What type of mutations do RNA viruses have?
More unstable mutations
What happens if a virus is more virulent?
Control is more difficult
What is the control of non-enveloped viruses like?
More difficult to control and spread more easily
What do we use in diagnosis and vaccination?
What is antigenic drift?
What is antigenic shift?
The first stage of viral replication is attachment and entry. What are the different ways this can happen?
1) Penetration (injection of genome) = non enveloped
2) Fusion = enveloped
3) Endocytosis = enveloped
How do viruses bind?
Viruses bind to receptor in cell surface
Glycoprotein on virus bind to protein/ polysaccharide of receptor
What is haemagglutinin?
What is neuraminidase?
N-antigen
N 1-11
Essential for escape
What is tropism?
The ability of specific virus to infect particular cell, based on virus-receptor interaction
What are the two types of pathogenesis?
1) Highly pathogenic
2) Lowly pathogenic
What does a change in tropism lead to?
Change in pathogenesis, symptoms and virulence
What is endocytosis?
Part of the cell machinery for moving large-sized materials into cell through engulfing
How can viruses exploit endocytosis and what different methods do they use?
What might enveloped viruses do during endocytosis?
May fuse with endosomal membrane
What happens once a virus has entered a cell through endocytosis?
Once inside, there is a pH change which releases virus from endosome
What is the non-endocytic route of entry?
What is the non-endocytic penetration route?
Non-enveloped virus attached to host cell and injects virus into cell
Where do DNA viruses replicate?
Replication of genome in nucleus
Where do RNA viruses replicate?
Replication of genome in cytoplasm
What is uncoating
Release of the viral genome from capsid so it can replicate inside host
How can viruses escape a cell
pH change
fusion
viral envelope with endosomal membrane
What varies greatly in viruses?