infection and disease lecture 4 viruses –part i. what are viruses ?

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Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I

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Page 1: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Infection and disease Lecture 4

Viruses –part I

Page 2: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

What are Viruses ?

Page 3: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viruses

• Obligate intracellular parasites

• Nucleic acid genome: DNA or RNA

• Protein coat: Protection, entry

• Envelope (some viruses): host / viral; lipids/glycoproteins; entry

• Size: 20-350nm3

Page 4: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Size of viruses

Page 5: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

How are viruses different from bacteria ?

Page 6: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viruses

• DNA / RNA in a protein coat

• Do not have protein synthesis apparatus

• Require host cells to replicate

• Smaller in size

Page 7: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Are viruses living things ?

• Do not breathe

• Do not move

• Able to replicate

• ? Living things

Page 8: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viruses cannot be seen using a light microscope

Page 9: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Classification of viruses

• No taxa above Family (no order, class, phylum, kingdom etc)

• Genus / species name ends in –virus

- binomial nomenclature is not yet adopted for viruses

Page 10: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Example

• Genus – Varicella zoster virus• Common name – chickenpox virus• Disease – chickenpox

Page 11: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Baltimore classification

Page 12: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Virus structure

Page 13: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viral structure – basics

• protein which coats the genome = capsid

• capsid usually symmetrical

• capsid + genome = nucleocapsid

• may have an envelope

Page 14: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viral Proteins

Page 15: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viral proteins• Structural – protect viral genome and

help in attachment. Eg. Capsid

• Non-structural – essential for initiation of replicative cycle. Eg. reverse trasncriptase, Proteases

• Virus envelope – contains glycoproteins and lipids

• Peplomers = glycoprotein spikes

Page 16: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Virus envelope

Page 17: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Virus envelope

• Contain lipids and glycoproteins

• Lipids – cellular membranes derived (through budding)

• Glycoprotein- virus encoded

• Role in attachment to host cell

• Loss of envelope = loss of infectivity

Page 18: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Envelope

Page 19: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Viral nucleic acids

Page 20: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Virus nucleic acids

• DNA genomes- 3 Kb to 375 Kb

• RNA genomes – 7Kb to 30 Kb

• Viral nucleic acids – linear , circular, segmented (RNA only).

Page 21: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Nucleocapsid

• Nucleic acid + protein coat

• Structural unit of the protein coat (capsid) is the capsomer.

Page 22: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Symmetry of nucleocapsid

• Icosahedral

• Helical

Page 24: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Icosahedral symmetry

• 20 faces / facets (triangles)• 12 vertices

Page 25: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

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Sides consist of hexons

Sides consist of pentons

Page 26: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Helical symmetry

• Viral protein subunits are bound to the viral nucleic acids in a periodic way

Page 27: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Steps in viral replication

Page 28: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Steps in virus replication

• Attachment

Penetration

Uncoating /disassembly

Synthesis of virus nucleic acids and proteins

Assembly

Release of virions

Page 29: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Virus replication – some interesting facts

• Average generation time – 6 to 40 hours

• Number of virions / infected cell– 100 to 100,000

• Much more than doubling - dramatic exponential growth !

100 – 100,000 viruses/cell, 6 – 40 hours

Page 30: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Poliovirus

Page 31: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Poliovirus pathogenesis

• Virus begins to multiply in the tissues around the oropharynx /tonsils.

• Enteroviruses are stable in acid in the stomach

• They pass to the intestines, where they replicate

• The virus begins to spill into the Blood.

Page 32: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Outcomes of poliovirus infection

There are 3 possible outcomes of infection:• Subclinical infection (90 - 95%) - inapparent subclinical

infection account for the vast majority of poliovirus infections.

• Abortive infection (4 - 8%) - a minor influenza-like illness occurs, recovery occurs within a few days

• Major illness (1 - 2%) - involves neuron damage in the CNS (central nervous system)

Page 33: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Poliovirus major illness

• Spinal form: Paralytic disease may begin with excruciating pain or spasms which may precede paralysis of the extremities.

• Bulbar form: An especially serious form is bulbar polio as it involves respiratory center in the medulla (Brain).

Page 34: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Poliomyelitis:

Iron lung machines

Page 36: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Influenza virus

Page 37: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Influenza virus

• 8 RNA segments

• Haemagglutinin – ability to bind to respiratory epithelial cell

• NA- increases disease severity

• Antibodies against HA /NA – protect /reduce severity of disease

Page 38: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

38

NORMAL TRACHEAL MUCOSA

3 DAYS POST-INFECTION 7 DAYS POST-INFECTION

Lycke and Norrby Textbook of Medical Virology 1983Ramphal et al., INFECTION AND IMMUNITY 1979 25:992-997 (mouse)

Normal tracheal mucosa

3 days post infection 7 days post infection

Page 39: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

39

Where do “new” HA and NA come from?

• ~15 types HA• ~9 types NA• all circulate in birds• Humans HA1-3; HA5. • Humans NA1 and NA2.

