virology exam 3
retroviruses (family Retroviridae) such as HIV-1 are spherical w/ distinctive nucleocapsid and matrix layers inside an envelope with prominent spikes
(+) RNA has all the typical features of eukaryotic mRNA: 5' methylated cap and 3' poly-A tail; genomes have long 5' and 3' UTR
still working on universal IAV vaccine, problems isolating one part
(ex. HA spike stalk promising, but have problems w/ stalk's head)
eukaryotic cell cycle
**4 stages: M, G1, S, and G2; progression thru the cell cycle is controlled by 3 checkpoints where cells can exit the cell cycle and undergo apoptosis; differentiated cells are in G0, which branches off from G1; some cells in G0 can be stimulated by growth factors to re-enter G1 and begin cycling
overlapping coding sequences commonly used by viruses to encode less abundant proteins w/ regulatory or enzymatic functions
**HIV accessory proteins have low abundance compared w/ polyproteins
expression of immediate-early, early, and late proteins = linked to layer of epithelium occupied by infected host cell (as cell moves thru layers)
**HPV gene expression and genome replication are tied closely to the differentiation status of the host cells in a stratified epithelium
typical sites of assembly in eukaryotic viruses = cytoplasm, plasma membrane, nucleus
**different viruses assemble at various different subcellular locations
antigenic proteins of flu A virus
**hemagglutinin (HA) & neuraminidase (NA)
if DNA damage = normal, uninfected cells exit cell cycle and undergo apoptosis
**key protein regulator of apoptosis in response to DNA damage = p53; stress caused when a virus forces a cell into S phase resembles DNA damage stress-- can trigger the p53 system (both DNA damage and viral infections activate p53)
most recent innovation w/ phages treating bacterial infections = use of enzymes produced by phages as drugs (not entire phage), e.g.
**lysins = enzymes that degrade peptidoglycan; useful in killing gram-positive bacteria
early transcription proceeds unidirectionally, terminating approx. halfway around the circular genome
**major mechanism by which SV40 encodes so many different proteins w/ small amount of DNA = alternative splicing (3 different mature early mRNAs that encode either small t antigen, large T antigen, or the 17-kt protein)
large T antigen interacts with:
**pRB, preveting pRB from interacting with E2F transcription factors and thus derepressing S phase genes; **interacts with p53, which prevents p53 from stimulating apoptosis
virus budding = capsid (in the cytoplasm) remains interior to the membranous structure that buds away
**when a virus buds, the exterior surface of plasma membrane remains exterior, the interior contents of the budding virus, which are contiguous w/ the cytoplasm, remain on the interior of the cell
whole genome replication involves host Pol II transcribing entire viral genome into single (not spliced) mRNA in nucleus-
-cytoplasm--encapsulated for new virions
misincorporation is responsible for much more genetic change than physical & chemical assaults, but UV light still important source of mutation
1. UV light causes formation of covalent bonds between atoms of adjacent pyrimidines (bases t, c, & u); 2. disrupts normal hydrogen bonding between strands of DNA & replication of DNA or RNA; 3. same issues w/ human DNA & sunlight
retroviral integrase inserts the viral cDNA into a chromosome, forming proviral DNA that can be transcribed by host Pol II
1. after the reverse transcriptase reactions, HIV cDNA is in complex w/ virus & host proteins called preintegration complex
virology unites the biosphere
1. all cells evolved awash in viruses and subviral entities; 2. viruses are actually central component of biosphere; 3. discipline of virology reveals the fundamental connectedness of all nucleic acid-base life
antiviral drugs target proteins unique to viruses & essential for their replication cycle
1. antiviral drugs bind to and inhibit viral proteins in infected cells; 2. ideal situation = antiviral drug does not bind to any normal human proteins- in practice this goal is rarely achieved; 3. good antiviral drug binds to target virus protein more tightly than it binds to human proteins-- at levels of drug in body, most of drug binds to viral proteins; 4. viral proteins that play essential role at any point during replication are particularly good possible targets b/c inhibiting them slows viral replication
viral evolution occurs in response to selective pressure from antiviral drugs
1. antiviral drugs exert strong selective pressure on viruses-- result in emergence of viruses resistant to drug used to treat them; 2. resistant viruses usually have genetic variations--alter the amino acids that would otherwise be involved w/ target protein & drug
attenuated vaccines = highly immunogenic b/c they can still replicate
1. are 3 different types of vaccines: attenuated, inactivated, and subunit (most to least immunogenic)
inactivated vaccines = composed of nonreplicating virions
1. are safer than attenuated b/c virus in vaccine treated so unable to replicate; 2. inactivate virus by physical assaults (heat, radiation) or chemical treatment; 3. e.g. poliovirus treated w/ formaldehyde-- forges covalent bonds between capsomeres-- prevents virus from uncoating; 4. inactivated vaccine provides immune system w/ foreign antigens that can provoke specific response against the virus
medically dangerous emerging viruses are zoonotic
1. as human population increases--spread into new landscapes--puts humans in contact w/ many wild (undomesticated) animal viruses, some of which can jump species barrier; 2. in addition, human expansion also = contact between pets and domesticated farm animals w/ many wild animal viruses; 3. zoonotic diseases = typically reproduce in nonhuman animal (usually vertebrate) but can be transmitted to humans
eukaryotic virus assembly must take cellular protein localization into account
