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Acellular Microbes. Infectious Agents Viruses Range from 10-300 nm. academic.pgcc.edu/.../Chapter%2013/size.html.

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Presentation on theme: "Acellular Microbes. Infectious Agents Viruses Range from 10-300 nm. academic.pgcc.edu/.../Chapter%2013/size.html."— Presentation transcript:

1 Acellular Microbes

2 Infectious Agents

3 Viruses Range from 10-300 nm. academic.pgcc.edu/.../Chapter%2013/size.html

4 All Organisms Have the Potential to be Infected by Some Type of Virus. E. Coli being attacked by lambda bacteriophage. www.asm.org/division /m/foto/ LamAttack.html Tobacco Mosaic Virus. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/.../Milne /tob amo1.htm Leaf left = uninfected tobacco leaf. Right leaf = infected leaf. www.nature.com/.../v411 /n68 39/full/411848a0.html Man infected with small pox. www.idph.state.il.us/Bioterror ism/spoxphoto1.htm Small pox virus. www.ncbi.nlm.n ih.gov/ICTVdb/I mages/Murphy/ Dow..

5 Sooooo………. what is a virus?

6 Virus Characteristics 1. Have genetic material, either DNA or RNA. 2. Can’t replicate without a host cell. 3. Can’t divide by binary fission, mitosis, or meiosis. 4. Can’t make their own energy (steal it from host cell). 5. Can’t make their own protein or genetic material (steal from host cell).

7 Characteristics of a Typical Virus 1. Consists of a genome of either RNA or DNA. 2. Genetic material surrounded by a capsid or protein coat. Composed of small protein units called capsomeres. 3. Some viruses have an outer envelope. 4. May also have a tail, sheath, and tail fibers.

8 A Typical Virus

9 Virus Classification 1. Type of genetic material. 2. Shape of the capsid. 3. Number of capsomeres. 4. Size of the capsid. 5. Presence or absence of an envelope. 6. Type of host it infects. 7. Type of disease it produces. 8. Target cell. 9. Immunologic or antigenic properties.

10 Viral Classification www.biotech100.com www.antibac2k.com

11 Where did viruses come from?

12 Virus Origin 3 Major Theories 1. Viruses are remnants of past infections (e.g. mitochondrion/chloroplasts). 2. Cells came before viruses. Viruses are degenerate cells or cell fragments. 3. Viruses represent a separate evolutionary branch

13 What if.... Scientists found a cell that was as large or larger than some bacteria and that cell had the capabilities to produce almost everything it needed to “live.” It required a host cell only to make some ribosomes. Is it a virus or a living cell?

14 Meet Mimi! http://www.microbiologybytes.com/virology/Mimivirus.html

15 Retrovirus Genetic information is single-stranded RNA. Have a special enzyme called reverse transcriptase. This enzyme makes DNA from RNA. Integrate their newly formed double- stranded DNA into the host cell. Example = HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus ( www.msu.edu)

16 “Junk DNA” Many retroviruses are responsible for “junk DNA” in our genome. Illustration by James Collins ( www.rps.psu.edu )

17 Sheep, Viruses, and Dr. Spencer

18 Bacteriophage A virus that infects bacteria. 2 types 1. Virulent Bacteriophage 2. Temperate Bacteriophage

19 Virulent Bacteriophage Causes Lytic Cycle (5 steps) 1. Attachment 2. Penetration 3. Biosynthesis 4. Assembly 5. Release textbookofbacteriology.net oceanworld.tamu.edu

20 Temperate Bacteriophage Do not immediately begin lytic cycle. Their DNA remains embedded in bacterial cell chromosome.

21 Animal Viruses Species specific. Attach to specific binding sites on cells. This affects what species and which cell type is infected. Multiplication of Animal Viruses (6 steps) – 1. Attachment – 2. Penetration – 3. Uncoating – 4. Biosynthesis – 5. Assembly – 6. Release www.heritageparkzoo.org

22 Budding A transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image of influenza viruses budding from the surface of an infected cell. (CNRI/Science Photo Library, National Audubon Society Collection/Photo Researchers, Inc.)

23 Antiviral Agents Interfere with the phases of viral multiplication. May disrupt a binding site. May disrupt an enzyme or protein. May interfere with the synthesis of viral parts like DNA, RNA, or protein synthesis.

24 Oncogenic Viruses Viruses that cause cancer. Ex. Human papillomaviruses (HPV – wart viruses) cause different types of cancers. – i.e. cervical cancer and other types of cancers of the genital tract. Kaposi Sarcoma – caused by human herpesvirus 8. www.hyle.org

25 Plant Viruses Maize chlorotic mottle virus (MCMV) nu-distance.unl.edu

26 Viroids and Prions

27 Viroids Consist of short, fragments of single- stranded RNA. Only found in plants (so far). Can interfere with plant’s metabolism, resulting in the plant being stunted or killed. Ex. Potato spindle tuber Left: normal potatoes; Right – infected potatoes www.unece.org

28 Proteins Left = unfolded protein; Right = folded protein

29 Prions Left = correct protein folding; Right = wrong protein folding www.cogs.susx.ac.uk

30 Prions Small infectious proteins. Cause fatal neurologic diseases in animals. Cause fatal spongiform encephalopathies. – Brain becomes riddled with holes. Brain with spongiform encephalopathy webs.wichita.edu

31 Prion Animal Infections Sheep infected with scrapie. ( www.gov.mb.ca) Deer infected with “chronic wasting disease.” ( http://www.fw.delaware.gov) Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, “mad cow disease.”

32 Prion Human Infections Kuru infected boy. Papua, New Guinea. pathology.mc.duke.edu Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. www.nlm.nih.gov Fatal familial insomnia

33 The End


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