• pigs• can be infected by

avian and human influenza viruses

Page 40: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

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Pigs can act as host for generation of human-avian reassortments

Influenza replicates in the digestive tract of pigs and is shed in faeces

Page 41: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Reassortment in influenza virus

H1N1

H2N2

H1N2

H1

H2

N2

N1

H1N2

Page 42: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Generation of pandemic influenza strains

Genetic reassortment – new HA and NA configuration- entire human population is susceptible

Page 43: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?
Page 44: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Infection and diseaselecture 5

RotavirusRabiesEbolaVZVHIV

Viruses and cancerEmerging infections

Page 45: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rota virus

Page 46: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rotaviruses - a major public health issue

• Gastroenteritis (diarrhea)

• > 500 million infections /year

• >1.5 million deaths – mostly Asia / Africa

• Targets enterocytes lining the villi

Enterocytes

Page 47: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rotavirus –the disease

• Enterocytes lining the tips of intestinal villi are

affected

• Villous atrophy, death of Enterocytes

• Enterocyte dysfucntion – net secretion of intestinal

fluid – causes diarrhoea

• Role of NSP4 (non-structural protein) as an

enterotoxin – stimulates secretory pathway NSP4 is an enterotoxin

Page 48: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rotavirus – transmission

• Mainly person to person via fecal-oral route

• Food and water-borne spread; Fomites

• Large amounts of viral particles are shed in diarrheal stools (1012 particles)

• Infective dose is small – as little 100 particles (virus shedding 2 weeks).

Page 49: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rabies virus

Page 50: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Transmission

• Usual route –dog bite

• Rare – aerosol inhalation in caves (bats)

Page 51: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rabies – how does it cause disease ?

51Murray et al., Medical Microbiology

Note: no viremia

Page 52: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Rabies – the disease

• Disease occurs after 2-8 weeks (virus travels 6 inches in CNS /day)

- mental status varies: severe agitation / depression

- hydrophobia (most patients)

- spasms of larynx and pharynx – may spit excessive saliva

- death often due to respiratory paralysis

- dogs can bite without provocation

Page 53: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

What should you do if a dog bites you?

• Wound – soap / water / no sutures/

• Vaccine

• HRIG – human Rabies Immunoglobulin – at site

• HRIG - injection

Page 54: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Ebola virus

Page 55: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Reservoir of Ebola virus

Page 56: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Ebola virus pathogenesis

• Human-to-human transmission – blood, body fluids , aerosol.

• Ebola attacks connective tissue

• it digests collagen, the protein that holds the organs together.

• The Ebola proteins chew up the body's structural proteins

• In this way, collagen in the body turns to mush, tissues die and liquefy

• 

Page 57: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Ebola –The disease

• Tremors /seizures

• Blood smearing all over the place

• Transmission to new host.

• The Ebola virus is transmitted by direct contact with the blood, secretions and possibly aerosol.

Page 58: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Ebola virus - control• Upto 90% case fatality

• Isolation of individuals

• Awareness

• Travel restrictions

• Protection of heathcare workers

• No vaccine

Page 59: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Varicella zoster virus

(chicken pox)

Page 60: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Pathogenesis - varicella

Respiratory route

• Replicates in the regional lymphnodes

• Replicates in liver

• viraemia – skin , salivary glands are seeded

• From skin to neurons in the spinal cord (Latent)

Page 61: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Zoster (Shingles)

Reactivation of latent virus –several years after primary infection

Page 62: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Zoster (Shingles)

Page 63: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Zoster (Shingles)

• Reactivation of latent VZV

• Similar vesicular lesions

• Often involves skin supplied by the infected part of the spinal nerves

• Occurs in >10% of individuals with a history of varicella infections; often in IC

hosts

• Usually @ > 50 years

• Trigger ?

Page 64: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

HIV (Human immunodeficiency virus)

• Transmission – blood / sexual / vertical

• HIV infects CD4+ T lymphocytes and macrophages

• Minor illness following infection

• HIV continues to replicate – but the immune system to keep the virus to low levels for several years. HIV infected T-lymphocyte

Page 65: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Progression from HIV infection to AIDS

• After about 5-15 years the body is not able to replace the lost CD4+ cells

• Virus loads increase and CD4+ cells decrease (AIDS – Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome)

• The individual succumbs to opportunistic infection

Page 66: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

HIV: Opportunistic infection

• Account for disease and death in AIDS patientsEg.• Fungi: candida species• Bacteria: mycobacterium avium-intracellulare• Viruses: cytomegalovirus

Death in about 1-2 years

Page 67: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Tumour viruses

Page 68: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

History

Page 69: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

History

• 1966 – Nobel for Rous

• 1980s – HBV, HPV

• About > 25% of all cancers are virus-related

Page 70: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Cancer

• Production of new cells death of old cells

• Cancer – unchecked growth of cells

• Transformation of a normal cell to cancer cell may take several years

• Clonal expansion of cancer cells

Page 71: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Tumour viruses

• Both DNA / RNA viruses

• Persistent infection

• No single mechanisms is common to virus-induced oncogenesis

• Virus proteins may interfere with the functioning of host proteins

• Virus may /may not be actively replicating

• “Hit and run” – no virus in virus induced cancer tissue

• “Innocent bystander” – virus in cancer tissue; but has nothing to do with the cancer

Page 72: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Human papilloma viruses (HPVs)

• Infect epithelial cells of skin

• Common warts

• HPV genital infections - STD

• 99% of cervical cancer cases

• Anal cancer

Page 73: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Hepatitis B virus / hepatitis C virus

• Chronic infection of the liver

• Major cause of liver cancer

Page 74: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseasesEmerging infectious disease: Newly identified & previously unknown mirobe that causes major problems

Re-emerging infectious disease: Infectious agents that have been known for some time, had fallen to very low levels that they were no longer considered a major problem & but increasing numbers are now being reported

Page 75: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Factors leading to emergence / re-emergence of infections

• Drug resistance (eg. TB- re-emergence)

• Evolution of the microbe (eg. HIV from SIV)

• Displacement of animals

• Humans populating areas close to animals

• International travel

Page 76: Infection and disease Lecture 4 Viruses –part I. What are Viruses ?

Examples of emerging infectious diseases• HCV – described in 1990; 2% of the

world’s population is infected

• Subacute respiratory syndrome (SARS) -2003

• Middle eastern respiratory syndrome –corona virus – 21 countries in 3 years