1. b/c eukaryotic viruses assemble at different subcellular locations, protein localization is very important aspect of viral biology; 2. synthesis and trafficking of cytoplasmic proteins, nuclear proteins, & transmembrane (across membranes) proteins are very important; 3. cytoplasm of a eukaryotic cell is very crowded and diffusion is much slower than in water; 4. diffusion is too slow for period of time needed for the completion of replication cycle; 5. therefore, viruses rely on the cytoskeleton (including microtubules) and motor proteins; 6. pharmaceuticals or other treatments that disrupt microtubules or microtubule-dependent motors interfere w/ viral assembly
dna viruses can cause productive lytic infections, cellular transformation, or latent infections
1. baltimore class I viruses 2. infection by most groups of dsDNA viruses can result in 3 distinct outcomes: a. lytic infection (productive infection) b. cellular transformation (host cell begins to be transformed into a cancer cell; cell becomes less responsive to physiological cues meant to regulate cell growth, differentiation, and death; can be dead end for virus, if no progeny virions produced) c. latent infection
repeated elements in any promoter region usually sites for protein binding
1. bind to ubiquitous host transcription factors such as SP1-- binds to the GC-rich sequences in 21-bp repeat; 2. 72-bp repeat functions as binding site for host proteins that enhance transcription
eukaryotic capping, splicing, and polyadenylation occur co-transcriptionally
1. during transcription elongation, Pol II is in a complex w/ capping, splicing, & polyadenylation enzymes 2. eukaryotic primary transcripts contain introns that must be spliced out for mRNA to encode protein-- splicing occurs at same time as transcription
**only enveloped viruses use budding
1. enveloped viruses exit host cell by pinching off; 2. host cell may remain alive for time until energetic costs of viral replication take their toll & cell dies despite not being lysed
viruses acquire envelopes thru one of two pathways:
1. enveloped viruses have more complex assembly than naked viruses for 2 reasons: a. they express both soluble cytoplasmic proteins and transmembrane proteins, which are translated at different sites, but must come together; b. they acquire their membranous envelope at a site distinct from either the nucleus or the cytoplasm, where new genomes accumulate
eukaryotic transcription is affected by the state of the chromatin
1. eukaryotic DNA is packed around nucleosomes forming chromatin-- when condensed, can interfere w/ transcription
unlike cells, viruses assemble from their constituent parts
1. every living cell comes from a preexisting parental cell (from division of a parental cell); 2. viruses arise by assembly, not by division of parental viruses; 3. x-ray crystallographer, Rosalind Franklin, was instrumental in determining that tobacco mosaic virus virions are composed of 2,310 identical capsomers that are arranged in a helical pattern surrounding a single genomic RNA molecule
new pandemic flu A strains may be able to arise thru mutation
1. gain of function studies have shown mutation can alter H5N1 HA protein so virus can attach to human cells more efficiently; a. could allow transmission directly from birds to humans; b. could make human-to-human transmission easier; 2. 2013 outbreak of avian H5N1 flu among Cambodians, researchers found potentially dangerous sequence variations that arose thru mutations of the viruses while they replicated in infected people
most baltimore class I viruses including polyomaviruses manipulate the eukaryotic cell cycle
1. generally, genome replication among class I dsDNA viruses, relies heavily on eukaryotic cell cycle; 2. host DNA replication proteins present exclusively during S phase; lasts about 1/3 of lifetime of actively cycling cell
subunit vaccines are composed of selected analgesic proteins
1. have only some of the component parts of the infectious microbe; 2. current inactivated vaccines in use for hep. B and seasonal flu
compact retroviral genome is used economically to encode many proteins through the use of polyproteins, alternative splicing, and translation of polycistronic mRNA
1. have small genomes--need strategies to encode more than one protein using same sequence
hepadnaviruses are enveloped and have genomes containing both DNA and RNA in an unusual arrangement
1. includes hepatitis B (HBV); 2. virions = spherical w/ icosahedral capsids, enveloped; envelope has 3 different types of spike proteins
lytic herpesvirus replication involves a cascade with several waves of gene expression
1. includes herpes simplex virus 1, varicella-zoster virus (human herpesvirus 3), epstein-barr virus (human herpesvirus 4), and kaposi's sarcoma virus (human herpesvirus 8); **can cause latent infections
adenoviruses are large dsDNA viruses w/ 3 waves of gene expression
1. infect respiratory organs, eyes, kidneys, gastrointestinal tract, and blood cells; 2. can cause acute bronchitis, pneumonia, pink eye, common cold (mostly rhinoviruses), and others; 3. linear dsDNA genomes, 4-8 times longer than small polyomaviruses and papillomaviruses dsDNA viruses; 4. after entry into its host cell, virus is progressively disassembled as it travels to nucleus--uncoating introduces viral genomic DNA into nucleus
lysis
1. is an option regardless of virus structure & enveloped or non-enveloped; 2. all assembled virions released in one large burst; 3. host cell is killed; ultimately explodes b/c of osmotic pressure
some viruses require maturation reactions during release in order to form infectious virions
1. maturation = any irreversible process that occurs during or after viral release that takes assembled virus from noninfectious state to infectious one
release from bacterial cells usually occurs by lysis
1. most living things, including bacteria, plants, & some protists, have rigid cell walls covering their plasma membranes (PM); a. cell walls squeeze back against osmotic pressure-- protects PM from osmotic lysis; 1. cell in hypotonic environment (solutes outside < solutes inside), water enters cell-- PM can lyse w/o cell wall or other mechanism; b. walls also provide protection against viruses except where viruses have evolved mechanisms to bypass cell wall during penetration & release of offspring virions
