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Viruses  What are they? and  What are they good for? (ebiomedia.com) (conference.eicar.org)

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Presentation on theme: "Viruses  What are they? and  What are they good for? (ebiomedia.com) (conference.eicar.org)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Viruses  What are they? and  What are they good for? (ebiomedia.com) (conference.eicar.org)

2 Structure of a virion RNA or DNA Protien capsid Icosahedral structure (www.underdog.be) Nucleo- capsid (www.internet-kompetenz.ch) Lipid bilayer Membrane protien

3 Life Cycle of a Virus Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

4  Membrane or capsid proteins bond to cell receptors Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

5  Permeation or  Injection of the genome or  Naked capsid swalllowed by the cell membrane or  Envelope integrated into cell membrane or  …. Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

6  Capsid breaks  Genome and enzymes released. Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

7  Viral genome replicated  Host cell mechanisms  Carry-along mechanisms  Protiens synthesized (Inhibition, Structure, Replication)  Host cell mechanisms Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

8 Virion assembled  In the cytoplasm  In the nucleus  At the cell membrane Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

9 Release of new viruses  Cell ruptures  Cell dies and membrane disolves  Virus ”buds” from the membrane Attachment Penetration Uncoating Replication & Expression Assembly Release

10 Example: Life cycle of a retrovirus Redisplayed without permission from W.H. Freeman publishing, www.whfreeman.com

11 Viruses helps research into…  DNA replication  mRNA synthesis, translation and regulation  DNA replication  Polyproteins  Intracellular transport  Membrane formation  Cell transformation And of course…  Gene therapy and cloning (vectors)

12 The Central Dogma Baltimore and Temin: ”How can retroviruses cause cancer?” DNA RNAProteins

13 Baltimore & Temin Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology 1975  Retrovirus replication: ”Reverse transcriptase” Viral RNA → DNA Viral RNA → DNA Photos reproduced without kind permission from www.nobel.se DNA RNAProteins The Central Dogma

14 Gene therapy  A ”viral vector” inserts genome into cells with defective genes.  Random integration  Swapping  Repairing  Regulation  Potential to treat deseases such as Cystic Fibrosis, Parkinsons, Alzheimers and cancers.

15 Gene Therapy Problems  Effects last for only 2-3 weeks  Immune response  Damages of random integration  Multigene disorders  Hard to produce viruses

16 Gene Therapy Research under way  Viruses that insert there genome at a specific location  A 47th chromosome  Vesicles carrying DNA


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