Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Viruses Living a borrowed life

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Viruses Living a borrowed life"— Presentation transcript:

1 Viruses Living a borrowed life
Discovery Structure and properties Types of viruses Significance Origin of viruses Viral reproductive cycles Viruses Living a borrowed life

2 Discovery of the tobacco mosaic virus
Tobacco mosaic disease could be transferred between plants Adolf Mayer (1886) Pathogen is non-bacterial and can pass through fine filters Dmitri Ivanovsky (1892) Independently replicated Ivanovsky’s experiments Agent was able to reproduce and multiply in host cells of tobacco plants Coined term “virus” Martinus Beijerinck (1898) Discovery of the tobacco mosaic virus

3 Structure and properties of viruses
Small infectious agent that can only replicate inside the living cell of an organism Virus particles (virions) Protein coat/capsid formed from capsomeres Nucleic acid core (DNA/RNA) ~ genes Accessory structures* Lipid envelope – from membrane of the host cell Structure and properties of viruses TMV adenovirus influenza T4

4 Virus classification Genetic material Shape Size Presence of envelope
DNA (dsDNA, ssDNA) RNA (dsRNA, ssRNA) Linear/circular in form Shape Helical Icosahedral Enveloped viruses Complex Size Usually nm Some can reach up to 14µm Presence of envelope Usually present in animal viruses Host specificity Due to specific attachment sites in hosts called receptors May infect bacteria, archaea, protists, algae, plants, fungi, animals Type of reproductive cycle Lytic cycle Lysogenic cycle Retroviruses (RNA viruses) Virus classification

5 Types of animal viruses

6

7 Virus reproductive cycles
Enveloped Virus

8 LYTIC vs lysogenic cycles in dsdna bacteriophages/Animal viruses

9 examples LYTIC VIRUSES influenza rhinovirus (common cold)
LYSOGENIC VIRUSES herpes I and II some retroviruses MIXED STAGE VIRUSES

10 Virus RNA  mRNA  proteins
RNA virus replication Virus RNA  mRNA  proteins

11 RNA retrovirus replication Virus RNA  DNA  mRNA proteins
RNA retrovirus replication Virus RNA  DNA  mRNA proteins

12 HYpotheses on viral origins
Progressive theory Genetic material from cells escaped and mutated Regressive theory Evolved from bacteria that are obligate intracellular parasites Virus-First Hypothesis Evolved from the first RNA segments before the early cells Viroids – RNA sequences that infect plants

13 Bacterial transduction Phage-mediated DNA transfer

14 http://liquidbio. pbworks. com/w/page/11135299/f/SwineEvolution

15 SIGNIFICANCE OF VIRUSES
pathogens viral gene therapy phage typing of bacteria source of enzymes pesticides antibacterial and anticancer agents molecular biology breakthroughs genetics and evolution


Download ppt "Viruses Living a borrowed life"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google