release from animal cells can occur by lysis
1. no cell wall to obstruct virus egress, instead, cytoskeleton is key for maintaining cell integrity; 2. viruses that exit thru lysis must disrupt cytoskeleton; 3. late protein (a protease) cleaves the intermediate filament cytokeratin-- intermediate filament no longer able to assemble properly; a. effect = deprives cell of mechanical integrity and makes it much more susceptible to lysis
capsids & nucleocapsids associate with genomes using one of two general strategies
1. once capsomers and genomes arrive at same location within cell, still must assemble
pandemic flu A strains have arisen thru recombination
1. origins of flu A strains that caused pandemics since 1918 have been studied; use approaches that rely on genome sequencing and bioinformatics; 2. viral genomes recovered from tissues of flu victims from 1918-1920 & samples preserved from all subsequent pandemics; 3. growing libraries of swine, domestic bird, and migratory bird samples for comparison; 4. where evolutionary history could be reconstructed, all pandemics caused by antigenic shift when avian influenza recombined w/ other strains of flu
release from plant cells often occurs thru biting arthropods
1. plant viruses must surmount thick cell wall when they exit cell
e. coli cell envelope
1. pm, then periplasm filled w/ loose network of peptidoglycan, & then 2nd lipid bilayer; 2. peptidoglycan = gel-like, v. large molecule, surrounds cell in 3 dimensions like a net-- protects the cell from osmotic lysis
polyomaviruses are small DNA viruses with early and late gene expression
1. polyomaviruses are models for viruses w/ some of shortest known genomes to replicate in animal cells; 2. associated with post-organ kidney transplant malfunction and w/ Merkel cell carcinoma; 3. naked spherical virions-- only 50 nm in diameter; 4. small genome (4-5 kbp) composed of circular dsDNA packaged into nucleosomes; 5. after attachment & penetration, uncoating results in introduction of viral genome w/ its 24 incomplete nucleosomes into nucleus; 6. after nuclear histone H1 joins the viral dsDNA genome-- nucleosomes are same host's chromatin-- viral genome is ready for transcription
poxviruses are extremely large dsDNA viruses that replicate in host cytoplasm
1. poxviruses are largest dsDNA viruses that infect humans (both physical size of virions & length of genomes)
hepadnaviruses use reverse transcription to amplify their genomes
1. replication cycle has many steps associated with gene expression & genome replication-- occur in nucleus
SV40 genome replication requires viral and host proteins to form active DNA replication forks
1. replication of SV40 DNA is arguably the best understood eukaryotic replicon to date; 2. many aspects of SV40 genome replication are similar to those of host DNA replication; unique aspects of viral replication involve large T antigen: a. regulatory roles b. direct enzymatic role during DNA replication
virions more structurally complex than TMV also reproduce by assembly, not by division
1. replication thru self-assembly of component parts makes viruses radically different from host cells; 2. other research provides evidence that more complex viruses also reproduce by assembly
metagenomics will revolutionize evolutionary understanding of viruses
1. results in discovery of 1000s of new viral genomes every year--pace of discovery is accelerating
retroviruses-- viral reverse transcriptases have polymerase and RNase H activity
1. retroviruses have genome of (+) ssRNA; 2. cause HIV among other diseases; 3. viral reverse transcriptase enzymes use an RNA template to synthesize DNA (reverse transcription)-- use DNA template to synthesize DNA (DNA polymerase enzyme)
existing drugs not very effective
1. seasonal flu A viruses already resistant to M2 protein inhibitors (no longer bind to M2 proteins); 2. NA inhibitors may shorten symptoms by one day if taken early during infection, but may not reduce hospitalizations or deaths; **new anti-flu drugs targeting viral enzymes such as RdRp are in development
papillomavirus replication cycle is tied closely to the differentiation status of its host cell
1. small circular DNA viruses; 2. important causes of human disease: a. lytic replication cycle causes warts, including genital warts, b. human papillomaviruses are leading cause of cervical cancer; 3. vaccines now prevent most common forms of cervical cancer by immunizing the population, including males, against HPV
gene therapy = engineered viruses could be used (in principle) to treat cancer and other conditions
1. some diseases caused by inheritance of faulty alleles that encode nonfunctional or dysfunctional proteins/mRNAs; 2. in principle, should be possible to treat genetic diseases thru gene therapy, by providing functional wild-type alleles to cells that need it; 3. b/c viruses are experts at binding to and introducing genes into host cells, are ideal vectors (carriers) for selective delivery of therapeutic transgenes; 4. if therapeutic transgenes could alter the genetic code of stem cells, then single treatment could in principle cure inherited disorder by providing functional gene expressed by correct cells
SV40 forces the host cell to express S phase & uses large T antigen and host proteins for genome replication
1. sv40 in particular: the large T and small t antigens have multiple functions, including manipulation of cell cycle and apoptotic pathways; 2. host cells susceptible to infection by SV40 typically in G0 prior to infection (so do not contain nuclear DNA replication proteins needed by virus); 3. virus must force cell to express S phase genes to replicate its genome; 4. changes in gene expression are accomplished by early nonstructural proteins-- large T antigen and small t antigen; 5. large T antigen interacts with pRB-- prevents pRB from interacting with EF2 transcription factors-- the S phase genes are no longer repressed; 6. large T antigen also interacts with p53-- prevents p53 from promoting apoptosis; 7. small t antigen inhibits a phosphatase complex (PP2A) which would otherwise dephosphorylate pRB; small t antigen therefore further biases the system toward expression of S phase genes
