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Foundations in Microbiology
          Fifth Edition

                                        Talaro
                                     Chapter
                                       6

    Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
An Introduction to the Viruses
            Chapter 6            2
3
Size of viruses




                  4
Naming viruses
• No taxa above Family (no kingdom,
  phylum, etc)
• 19 families of animal viruses
• Family name ends in -viridae ,
  Herpesviridae
• Genus name ends in -virus, Simplexvirus
• Herpes simplex virus I (HSV-I)
•   Family – Herpesviridae
•   Genus – Varicellovirus
•   Common name – chickenpox virus
•   Disease - chickenpox




                                     6
capsids
• All viruses have capsids- protein coats that
  enclose & protect their nucleic acid
• Each capsid is constructed from identical
  subunits called capsomers made of protein
• 2 types:
  – helical
  – iscosahedral


                                                 7
helical
          8
icosahedral
              9
icosahedral
      • 20-sided with 12 corners
      • Vary in the number of
        capsomers
      • Each capsomer may be
        made of 1 or several
        proteins
      • Some are enveloped


                            10
complex




          Fig 6.9a,c
6 steps in phage replication
s adsorption – binding of virus to specific
  molecule on host cell
s penetration –genome enters host cell
s replication – viral components produced
s assembly - viral components assembled
s maturation – completion of viral formation
s release – viruses leave cell to infect other cells
Fig 6.11 13
penetration




              14
Bacteriophage assembly line




                              15
• Not all bacteriophages lyse cells
• Temperate phages insert their viral DNA
  into the host chromosome & viral
  replication stops at there until some later
  time.
• Lysogeny- bacterial chromosome carries
  phage DNA




                                                16
Host range
• Spectrum of cells a virus can infect
  – cell has to have a specific structure (receptor) on its
    surface for viral attachment
  – cell has to contain all of the enzymes and materials
    needed to produce new virions
• May be one species or many
  – HIV (only humans) vs rabies (many animals)
• May be one tissue or many within a host
  – Hepatitis (liver) vs polio (intestinal & nerve cells)
                                                        17
Differences between phage and
     animal virus replication

2. Animal virus replication is more complex
   than phage replication because host cells
   are more complex.
3. Animal viruses cannot inject their DNA.
4. Lysogeny for phage, latency for animal
   viruses
                                           18
Animal virus replication
1.   adsorption
2.   penetration/uncoating of genome
3.   duplication/synthesis
4.   assembly
5.   release



                                       19
20
adsorption




             21
penetration




              22
Release by budding




                     23
Cytopathic effects- virus-induced
        damage to cells
1.   changes in size & shape
2.   cytoplasmic inclusion bodies
3.   nuclear inclusion bodies
4.   cells fuse to form multinucleated cells
5.   cell lysis
6.   alter DNA
7.   transform cells into cancerous cells
                                               24
Cytopathic changes in cells




                              25
How do we grow viruses?

   Obligate intracellular parasites
require appropriate cells to replicate.
Growing animal viruses
1. live animals
2. bird embryos – chicken, duck; intact, self-
   supporting unit, sterile, self-nourished
3. cell culture




                                             27
28
29
Other noncellular infectious agents
•   prions - misfolded proteins, contain no nucleic acid
    –   cause spongiform encephalopathies – holes in the brain
    –   common in animals
        •   scrapie in sheep & goats
        •   bovine spongiform encephalopathies (BSE), aka mad cow disease
        •   humans – Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
•   viroids - short pieces of RNA, no protein coat
    –   only been identified in plants, so far



                                                                    30
Diagnosis of viral diseases
• More difficult than other agents
• Consider overall clinical picture
• Take appropriate sample
  – Infect cell culture- look for characteristic
    cytopathic effects
  – Screen for parts of the virus
  – Screen for immune response to virus
    (antibodies)

                                                   31
diagnosis




            32

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An introduction to the viruses

  • 1. PowerPoint to accompany Foundations in Microbiology Fifth Edition Talaro Chapter 6 Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
  • 2. An Introduction to the Viruses Chapter 6 2
  • 3. 3
  • 5. Naming viruses • No taxa above Family (no kingdom, phylum, etc) • 19 families of animal viruses • Family name ends in -viridae , Herpesviridae • Genus name ends in -virus, Simplexvirus • Herpes simplex virus I (HSV-I)
  • 6. Family – Herpesviridae • Genus – Varicellovirus • Common name – chickenpox virus • Disease - chickenpox 6
  • 7. capsids • All viruses have capsids- protein coats that enclose & protect their nucleic acid • Each capsid is constructed from identical subunits called capsomers made of protein • 2 types: – helical – iscosahedral 7
  • 10. icosahedral • 20-sided with 12 corners • Vary in the number of capsomers • Each capsomer may be made of 1 or several proteins • Some are enveloped 10
  • 11. complex Fig 6.9a,c
  • 12. 6 steps in phage replication s adsorption – binding of virus to specific molecule on host cell s penetration –genome enters host cell s replication – viral components produced s assembly - viral components assembled s maturation – completion of viral formation s release – viruses leave cell to infect other cells
  • 16. • Not all bacteriophages lyse cells • Temperate phages insert their viral DNA into the host chromosome & viral replication stops at there until some later time. • Lysogeny- bacterial chromosome carries phage DNA 16
  • 17. Host range • Spectrum of cells a virus can infect – cell has to have a specific structure (receptor) on its surface for viral attachment – cell has to contain all of the enzymes and materials needed to produce new virions • May be one species or many – HIV (only humans) vs rabies (many animals) • May be one tissue or many within a host – Hepatitis (liver) vs polio (intestinal & nerve cells) 17
  • 18. Differences between phage and animal virus replication 2. Animal virus replication is more complex than phage replication because host cells are more complex. 3. Animal viruses cannot inject their DNA. 4. Lysogeny for phage, latency for animal viruses 18
  • 19. Animal virus replication 1. adsorption 2. penetration/uncoating of genome 3. duplication/synthesis 4. assembly 5. release 19
  • 20. 20
  • 24. Cytopathic effects- virus-induced damage to cells 1. changes in size & shape 2. cytoplasmic inclusion bodies 3. nuclear inclusion bodies 4. cells fuse to form multinucleated cells 5. cell lysis 6. alter DNA 7. transform cells into cancerous cells 24
  • 26. How do we grow viruses? Obligate intracellular parasites require appropriate cells to replicate.
  • 27. Growing animal viruses 1. live animals 2. bird embryos – chicken, duck; intact, self- supporting unit, sterile, self-nourished 3. cell culture 27
  • 28. 28
  • 29. 29
  • 30. Other noncellular infectious agents • prions - misfolded proteins, contain no nucleic acid – cause spongiform encephalopathies – holes in the brain – common in animals • scrapie in sheep & goats • bovine spongiform encephalopathies (BSE), aka mad cow disease • humans – Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease • viroids - short pieces of RNA, no protein coat – only been identified in plants, so far 30
  • 31. Diagnosis of viral diseases • More difficult than other agents • Consider overall clinical picture • Take appropriate sample – Infect cell culture- look for characteristic cytopathic effects – Screen for parts of the virus – Screen for immune response to virus (antibodies) 31
  • 32. diagnosis 32