Viruses Disease causing agents. Viruses Can multiply only in cells and which, by virtue of their...

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Viruses Disease causing agents

Transcript of Viruses Disease causing agents. Viruses Can multiply only in cells and which, by virtue of their...

Page 1: Viruses Disease causing agents. Viruses Can multiply only in cells and which, by virtue of their tiny size can pass through filters that hold back even.

Viruses

Disease causing agents

Page 2: Viruses Disease causing agents. Viruses Can multiply only in cells and which, by virtue of their tiny size can pass through filters that hold back even.

Viruses

• Can multiply only in cells and which, by virtue of their tiny size can pass through filters that hold back even the tiniest bacteria

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Viruses

• Extensive study in an effort to find methods to control virus-induced diseases

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Virus

• Important tool in molecular biology and rDNA applications

• rDNA – recombinant DNA

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Gene Therapy

• Some viruses are used in gene therapy

• Retro viruses• Adenovirus• Herpes virus• vaccinia

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Retro virus

• AIDS• Leukemia

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Adenovirus

• Sore throat• Respiratory tract infection• Liver infection• Liver cancer

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Herpes virus

• Cold sores• Genital lesions• Mononucleosis• Chicken pox

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Herpes virus

• Central nervous system infection

• Developmental abnormalities

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Vaccinia

• Cowpox

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Question?

• What would you want to know if your Doctor recommended gene therapy using adenovirus as a vector?

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Virus structure

• Very small• Can usually only be seen

with an electron microscope

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Virus Structure

• Genome – all genetic information contained by an organism

• DNA or RNA double stranded or single stranded DNA or RNA

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Virus Structure

• Sometimes double stranded RNA

• Capsid – protective coat

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Capsid

• Nucleic acid and a protein is called a nucleocapsid

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Virus Structure

• Envelope – lipid membrane only found in viruses that infect animal cells

• Proteins embedded in envelope

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envelope

• These proteins are often sticking outside the virus particle and have sugars attached to them

• Are referred to as envelope glycoproteins

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Capsid Shapes

• Icosohedral – 20 sided sphere

• Helical - tubular

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Icosohedron

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Helical virus

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Virus size

• Range in size from 10 nm to 1000 nm

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Virion

• Complete virus particle• Four general categories of

virion structure• Based on shape of the

capsid and whether it has an envelope or not

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Virion structures

• Naked icosohedral• Naked helical• Enveloped icosohedral• Enveloped helical

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• Some viruses have mixed morphologies

• Some bacteriophages have capsids that are part helical and part icosohedral

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• Most complex virus particles are the pox viruses

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Prion

• Protein only, can be reproduced

• Scrapie – in sheep, like mad cow disease

• Grinding of animals used in animal feed

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Kuru

• Kuru – degenerative brain disease

• Custom of eating the brain of dead relatives

• Human equivalent of mad cow disease

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Host Range Categories

• Animal – usually species and cell specific

• Plants• bacteria

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Host range specificity

• Requirement for a specific interaction between a protein on the outside of the virus - Envelope glycoproteins, capsid proteins

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• And a cell surface protein – hormone receptor or some other protein important for cell function

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Example

• HIV – only infects helper T lymphocytes because the gp120 protein in the HIV envelope interacts with the CD4 protein on the helper T cell

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Multiplication

• Attachment of virus to cell surface

• Penetration – into cell, sometimes entire virus, genome only

• Genome replication

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Multiplication

• Genome (protein) translated into virus proteins using host ribosomes

• Assemble new virus particles• Release of new virus from

cell either by budding or lysing

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Virus genomes

• Must encode any proteins necessary for multiplication which are not provided by the cell

• Capsid proteins and special enzymes

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Special enzyme

• One that could synthesize RNA using an RNA genome as a template

• Process would not occur in an uninfected cell

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Retroviruses

• Unique group of animal viruses that include HIV

• Contain an RNA genome that is reverse transcribed into DNA

• Requires the enzyme reverse transcriptase

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Animal virus w/ DNA genome• Virus DNA is replicated• Genes are transcribed• mRNA is exported to the

cytoplasm and translated• Proteins are transported

back into the nucleus to combine with new virus DNA to assemble new virions

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Enveloped Viruses

• Obtain lipid membrane by budding from a cell

• Taking part of the plasma membrane with them

• Membrane remains enclosed around the nucleocapsid

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• Virus proteins often imbedded into the envelope and are involved in binding of virion to surface of target cell