most class I animal viruses rely on host transcription machinery for gene expression
1. transcription by class I animal viruses catalyzed by host enzymes 2. transcription occurs in the nucleus; is catalyzed by RNA polymerase
late SV40 transcription is regulated by both host and viral proteins
1. transcripts initiate from a second promoter in NCCR-- transcription proceeds in opposite direction around genome from early transcriptions
viral genetic diversity arises through mutation and recombination
1. two major sources of change in the nucleotide sequences over time: mutation and recombination
drugs to treat flu target uncoating and release stages of viral replication
1. uncoating = existing drugs that treat influenza infections target M2 & NA; are envelope-associated proteins unique to virus; a. after flu virus enters cell thru endocytosis, cell acidifies the endosome; b. M2 matrix protein allows protons to cross viral envelope-- triggers rearrangements of HA viral spike; c. rearranged spike activates process of fusion of viral envelope w/ host endosome membrane-- genome is released into cytoplasm
polyomavirus replication cycle
1. uncoating releases the genome with nucleosomes into the nucleus; 2. early mRNAs are synthesized by host Pol II; 3. they exit the nucleus; 4. and are translated; 5. making early proteins that manipulate the host cell; 6. early proteins enter the nucleus; 7. and enable genome replication; 8. late mRNAs are produced by host Pol II; 9. they exit the nucleus; 10. and are translated; 11. late proteins enter the nucleus; 12. where they assemble with new genomes; 13. and are ultimately released thru host cell lysis
last stages of virus replication cycle are assembly, release, and maturation
1. viral assembly: a. refers specifically to assembly of capsids w/ genomes; b. is universal to all viruses (although varies w/ viral group); c. enveloped viruses must also acquire a membrane during assembly; 2. release: a. similar in all viruses- 1. result is extracellular infectious particles; 2. different methods of release = lysis and budding
synthesis of mRNA in SV40 is controlled by the noncoding control region
1. virus DNA encodes seven proteins; 2. genomes expressed in nucleus, where host factors needed for mRNA production are abundant 3. genome has 2 promoters facing in opposite directions; are [art of noncoding control region (NCCR)
might be possible to develop bacteriophage therapy to treat people w/ antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections
1. viruses not only microbes that evolve resistance to drugs used to treat them; antibiotic resistance among pathogenic bacteria is an increasing problem; 2. microbiologists interested in developing bacteriophages as pharmaceuticals to treat infection for almost 100 years; 3. USSR was innovative in developing phages as treatment for bacterial infections; 4. phages commonly used in food industry to reduce bacterial loads during food processing
6 large T antigen proteins form hexamers--
2 hexamers bind to ori-- facilitates melting DNA at the origin (separate the strands); **DNA replication then proceeds bidirectionally (aka theta replication)
in principle- rational vaccine design includes antigens that should provoke immune response to protect against all IAV
= development of universal IAV vaccine
concatamer
DNA molecules w/ multiple genomes covalently attached to each other in tandem
checkpoint during G1 is particularly important for DNA virus replication
G1 checkpoint is controlled by growth factors that can stimulate the cell to enter S phase; many host cells susceptible to viral infection are differentiated, thus exist in G0 and therefore have not passed the G1 checkpoint; DNA viruses that replicate in the nucleus typically affect the cell cycle by causing a differentiated host cell to pass the G1 checkpoint in the absence of external growth factor stimulation; dsDNA viruses target cell cycle proteins (growth factors, etc.) to manipulate cell cycle & control DNA replication
all retroviruses encode 3 polyproteins
Gag, Gag-Pol (processed by viral protease enzyme), and ENV (processed by host protease enzyme); HIV-1 also encodes 6 accessory proteins
HSV-1 does the opposite: actively prevents host cell from expressing S phase genes
HSV-1 must encode all proteins needed for DNA replication b/c no analogous host proteins are available; **proteins include those that participate directly in replication as well as enzymes for deoxribonucleotide triphosphate (dNTP) synthesis
what genome type is IAV & what type of polymerase does it need initially
IAV genome = (-) ssRNA and uses RdRp (rna dependent rna polymerase)
small t antigen interacts with:
PP2A (phosphatase) complex and inhibits its activity, thereby preventing repression of S phase genes
what host enzyme is used for transcription of DNA to mRNA
Pol II
why would fewer people infected reduce the chances of avian flu developing the ability to be transmitted from person to person
RNA-based viruses have higher mutation rate b/c RdRp cannot proofread, the more people infected, the more viral replication occurs, and the more opportunities exist for a mutation that will allow it to be contagious from one person to another-- note an increase in probability, does not mean that it can't happen in small population of infected individuals
process of synthesizing the first cDNA strand is discontinuous; the reverse transcriptase begins copying one part of the (+) RNA template before jumping to distal part of template and continuing DNA synthesis, skipping over intervening (+) RNA
RNase H domain essential for jumping reactions
why isn't viral transcription enzyme RdRp, as with many rna-based viruses?
