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Viruses, Viroids, and Prions
Viral General Information
Viruses are unique infectious agents that differ fundamentally from cellular life forms. They are composed of genetic material encased in a protein shell and require host cells for replication.
Virus: A non-cellular infectious particle containing either DNA or RNA, enclosed in a protein capsid. Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites, meaning they can only replicate inside living host cells and are inert outside them.
Genome: The genetic material of a virus, which may be DNA or RNA, and can be single-stranded or double-stranded.
Capsid: The protein coat that surrounds and protects the viral genome. It is composed of subunits called capsomeres.
Host Range: The spectrum of host cells a virus can infect. This range is usually limited to specific species or cell types.
Bacteriophages: Viruses that specifically infect bacteria.
Transmission: The process by which viruses spread to and infect new hosts.
Tissue Tropism: The specificity of a virus for particular host tissues or cell types.
Uncoating: The process by which the viral genome is released from the capsid inside the host cell.
Key Concepts in Viral Biology
Viruses typically have a limited host range due to specific interactions with host cell receptors.
Viral reproduction involves several steps: attachment to the host cell, entry, hijacking of host cellular machinery, assembly of new virions, and exit from the host cell.
A virus refers to the intracellular form, while a virion is the complete, infectious extracellular particle.
The Capsid and Envelope
The structure of viruses includes a protein shell and, in some cases, a lipid envelope derived from the host cell.
Capsomeres: Protein subunits that make up the capsid.
Viral Envelope: A lipid membrane surrounding some viruses, derived from the host cell membrane during viral exit.
Spike Proteins: Glycoproteins embedded in the envelope that facilitate attachment to host cells.
Viral Classification
Viruses are classified based on genetic material, structure, and host range.
Viral Species: A group of viruses sharing genetic information and host range.
Viruses are often named using descriptive common names.
Subspecies: Designated by numbers (e.g., HIV-1).
Viroids and Prions
Viroids and prions are infectious agents distinct from viruses, lacking typical viral structures.
Viroids: Infectious RNA molecules without a protein capsid, primarily infecting plants.
Prions: Infectious misfolded proteins that cause neurodegenerative diseases.
PrPc: The normal, cellular form of the prion protein.
PrPsc: The abnormal, infectious form of the prion protein.
Prions cause protein aggregation and neural damage (e.g., Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease).
Capsid Structures
Viruses exhibit diverse capsid morphologies, which influence their classification and infection mechanisms.
Helical: Rod-shaped capsid structure.
Icosahedral: 20-sided, symmetrical structure.
Polyhedral: Many-sided structure.
Enveloped: Surrounded by a lipid membrane.
Complex: More intricate structures, such as those found in bacteriophages.
Viral Replication
Viruses replicate through distinct cycles, often visualized and quantified in laboratory settings.
Plaque Method: A technique to visualize and quantify viruses by the formation of clear zones (plaques) on a cell layer.
Plaques: Clear zones indicating cell lysis due to viral infection.
PFU (Plaque-Forming Units): A measure of viral quantity based on the number of plaques formed.
Lytic Cycle
Attachment: Virus binds to specific receptors on the host cell surface.
Entry: Viral genome enters the host cell.
Synthesis: Host machinery is hijacked to produce viral components.
Assembly: New virions are assembled from synthesized components.
Lysis: Host cell bursts, releasing new virions.
Lysogenic Cycle
Integration: Viral genome integrates into the host genome.
Dormancy: Viral genome remains latent within the host.
Replication: Host cell replicates, copying the viral genome.
Induction: Environmental triggers cause the virus to enter the lytic cycle.
Examples of Important Viruses
HPV (Human Papillomavirus): Icosahedral, non-enveloped, double-stranded DNA virus; replicates in the nucleus.
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus): Causes AIDS, infects T cells, uses reverse transcriptase to convert RNA to DNA, integrates as a provirus, and buds from host cells.
Influenza A: Enveloped virus with segmented RNA genome. Hemagglutinin (HA) mediates attachment; neuraminidase (NA) facilitates release. The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic caused massive mortality.
Summary Table: Virus Types and Features
Virus | Genome Type | Capsid Structure | Envelope | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
HPV | dsDNA | Icosahedral | No | Nuclear replication |
HIV | ssRNA (2 copies) | Icosahedral | Yes | Reverse transcriptase, provirus integration |
Influenza A | Segmented ssRNA | Helical | Yes | HA and NA proteins, antigenic shift/drift |
Additional info: The table above summarizes key structural and genetic features of representative viruses discussed in this chapter.