Viruses

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VIRUSES

description

Viruses . Lytic vs. Lysogenic . Vaccines. First made was in 1700’s- fight smallpox Help prevent viral infections, but they cannot cure most viral infection Some recently-developed drugs do combat some viruses, mostly by interfering with viral nucleic acid synthesis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Viruses

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VIRUSES

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Lytic vs. Lysogenic

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Vaccines• First made was in 1700’s- fight smallpox• Help prevent viral infections, but they cannot cure most

viral infection • Some recently-developed drugs do combat some viruses,

mostly by interfering with viral nucleic acid synthesis.• AZT interferes with reverse transcriptase of HIV.• Acyclovir inhibits herpes virus DNA synthesis.

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WHAT IS HIV??• “Human Immunodeficiency Virus”• A unique type of virus (a retrovirus)• Invades the helper T cells in the body of the host• Preventable, managable but not curable

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WHAT IS AIDS ???• “Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome”• HIV is the virus that causes AIDS• Disease limits the body’s ability to fight infection due to reduced helper T cells.

• Patients predisposed to multiple opportunistic infections leading to death.

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Stage 1 - Primary• Short, flu-like illness - occurs one to six weeks after infection

• Mild symptoms• Infected person can infect other people

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Stage 2 - Asymptomatic• Lasts for an average of ten years • This stage is free from symptoms• There may be swollen glands• The level of HIV in the blood drops to low levels

• HIV antibodies are detectable in the blood

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Stage 3 - Symptomatic

• The immune system deteriorates • Opportunistic infections and cancers start to appear.

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Stage 4 - HIV AIDS

• The immune system weakens too much as CD4 cells decrease in number.

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Opportunistic Infections associated with AIDS• Bacterial infections

• Tuberculosis (TB)• Herpes Simplex• Herpes Zoster• Vaginal candidiasis• Hairy leukoplakia• Kaposi’s sarcoma

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Opportunistic Infections associated with AIDS

• Pneumocystic carinii• Toxoplasmosis• Cryptococcosis• Coccidiodomycosis• Cryptosporiosis• Non hodgkin’s lymphoma

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HAART = highly active anti-retroviral treatment

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Transduction

• Definition: Gene transfer from a donor to a recipient by way of a bacteriophage

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Transduction

• Types of transduction– Generalized - Transduction in which

potentially any donor bacterial gene can be transferred

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Generalized Transduction

• Release of phage

• Phage replication and degradation of host DNA• Assembly of phages particles

• Infection of recipient• Legitimate recombination

• Infection of Donor

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Transduction• Types of transduction

• Generalized - Transduction in which potentially any dornor bacterial gene can be transferred.

– Specialized - Transduction in which only certain donor genes can be transferred

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Specialized TransductionLysogenic Phage

• Excision of the prophage

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bio

gal bio

gal bio

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bio

bio

gal

• Replication and release of phage

• Infection of the recipient

• Lysogenization of the recipient– Legitimate

recombination also possible

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Transposable Genetic Elements• Definition: Segments of DNA that are able to move from

one location to another• Properties

• “Random” movement• Not capable of self replication• Transposition mediated by site-specific recombination

• Transposase

• Transposition may be accompanied by duplication