RdRp is an rna-dependent enzyme (template to be transcribed is RNA). Class I viruses are dsDNA, so the host enzyme can transcribe it
vaccines = critical components of effective public health
WHO estimates vaccines prevent 2.5 million deaths each year; vaccine is medical treatment that provokes an immune response
macrophage
a large phagocytic cell found in stationary form in the tissues or as a mobile white blood cell
origin of 1977 influenza pandemic strain is possible exception to antigenic shift as cause
a. 1977 strain is very similar to 1918 H1N1 strain archived in 1950s; b. 1977 epidemic probably caused by accidental release of a frozen lab stock of old H1N1 viruses
several mechanisms trigger switch to late transcription
a. 1st: late transcription typically repressed by several copies of different host proteins; collectively called initiator-binding proteins (lbps) that bind to NCCR; b. initiator-binding proteins remain at constant levels in the nucleus; c. after viral genome has replicated many times, lbps distribute themselves among the many copies of NCCR-- lbp-mediated repression of late transcription alleviated when not enough copies of initiator-binding proteins to bind to all NCCRs; d. 2nd, accumulation of large T antigen in nucleus stimulates late transcription and represses early transcription by binding to parts of NCCR
5 anti-flu drugs on the market
a. 2 (amantadine and rimantidine) inhibit the M2 protein; b. other 3 (oseltamivir, zanamivir, peramivir) inhibit NA enzyme & block budding
vaccinia virus structure is complex
a. 2 different infectious vaccinia virions exist (intracellular mature virus, IMV, and extracellular enveloped virus, EEV); b. both forms contain a core, core wall, and lateral bodies surrounded by an inner membrane; c. larger EEV form has another membranous external envelope w/ viral spikes; d. large linear genome inside composed of 194 kbp dsDNA w/ inverted terminal repeats-- form covalently closed hairpin termini
H1N1 strain of 2009 pandemic is multiple recombinant
a. 3 gene segments including HA originate from swine-H1N1 (contracted from humans in 1918 pandemic); b. 2 genome segments including one encoding NA originate from different swine virus- has recent ancestors in birds; d. last genome segment descended from H3N2 human viruses; originated w/ 1968 pandemic
1957 H2N2 virus is recombinant
a. 5 of its genome segments descend from 1918 H1N1 virus; b. 3 segments, including the 2 encoding HA and NA, originated from a different avian influenza strain
viruses use ESCRT machinery to bud from and exit cells
a. ESCRT machinery is recruited to form an ever-tightening spiral underneath budding virion; b. finally, a cellular ATPase disassembles the ESCRT machinery; c. result = release of enveloped virus
vaccine that protects against HBV:
a. HBV S gene cloned in yeast, where large S spike protein is overexpressed; b. S protein then purified and used in combination with an adjuvant in vaccine
also have an RNase H domain that removes RNA from RNA-DNA hybrids
a. RNase H (or RNH) = non-sequence-specific enzymes that catalyze the cleavage of RNA in an RNA/DNA substrate; b. uses a hydrolytic mechanism (hydrolysis- molecule of water breaks down one or more chemical bonds)
spillover = when disease jumps species barrier, zoonotic spillover includes:
a. SARS-CoV; b. MERS-CoV; c. HIV (chimps to humans); d. pandemic flu A; e. 2013-2016 ebola in Africa started from transmission from bat to toddler; f. SARS-CoV-2, origin unknown, bat viruses have similarities
mRNAs leave the nucleus as normal mRNP particles-- translated in the usual way-- produce the regulatory T antigens
a. T antigens have nuclear localization signals-- cause them to be imported into the nucleus; b. in nucleus, affect gene expression and genome replication; e.g., large T antigen binds to sequences in NCCR-- represses early mRNA production
2nd lambda lysis protein (endolysin) degrades peptidoglycan (in the periplasm)
a. access to periplasm thru pores made by holing; b. result: mesh of the peptidoglycan full of holes large enough to allow virions to escape
recombinant vaccines = attenuated vaccines where attenuated virus engineered to express proteins from another species, ex. adenoviruses
a. adenoviruses (dsDNA) have capacity to incorporate large amounts of DNA from other sources; b. have long been favored as recombinant vaccine vectors and gene therapy agents; possible candidate for universal IAV vaccine
maturation stage (only in some specific viruses)
a. assembled proteins undergo proteolysis (breakdown of proteins or peptides into amino acids by the action of enzymes-- obligatory for virion to be infectious- if type to use proteolysis); b. other cases: proteins must be rearranged in some way for the virions to be infectious; c. maturation events are irreversible; d. maturation occurs during or after release in eukaryotic viruses
once virions are leaving or leave cell surface and successfully bud away, need to avoid:
a. binding to outside cell surface (w/ spike proteins) so escape from cell is impossible; b. re-infecting same host cell
viruses that infect animals (bats, camels, chimps, swine) already adapted to many conditions that make it possible to replicate in humans
a. can replicate at human-like body temps.; b. have also evolved to respond to (defend against) mammalian defenses
at each checkpoint, cell assesses whether completion of cell cycle w/o any mutations is likely, then:
a. continues thru the cell cycle; b. if there is something irreparably wrong, exits the cell cycle-- typically undergoes apoptosis
