An enzyme that breaks apart and destroys host cell DNA; essential for the replication of viral DNA and capsid
Maturation (Bacteria)
Assembling virus particles into mature viruses:
Mature Viruses are Released (Bacteria)
Burst Size
The number of phages released per cell when it lysis due to viral infection (approximately 200)
Adsorption (Animal)
A recognition process between a virus and a host cell that results when the virus attaches to the external surface of the host cell