virus
genetic element containing either RNA or DNA that replicates in cells but is characterised by having extracellular state; single stranded or ds; small
T/F - viruses contain organelles
false
virus structure
inert; nucleic acid surrounded by protein capsid; sometimes other macromolecular components (envelope)
naked virus vs enveloped virus
naked - capsid composed of capsomeres is outermost layer
enveloped - has capsid, but surrounding that is macromolecular envelope
most prevalent classification system and how it works:
baltimore classification: class (I-VII), description (dsDNA or ssDNA). based on type of genome virus possesses
importance of bacteria-phage interaction
potential controller of microbial pop. size
phage infection may influence phenotype of host (rather than killing it)
important for molecular bio (eg phage can carry coding vector)
method of bacteriophage quantification & steps involved
plaque assay
what defines size of plaque? what is the unit of measurement for plaques?
size of virus
plaque-forming units (bc size of plaque isn’t indication of useful tings)
problems with plaques and how to solve
some bacterial lawns are really thick and you like…can’t see any real information from it. solved by dilution
virus replication
permissive cells
allow virus multiplcation to occur
burst size
amount of new viral particles
methods of virus resistance
host cell lacks surface receptor
host restriction endonucleases destroy injected phage DNA
why does t4 have lysozyme
will lyse cell wall, releasing new viral particle
t4 time of replication
25 min
is t4 lytic or lysogenic
lytic
entry mechanism of bacteriophage
temperate bacteriophages + example
lysogenic - phage dna is injected into host cell cytoplasm, can either go directly into lytic cycle or can undergo lysogeny
some will integrate genome into host genome, or genome will just exist separately as a plasmid in host, can be carried for many generation, most of the viral genes are not expressed
lambda phage is temperate that infects E. coli
prophage
integrated/maintained phage genome
lysogen
bacterial cell carrying prophage (phage genome)
lysis
replication and release of mature virus
lysogeny
integration of viral DNA into host genome or maintenance as plasmid
transduction
transfer of host genes from one cell to another by virus
two types: generalized and specialised
generalized transduction
host bacterial gene accidentally packaged into lytic phage and transferred to new cell