| Viruses : Viruses More free powerpoints at http://www.worldofteaching.com
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| Is a Virus a Living Organism? : Is a Virus a Living Organism? Chapter 1 – Properties of life
Cellular Respiration
Reproduction
Metabolism
Homeostasis
Heredity
Responsiveness
Growth and development |
| Viruses are not living organisms : Viruses are not living organisms Viruses do not
Grow
Have homeostasis
Metabolize
Viruses do
Infect cells and use the cell to make more viruses
Cause disease in many organisms |
| Parts of a Virion (a virus particle) : Parts of a Virion (a virus particle) Nucleic Acid – RNA or DNA
Capsid – protein coat that surrounds the DNA or RNA in a virus
Lipid Membrane – a membrane around the capsid in many kinds of viruses; helps the virus enter cells (“enveloped” viruses; without the membrane, the virus is “naked”)
Made of proteins, lipids, and glycoproteins |
| RNA or DNA? : RNA or DNA? Viruses with RNA
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
Influenza viruses
Rabies
Viruses with DNA
Warts
Chickenpox
mononucleosis |
| Virus Shapes : Virus Shapes Helical
Rodlike with capsid proteins winding around the core in a spiral
Tobacco Mosaic Virus |
| Virus Shapes : Virus Shapes Polyhedral
Has many sides
Most polyhedral capsids have 20 sides and 12 corners |
| Virus Shapes : Virus Shapes Polyhedral capsid attached to a helical tail. |
| How do viruses replicate? : How do viruses replicate? 2 methods of replication:
1. Lytic Cycle – the virus enters the cell, replicates itself hundreds of times, and then bursts out of the cell, destroying it.
2. Lysogenic Cycle – the virus DNA integrates with the host DNA and the host’s cell helps create more virus DNA. An environmental change may cause the virus to enter the Lytic Cycle. |
| Slide10 : In the lytic cycle, the virus reproduces itself using the host cell's chemical machinery. The red spiral lines in the drawing indicate the virus's genetic material. The orange portion is the outer shell that protects it. |
| Slide11 : In the lysogenic cycle, the virus reproduces by first injecting its genetic material, indicated by the red line, into the host cell's genetic instructions. |
| Viruses Enter Living Cells : Viruses Enter Living Cells Viruses enter bacterial cells by punching a hole in the cells wall and injecting its DNA |
| Viruses Enter Living Cells : Viruses Enter Living Cells Viruses enter plant cells through tiny rips in the cell wall.
Viruses enter animal cells by endocytosis. |
| Mutating viruses : Mutating viruses Viruses can mutate when they copy the genetic material
Copy something wrong
Mistake proves useful
More powerful virus (more infectious)
Viruses don’t mutate often, except…
Influenza
HIV |
| Viruses are host cell specific. : Viruses are host cell specific. Most viruses are restricted to certain kinds of cells (those that infect plants cannot infect animal cells).
Why?
Scientists think that viruses originated from escaped genetic material from host cells. |
| Viruses can be beneficial… : Viruses can be beneficial… Bacteriophages – attack & destroy bacteria
Baculovirus – ebola-like virus that attacks insects
Could use for pest control in crops
Cabbage loopers eat
cabbage crops
Virus can kill pests in days
(it’s really gross)
… and then there are those that are not so good…. |
| The spread of West Nile virus (1999 – 2002) – bird, horse, mosquito or human : The spread of West Nile virus (1999 – 2002) – bird, horse, mosquito or human |
| Also important… : Also important… Any agent (not just viruses) that causes disease is a pathogen.
When a virus inserts its genetic material into a host’s DNA, it is called a provirus.
Some viruses replicate very slowly and only cause damage when the conditions are “right”. (cold sores) |
| Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)Acquired Immuno Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) : Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Acquired Immuno Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) |
| Basic Structure : Basic Structure Viral envelope – lipid bilayer; glycoproteins protrude from surface
Glycoproteins enable virus to recognize surface proteins of special immune cells and to enter the cell (like a key to the cell’s door)
2 strands RNA – only 9 genes; 3 are found in many viruses (structural proteins)
Reverse Transcriptase – turns RNA into DNA (this makes HIV a retrovirus); DNA instructs cell to make more viruses |
| HIV Making Factories : Virus enters cell through endocytosis
Virus replicates RNA to DNA with reverse transcriptase
HIV Making Factories |
| Slide24 : DNA enters nucleus & binds with host DNA
New virions exit cell through exocytosis to infect other cells (notice cell isn’t destroyed) mRNA is created (carries instructions for making new viral proteins) and leaves nucleus
Uses host cell’s enzymes to make new viruses |
| How Is HIV Spread? : How Is HIV Spread? Sexual contact
Sharing contaminated needles
Blood transfusions
Breast feeding (mother to baby)
Mother to baby during pregnancy or birth
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| Think about it… : Think about it… In the US, there is better than a 1/1000 chance of contracting HIV during unprotected sex
A person can be contagious for more than 10 years before any sign of the disease is apparent
HIV becomes AIDS when the number of immune cells drops below a predetermined number
No one dies from HIV or AIDS; people die from secondary infections (ranging from the common cold to cancer)
More than 3 million people (size of Chicago) die each year
There are approx. 14,000 new cases of HIV worldwide every day |