What are viruses?
Acellular, obligate intracellular parasites known to infect every type of cell. They are considered nonliving and cannot live outside a host cell.
General Characteristics of Viruses?
What are the size of viruses?
Animal- 22nm-450nm
Require an Electron Microscope to view
How are viruses different from other pathogens?
Acellular, reproduce via assembly process, haploid (except retroviruses), contain EITHER DNA or RNA, lack organelles/cytoplasm/nucleus/nucleoid.
The genome of the virus is surrounded by?
An outer protein coat (Capsid). And sometimes an envelope.
What is an envelope?
A lipid membrane derived from the host cell (either the cell membrane or internal organelle membrane), which contains glycoproteins of viral and host cell origins.
True or False? 13 of the 19 families of animal viruses are enveloped.
True
Most Enveloped Viruses cannot survive in the GI tract
……
The capsid is made up of identical protein subunits called…..
Capsomers.
What are the two symmetrical nucleocapsid structures found among medically important human and animal viruses?
Helical and Icosahedral
How are the Nucleocapsids of helical viruses arranged?
They are tightly wound and rigid in naked viruses, nucleocapsids of enveloped viruses are looser.
Icosahedral capsids have ____Triangular faces and ____corners.
20 Triangular faces and 12 corners.
What is the function of the capsid and envelope?
To protect the virus core, which contains the genome.
The viral envelope plays the following roles….
Host Cell recognition and binding to host cell upon infection. Capsid proteins fulfill these roles in the absence of an envelope.
Capsid+Genome=
Nucleocapsid
True or False. A virus contains DNA and RNA?
False. DNA or RNA.
DNA Viral Genomes can exist as…..
Single Stranded Linear (+ or -), Double Stranded Linear, or Double Stranded Circular.
RNA Viral Genomes can exist as…..
Single Stranded Linear (+ or -), Single Stranded Negative Sense Segmented, Single Stranded Circular Negative Sense, or Double Stranded Linear Segmented.
Why are virus genomes small?
Physically not enough space.
Describe “Strain”, “Type”, and “Variant”.
Strain- Same virus but isolated form different patients or geographical locations.
Type- Same virus but responding differently to antibody detection (serotypes)
Variant- Virus whose phenotype differs from wild-type (genetic mutation is not known)
Spontaneous mutations occur often in viral genomes. What are their rates of incidence? And why do RNA viruses have a higher rate?
DNA Virus- 1/10^-9
RNA Virus- 1/10^-3
RNA dependent RNA polymerases are typically more error prone than their DNA counterparts.
All RNA viruses encode an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase EXCEPT…..
Retroviruses (RNA Dependent DNA Polymerases)
Reverse transcriptase have a rate of error of……
One per cycle
What are the two methods of recombination?
Intramolecular recombination by strand breakage and religation or strand switching (occurs in all viruses that use a DNA intermediate)
Intramolecular recombination by copy-choice, a viral polymerase switches template strands during replication. (Occurs only in RNA)