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Bacteriophages

• Viruses infecting bacteria• (phages)• Bind to surface of

bacterial cell and inject their DNA into the cell

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Phages

• leaves the capsid outside the cell

• Genome is replicated and translated

• New virions are assembled

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Phages

• Bacterial cell bursts open to release the new viruses

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How do viruses cause disease

• Effect they have on cells when they divide and multiply

• Many viruses must lyse the cell

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Lysis

• Explode cell• Non eveloped viruses get

out of the cell this way• Cell becomes so full of the

new virus from replication that it explodes

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lyse

• Infection of many cells may cause extensive damage to tissues

• Symptoms of the viral infection are determined by the cell type infected

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Rhinovirus

• Causes the common cold• Infect and damage cells

lining the upper respiratory tract

• Symptoms result from the body’s efforts to repair damaged tissue

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• Even if a virus can be released from a cell with lysis, it still causes significant changes within the cell and interferes with cellular functions

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• Animal viruses whose genomes become inserted into the cellular DNA can cause infected cells to be transformed into tumor cells

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• Can enter an animal or plant only through a wound or natural opening

• Respiratory system• Digestive system

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• Blood• Wound • Genital openings

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Interferron

• Blocks translation

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Retro virus

• Use reverse transcriptase• Causes higher rate of

mutation• Part of the reason retro

viruses are hard to create vaccines for also part of the inherent danger!

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RDNA Technology

• New viruses may be constructed with RDNA technology

• Yield modified viruses for vaccines

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• Virus DNA is easily isolated from infected cells

• Can be digested with restriction enzymes to remove portions of the genome

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• Specific virus genes can be cloned

• Resulting virus either lacks certain genetic info or contains additional info that alters the behavior of the virus, causing new proteins to be produced

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Vaccines

• Goal is to stimulate the immune system to recognize and respond to an infectious agent without the animal getting sick

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• Some portions –disease causing portion -of the virus can be eliminated from the material used to make the vaccine

• Animal’s immune system will still respond the same way

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• Vaccinia virus causes only mild symptoms in humans

• Engineered to express proteins from other more dangerous viruses

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• Altered vaccinia virus will multiply in the host and generate an effective immune response

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Gene cloning and genetic engineering

• Bacteriophages can enter bacterial cells and multiply efficiently

• A piece of DNA inserted into a phage will be replicated in the cell

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• Phages are used in this way as vectors

• Vector – mechanism for introducing something into a living system

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• Bacteriophage Lambda• Popular vector• One third of its DNA is not

needed for replication and can be replaced by foreign DNA

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• Lambda vectors can accommodate much larger pieces of DNA than most plasmid vectors

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• Reverse transcriptase is used to transcribe RNA from cells into corresponding DNA sequences – called cDNA for cloning

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• Process allows preferential cloning of DNA

• Normally less than 1% of the total DNA in an animal cell

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• Recombinant phages • Produced by joining

phage DNA and cellular DNA

• Bacteria is mixed with rDNA and spread on the surface of an agar plate

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• Bacteria grow across the plate as a “lawn”

• If a virus infects a cell the released viruses will infect neighboring cells

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• Creates plaques – clear areas

• Plaque hybridization is performed to identify a plaque containing a virus

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Plaque hybridization

• Nitrocellulose membrane is placed on the plate

• Pick up a little of the phage from each plaque

• Membrane is treated to release DNA from the phage and attach to the membrane

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• Probe is used that hybridizes only DNA containing a complementary nucleotide sequence

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• Animal Viruses can be used to transfer cloned pieces of DNA into animal cells so that the gene will be expressed

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• Process may be used to study function of a protein

• Or to correct a defect caused by a missing or incorrect gene

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• Retroviruses most commonly used

• Retro DNA is efficiently inserted into cellular DNA

• Becomes part of the cell’s genetic material

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• Retroviruses can be used to genetically engineer cells or even whole animals

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Gene Therapy

• Virus vectors – retro and adenoviruses

• Used in gene therapy applications for immunodeficiency, cancer, Cystic Fibrosis and other diseases

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