release: NA is 1 of 2 viral spikes; is enzyme needed during release from host cells
a. during budding, HA spikes on newly formed virions can get stuck to neuraminic acid on surface of former host cell; b. HA enzyme (neuraminidase) cleaves the surrounding sialic acid sugars-- releases virus into extracellular space
following assembly:
a. enveloped virus exits host cell by budding; b. last steps of maturation actually occur at the same time or slightly after budding
two different strategies by which some viruses acquire envelopes
a. formation of internal structures of virion that occur in coordination w/ envelope acquisition process, e.g. HIV; -or- b. acquisition of envelope occurs sequentially after assembly of capsid and genome finished; assembled capsid interacts w/ a cellular membrane that also contains virus spike proteins & pinches off, e.g. flu virus
2 cases where a single HIV-1 mRNA encodes > one protein by manipulating translation
a. genome-length mRNA is used to translate either Gag polyprotein or Gag-Pol polyprotein; b. accessory vpu gene overlaps from env gene, Vpu protein is translated from the vpu-env mRNA thru use of an alternative start codon; c. production of a less abundant Gag-Pol polyprotein requires a -1 ribosomal frameshift
zoonotic flu strain at first not adapted to humans, some viruses unable to replicate in humans or only poorly, but sometimes virus replicates so ferociously that death rate is much higher than for human-adapted flu strains, like H5N1 avian flu virus
a. has 60% mortality rate in people (typical seasonal flu rate is < 0.1%); b. can only be contracted directly from birds; is not transmitted from human to human
NCCR
a. has no nucleosomes; b. plays a crucial role in gene expression & regulation; c. specific sequences & certain host proteins required for early viral gene expression; d. regulatory DNA includes AT-rich sequences, a 21-bp repeat region containing 2 copies of GC-rich sequence, & single 72-bp repeat; e. AT-rich region serves to initiate assembly of the Pol II transcription complex (TATA box)
3rd protein (spanin) needed to breach outer membrane
a. has transmembrane segments embedded in plasma membrane and in outer membrane (spanin spans the periplasm); b. fuses the inner membrane w/ outer membrane
covalent modification of histones alters chromatin
a. histone acetyl transferase enzymes add negatively charged acetyl groups to histones-- move apart due to repelling like charges b. histone deacetylation enzymes remove acetyl groups-- enable close nucleosome packing
sampling diverse environments leads to discovery of many new virus genomes, e.g.
a. human gut is rich source of plant virus genomes b/c of omnivorous diets; b. deep sea hydrothermal vents have diverse virus communities w/ esp. large populations of dsDNA bacteriophages & archaeal phages
bacteriophage lambda (release from host w/ cell wall)
a. infects bacteria that stain negative in the gram reaction-- means they have particular type of cell wall; a. E. coli is gram negative and the host for phage lambda
integrated proviral DNA from a retrovirus is maintained for lifetime of host cell; provides longest lasting expression of therapeutic gene
a. insertion of proviral DNA can also cause cancer, so carries risks
has repeated sequences such as inverted repeats and shorter tandem repeats, found at species-specific locations
a. inverted repeat = reverse order complement; b. tandem repeats = series of DNA bp repeated ≥ 2 times in a row
1st protein (holing) attacks PM
a. is a transmembrane protein; b. clumps together w/ other holing molecules; c. many holing proteins rearrange themselves-- form huge holes in PM
effective antiviral drugs also have good pharmacological properties
a. lack of/minimal side effects (often caused when drug binds to and interferes w/ normal human protein function); b. whether can be taken orally; c. length of time it persists in human body; d. how human body breaks down or otherwise modifies the drug
early transcripts in alternative splicing
a. large T antigen plays many regulatory roles; **b. small t antigen and large T antigen both required to drive cell out of G0 and pass the G1/S cell cycle checkpoint
circular genomes w/ dsDNA, but with gap where DNA is single-stranded
a. longer strand of DNA has terminal protein covalently attached to 5' end; b. shorter DNA is actually a DNA-RNA chimera w/ smaller number of RNA nucleotides at 5' end
what are functions of viral regulatory proteins
a. manipulate the host cell cycle; b. regulate viral gene expression; c. participate in viral DNA replication
HPV
a. naked spherical virions w/ single type of capsomer; b. encodes ≥ 12 proteins, **replication cycle is very similar to that of polyomavirus: after uncoating (including introduction of viral genome into nucleus), host Pol II transcribes viral early mRNAs
1918 H1N1 virus origin in birds
a. not known if it was an antigenic shift; b. after the human pandemic began, humans transmitted it to swine; is important for evolution of later pandemic strains
mutation
a. occurs when mistake is made during replication or a physical or chemical assault changes a nucleotide; b. cellular DNA polymerases have editing functions that keep rate of nucleotide substitutions very low, but many viral polymerases have no editing functions- viral RdRps are particularly mutagenic
viral genomes have size limit based on capsid size as well as mechanism of packaging the genome during assembly and maturation
a. packaging capacity of gene therapy vector = length of nonviral genes that can be inserted into vector
viruses have evolved mechanisms to prevent sticking to or re-infecting host, ex.
