Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Viruses Chapter 19 HIV virus Ebola virus H1N1 flu virus T4 bacteriophage Smallpox virus.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Viruses Chapter 19 HIV virus Ebola virus H1N1 flu virus T4 bacteriophage Smallpox virus."— Presentation transcript:

1 Viruses Chapter 19 HIV virus Ebola virus H1N1 flu virus T4 bacteriophage Smallpox virus

2  Virus: an infectious particle consisting of little more than gene packaged in a protein coat.  Why are they important?  Basic molecular biology concepts were discovered using viruses.  DNA and mRNA  Translation and transcription  Enhancers  Viruses can be used as experimental systems.  The study of viruses has led to the development of techniques that enable scientists to manipulate genes and transfer them from one organism to another (gene therapy).  Biological control (population control).  Studying viruses helps scientists understand how viruses cause disease. A Borrowed Life

3  Polio  HIV (Retroviridae)  Influenza/Avian flu (Orthomyoviridae)  Ebola (Filoviridae)  West Nile (Flaviviridae)  Hepatitis (several families)  Herpes (Herpesviridae)  HPV (Papillomaviridae)  SARS (Coronaviridae)  Smallpox (Poxviridae)  Common Cold Diseases Caused by Viruses

4  In 1883, Adolf Mayer discovered that he could transmit tobacco mosaic disease from plant to plant by rubbing sap from diseased leaves onto healthy leaves.  Suggested caused by small bacteria that were invisible under a microscope.  In 1892, Dmitri Iwanowsky passed infected sap through a filter designed to remove bacteria. Sap still caused disease.  Iwanowsky still clung to the idea that bacteria caused the disease. Discovery of Viruses… Using tobacco mosaic disease (stunts growth and gives leaves a mosaic coloration)

5 In 1899, Martinus Beijerinck filtered infected sap through a porcelain filter known to trap bacteria; sap still caused disease. He also noted that the agent that caused disease could not be cultivated on a nutrient plate.  He had the courage to champion a new concept.  Called the agent Contagium vivum fluidum (contagious living fluid).

6 Beijerinck’s suspicions were confirmed in 1935 when the American scientist Wendell Stanley crystallized the infectious particle, now known as the tobacco mosaic virus.  Won the Noble Prize in 1946.  This data freaked scientists out; a chemical thing was behaving as if it was living.

7  Smallest viruses are 25nm in diameter.  Smaller than a ribosome.  Parvovirus  Largest viruses are 400 nm in diameter.  Barely visible under a light microscope.  Mimivirus Size of Viruses

8 Nucleocapsid (virion) Definition: viral genome and capsid Viral Genomes  Genetic Material  Double stranded DNA (dsDNA)  Single stranded DNA (ssDNA)  Double stranded RNA (dsRNA)  Single stranded RNA (ssRNA).  Genome is usually single linear or circular molecule of nucleic acid.  Genomes can consist of 3 to several hundred genes. Viral Capsids  The protein shell enclosing the viral genome is called a capsid.  Capsids are built from a large number of protein subunits called capsomers.  Shapes: helical (rod-shaped), icosahedral, complex.

9  Proteins arrange helically.  Allows equivalent bonds between proteins and nucleic acids.  Bonds are not strained.  Proteins have a groove to interact with the nucleic acid.  Example: Tobacco Mosaic Virus Helical Viruses

10  20 sided solid, in which each side is an equivalent triangle.  Most stable solid approaching a sphere.  Energetically stable shape.  Least distortion of protein subunits or bonds between proteins.  Example: Adenovirus (respiratory virus of animals). Icosahedral Virus

11  Combination of icosahedral and helical features.  Example: bacteriophage T4  Elongated icosahedral head.  Tail has helical symmetry. Complex Virus

12 Relevance of Virus Structure  Molecular nature of surface components.  Important for vaccine development.  Viruses initiate entry into the cell by attaching to receptors.  Nature of biomolecular interactions. What determines virus structure?  Protein-protein interactions.  Protein structure  protein sequence  viral gene  Protein-nucleic acid interaction. Hepatitis B Virus West Nile Virus


Download ppt "Viruses Chapter 19 HIV virus Ebola virus H1N1 flu virus T4 bacteriophage Smallpox virus."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google