Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Viruses Dead or alive?.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Viruses Dead or alive?."— Presentation transcript:

1 Viruses Dead or alive?

2 Viruses What are the parts of a virus? How does a virus replicate?
How do viruses benefit humans? How do viruses cause disease?

3 Viruses At the boundary of life, between the macromolecules (which are not alive) and the prokaryotic cells (which are), lie the viruses and bacteriophages (phages).

4 Viruses Viruses depend on the host cells that they infect to reproduce. When found outside of host cells, viruses exist as a protein coat or capsid, sometimes enclosed within a membrane. (In other words they are dormant until they infect a cell. )

5 Viral structure Viruses are not cells. Basic structure: Protein coat
Nucleic acid core (RNA or DNA) Lipoprotein coat (second coat – only in enveloped viruses)

6 Virus Categories DNA viruses – stable, do not mutate rapidly
Single-stranded or double-stranded Smallpox, Hepatitis B RNA viruses – mutate rapidly, unstable HIV, Rhinovirus HIV Virus

7 Bacteriophages attack bacteria (prokaryotes)
Typical phages have hollow heads (where the phage DNA or RNA is stored) tunnel tails, the tips of which have the ability to bind to specific molecules on the surface of their target bacteria.

8 Viruses Viruses are found everywhere.
Viruses are parasites responsible for causing many diseases in living things (herpes and HIV in humans, for example)

9 Lytic Cycle Virus attaches to host cell’s membrane and injects its nucleic acid into the host cell. The viral nucleic acid takes over protein synthesis, creating new viruses. The host cell bursts, lyses, releasing the newly formed viruses.

10 Before attachment Attachment Penetration and uncoating Release Assembly Replication

11 Lysogenic Cycle Begins the same way as the Lytic cycle
Does not immediately take over the host cell’s genetic material Instead – viral DNA is integrated (mixed) with the host cell’s chromosome Cell is now called a Provirus.

12

13 Provirus May not affect the functioning of the host cell
Every time host cell reproduces, so does the provirus – this can continue for many years Can activate at any time causing illness

14 Retrovirus Is the most complicated replication cycle RNA viruses
Through reverse transcriptase, the RNA virus will make DNA from RNA within the host cell This DNA is then integrated into the host cell’s DNA.

15 Common Viral Diseases Lysogenic Retrovirus
Herpes simplex 1, herpes simplex 2, hepatitis B, chicken pox Retrovirus HIV All other retroviruses are non-human affecting, although there is some debate

16 WORK… Complete the last diagram P.480 lab 18.1 problem solving P. 483 Q1-5


Download ppt "Viruses Dead or alive?."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google