a. particular proteins collaborate to remove receptors from cell surface or prevent them from being displayed there initially (so nothing to remove); b. cells infected w/ enveloped viruses: budding in combination w/ metabolic strain on host causes its death
vaccinated people become sick b/c:
a. person has underlying immune deficiency; b. had another infection that altered response to the vaccine; c. attenuated vaccine acquired a new mutation that somewhat restored ability to replicate in humans; d. vaccine strain recombined w/ natural virus and co-infected person; **thus, inactivated vaccines are sometimes preferred over attenuated ones
not all maturation processes are well-understood; ex. studies of viral maturation
a. picornaviruses & HIV- maturation is caused by a viral protease found inside the maturing procapsid; b. procapsid = immature viral capsid that does not yet contain a genome
recombination between different influenza A viruses occurs often in swine
a. pigs more susceptible to avian influenza than humans; b. also susceptible to human influenza; c. when avian influenza replicates in pigs, is selection for offspring viruses that better infect pigs (alpha 2,3 linkage vs. alpha 2,6 linkage in sialic acids)-- also increases susceptibility to humans (due to similarities between pigs & humans, both mammals)
HIV uses 3 main strategies to encode proteins:
a. polyproteins- reduced amount of mRNA b/c mRNA encoding polyprotein has only one 5' UTR, one start codon, one stop codon, and one 3' UTR for entire polyprotein; b. alternative splicing to express proteins w/ overlapping coding sequences; c. translation of polycistronic mRNA
DNA viruses usually block p53
a. prevents apoptosis; b. enables phosphorylation of pRB-- forces the host cell past the G1 checkpoint
viral gene expression cannot occur until viral DNA becomes inserted into a host chromosome
a. process is catalyzed by a viral enzyme = integrase; b. integrase was packaged into virion and traveled w/ viral nucleic acids from cell periphery into nucleus; c. early steps use viral enzymes; some later steps catalyzed by cellular enzymes (vs. viral integrase)
gain of function experiments-- start w/ avian viruses and select those w/ improved transmission among lab mammals
a. purpose of experiments = determine genetic changes that might be necessary for an avian strain to become pandemic--predict likelihood, i.e. number of mutations needed, that pandemic will occur & consider location & human demographics **also to understand molecular bio of transmission
promising strategies in molecular bio to try to reduce chance that resistance can evolve
a. sequence many strains of virus, compare, & look for conserved regions among them; b. if conserved sequences (less than or = 1 amino acid) occur in active site of enzyme or in other surface-exposed regions of protein, can design something to bind/block function of protein
two general methods by which capsids and genomes associate w/ one another during assembly
a. sequential assembly = capsid forms separately from the genome (hollow shell) and is subsequently filled in another step; B. concerted assembly = capsomers & genome come together during genome synthesis assembly-- no separate empty capsid to fill
virions have only a few basic arrangements of capsomers and nucleic acids--determines the mechanism of assembly
a. shell-like capsid w/ nucleic acid inside, ex. icosahedral capsids; b. nucleocapsid in which capsomers coat the genome (tight physical association between the capsomers and genome); c. capsid or nucleocapsid to be surrounded by an envelope
classic experiments of Hershey and Chase
a. sought to determine whether DNA or proteins entered host to direct synthesis of new phages; b. used radioactive building blocks of dNTPs and amino acids to track chemical processes; c. results from measuring new infections: DNA entered host cells and directed synthesis of new bacteriophages, whereas protein remained outside of the host cell, far from the cytoplasmic site of bacteriophage production; d. if some form of division were responsible for virus replication, entire parental virus should have entered host cell (not the case)- also, the radioactive material would both be distributed to offspring phages in about equal amounts (also not true); **later, other research showed that even the complex bacteriophage T4 s/ icosahedral head, helical tail, and tail fibers could assemble spontaneously
new capsids either:
a. trafficked back to nucleus-- release new relaxed circular DNA into nucleus-- more genome copies; -OR- b. targeted for assembly of new enveloped virions
2 well-known poxviruses that infect humans
a. variola virus (smallpox, 1979 = eradicated from natural circulation, samples still exist in US and Russia); b. vaccinia virus (cow pox, used to immunize people to protect against smallpox, very closely related to variola-- induces immunity against both variola & vaccinia viruses, but does not cause disease in healthy people)
cells in G0 contain a complex of pRB protein
a. when bound to other factors-- represses expression of proteins needed for DNA replication; b. when phosphorylated (add phosphate group), pRB cannot bind to other factors that prevent DNA replication-- DNA replication proceeds
membrane invaginating (turning inside) to form vesicle inside multivesicular body is pinched off from outer membrane thru process known as: abscission
abscission catalyzed by protein complexes = ESCRT machinery (endosomal sorting complexes)
preintegration complex also includes at least some capsid proteins-- enable the DNA and its associated proteins to dock w/ a nuclear pore complex
after docking, preinitiation complex is released into the nucleoplasm (inside nucleus)
after entering host cells, capsids w/ genome inside transported to nucleus
after relaxed circular DNA is released into nucleus thru nuclear pore, host enzymes convert it into covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA)
to lyse host cell, bacteriophage lambda encodes different proteins that each attack one of the layers
all 3 proteins expressed late in infection-- is time for assembly of offspring phages before lysis occurs
genomes can be transcribed and translated by software & the proteins they encode can be subjected to bioinformatics analysis
all w/o ever culturing a single virus
what is a protease
an enzyme that breaks down proteins & peptides
antigenic definition
antibody or immune response triggered by antigens on a particular virus-- antigenic shift is a change in antigens that trigger an immune response- often replacement of the HA or NA w/ novel HA or NA
antigenic =
antibody or immune response triggered by antigens on a particular virus; antigenic variation = virus presents many different triggers for the immune system, including many that the immune system is not able to recognize
