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Viruses, Viroids, and Prions Unit 03 Microbiology
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History of Viruses By the 1800s, many bacteria, fungi, and protozoa were identified as infectious agents. Most of these organisms could be easily seen with a light microscope in a lab. In the 1890s, D.M. Iwanowsky and Martinus Beijerinck found that mosaic disease of the tobacco plant was caused by an agent too small to be seen with a light microscope. They could be grown only in media that contained living cells.
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Tobacco Mosaic Virus
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History of Viruses Beijerinck called the agent a filterable virus. About 10 years later, F.W. Twort and F. d’Herelle discovered a filterable virus that destroyed bacteria. With time, filterable was dropped and virus remained. Virus means poison.
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Viruses Viruses can be viewed as genetic information- either DNA or RNA- conained within a protective coat. They are inert particles, incapable of metabolism, replication, or motility. When a viral genome finds its way into a host cell, however, it can hijack that cell’s replication machinery causing it to produce more virus.
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Viruses Have two main groups- those that infect prokaryotic cells and those that infect eukaryotic cells Bacteriophages: A virus that infects bacteria: often shorted to phage. Phage means to eat.
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Viruses The fact that viruses are obligate intercellular parasites makes them very difficult to study. They can be seen only with an electron microscope.
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Listeria monocytogenes In 2006, the FDA approved a preparation of bacteriophages that infect the food-borne pathogen L. monocytogenes for use as an antimicrobial agent on ready to eat meat and poultry products. L. monocytogenes multiplies at refrigeration temperatures and causes a potentially lethal disease.
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Characteristics of Viruses They are noted for their small size. They are app. 100 to 1000 times smaller than the cells they infect. Smallest 10 nm in diameter, and contain very little nucleic acid. The largest is 800 nm. One was so large it was identified as a bacterium.
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Viral Architecture At a minimum, a viral particle consists of nucleic acid surrounded by a protein coat. The coat is a capsid. The capsid together with the nucleic acid it encloses is a nucleocapsid.
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Viral Architecture Some viruses have an envelope, a lipid bilayer outside of the capsid. Those that have it are enveloped viruses. Those that don ’ t are naked viruses. Nearly all phages are naked. Enveloped viruses are more susceptible to disinfectants.
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Viral Architecture Viruses contain only a single type of nucleic acid- either RNA or DNA- but never both. They are classified as either RNA or DNA viruses. The type of genome has important implications with the virus replication.
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Naked and Enveloped Viruses The image on the left is a naked virus West Nile The image on the right is of influenza an enveloped virus
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Shapes of Viruses Viruses generally have three shapes Icosahedral Helical Complex
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Shapes of Viruses
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Viral Taxonomy Although viruses are not living organisms they are classified to provide easy identification and study. The International Committee on Viral Taxonomy keeps an online database. They describe over 6,000 viruses belonging to 2,288 species, 348 genera, 87 families, and 6 orders. Key characteristics used are the genome structure and the hosts they infect. Shape and symptoms are also considered.
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Virus Transmission Viruses are often grouped according to how they are transmitted. Zoonotic viruses cause zoonoses- transmission from an animal to a human Arboviruses- transmitted by arthropods- mosquitoes and ticks- West Nile, Yellow Fever, Dengue Fever Enteric viruses- fecal-oral route Respiratory viruses- respiratory or salivary route
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Infections Lytic phages exit the host at the end of the infection cycle by lysing the cell. These viral infections result in the formation of new virus particles and are called productive infections.
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Infection Cycle- Viral Replication Has five stages Attachment Genome Entry- uncoating releases the nucleic acid from the protein coat Sythesis of proteins and genome- genes are transcribed and translated Assembly (maturation) Release- enveloped virions by budding Naked virions are released when the host cell dies
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Categories of Animal Virus Infections Acute- sudden onset of symptoms of relatively short duration Persistent- can continue for the life of the host, with or without symptoms Chronic infections Latent infections- remains silent, but can reactivate
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Viroids and Prions Viroids are plant pathogens that consist of small circular, single stranded RNA molecules Prions are composed solely of protein, and a cause a number of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies.
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