definition of mutation
any change to DNA or RNA sequence of nucleotide bases
bacteriophages, picornaviruses, and reoviruses
assemble, express/replicate genomes in the cytoplasm
vaccines provoke long-lasting immunity and require few booster shots to repopulate pool of memory lymphocytes
b/c attenuated viruses can replicate in the body & administered to millions of people, attenuated viruses cause small number of people to get sick
gain of function experiments = controversial
b/c of danger that lab-selected strain could escape lab; disagreement regarding whether risks of gain-of-function transmission experiments outweigh public health benefits of knowledge gained
viral world is very diverse
by any measure, e.g. virion size, composition, shape, and enveloped or non-enveloped (naked)
human papmillomaviruses encode about 13 proteins that are translated from polycistronic mRNA
can also encode variants of some proteins
enveloped HSV-1 enters host cell by fusion w/ plasma membrane
capsid is transported to nuclear pore-- viral DNA is released into nucleus (capsid remains in cytoplasm); cellular enzymes in nucleus ligate ends of viral genome together to make circular DNA
many viruses infect terminally differentiated cells such as macrophages or neurons
cell nuclei in G0 phase lack most DNA replication proteins; **progression thru cell cycle not automatic-- is controlled by 3 checkpoints
most class I viruses prevent or delay cellular apoptosis
cells have a mechanism to detect and respond to DNA damage; e.g. body's natural defense against cell transformation that can lead to cancer
inactivated vaccines contain adjuvants
chemicals that enhance immune response by simulating danger (i.e cell death without killing cells)
approx. 147 bp (depending on species) of eukaryotic DNA are wrapped around each histone
chromatin resembles beads (of nucleosomes) on a string in electron micrographs; **histones packed together by a 5th histone protein that binds to the linker DNA between nucleosomes
**unlike polyomavirus: important aspect of papillomavirus replication cycle--
closely tied to the differentiation status of host cells; **papillomaviruses can only infect stratified squamous epithelia, such as that found in human skin; cells in each layer are uniquely differentiated to serve unique functions of each layer
nucleosome
consists of a segment of DNA wound around 8 histone proteins (2 each of 4 different proteins), resembles thread wrapped around a spool
both enzymes also able to copy the (-) cDNA to synthesize (+) DNA--
creates dsDNA copy of a (+) RNA template
although adjuvant improves immune response, inactivated vaccines typically require more boosters over person's lifetime to repopulate pool of memory lymphocytes
current inactivated vaccines in use for one of two types of polio vaccine
cellular machinery that moves viral components from cell periphery to nucleus
cytoskeleton, with motor proteins
have been instances where something went wrong during inactivation process & people injected w/ infectious virions...
danger makes subunit vaccines more attractive b/c safer, although less immunogenic
can also attenuate viruses thru genetic engineering
delete genes needed to cause infection in humans but are not required for growth in culture (then force mutation, rather than waiting for one to occur)
method to stop evolution of more dangerous descendants of H5N1 avian flu =
destroy infected poultry when there is an epizootic (pandemic in nonhuman animals)
disadvantage w/ phages:
difficult to create collection of phages that could reasonably be expected to kill a particular pathogen during a natural infection
subunit vaccines = very safe, b/c do not originate as infectious microbes- however-
do not provoke a very strong response on their own, so boosters and strong adjuvants are necessary
NCCR of SV40 includes many regulatory sites
early promoter drives transcription to the left, and the late promoter drives transcription to the right; **NCCR has an AT-rich region, 3 21-bp sequences, and 2 72-bp sequences, all of which are multifunctional in that they interact with a variety of different proteins depending on the stage of the virus replication cycle
how do most plant viruses infect plants (mode of entry)
entry thru some type of cell damage, usually thru chewing animals, esp. arthropods
retroviruses and rhabdoviruses
enveloped, assemble at plasma membrane
coronaviruses and poxviruses
enveloped, assemble on internal membrane
herpesviruses and influenza virus
enveloped, assemble some components in nucleus & other components at the plasma membrane or at an internal membrane site
what is an endosome/its function
eukaryotic intracellular membrane-bound vesicle, used for transporting molecules & substances around cell
gene expression and genome replication among hepadnaviruses also involves reverse transcription
even though genomes are predominantly DNA
urgent need for new/better vaccines to prevent viral infection
ex. no HIV, MERS, SARS, cancer-causing viruses, or cold vaccines
as w/ RNA viruses w/ RdRp, influenza A has high misincorporation rate (mistakes in copying/mutations)
exhibits high rates of antigenic variation
after entering cell, core of vaccinia virion is released into cytoplasm--
forms a virus factory very similar to VRCs
cccDNA is maintained as an extrachromosomal (not in a chromosome) genetic element throughout lytic infection
gene expression begins w/ host's Pol II synthesizing viral mRNAs and viral pregenomic RNA
w/ many viruses:
genes encoding most abundant structural proteins do not overlap w/ other coding sequences
some viral mRNAs are spliced, whereas the full-length genomic RNA is not spliced
genomic DNA exported to cytoplasm = translation
attenuated vaccines replicate slowly in human body
gives adaptive immune response time to develop
1st gene therapy trials happened in last 25% of 20th century
have been ~2000 trials
virus also expresses a regulatory RNA during late gene expression
helps shut down production of early proteins
groups of viruses that have prodigy virions that escapae by budding
herpesviruses, (-) ssRNA including influenza
terminally differentiated cell
highly specialized cell that does not typically undergo mitosis; have exited the cycle, passing from G1 into resting phase (called G0), vs. continuing to S phase; some differentiated cells remain in G0 for the rest of their life; others can respond to signals (e.g. growth factors)-- induce cell to exit G0 and re-enter the cycle at G1 stage-- then progress thru G1, S, G2, and M
viral replication complex
host proteins & viral nucleic acids assembled on a specific membrane
release from animal cells can occur by budding
in secretory vesicle (material to be secreted from cell), fusion event results in the interior contents of the vesicle from being released; viral budding from PM is opposite of this process
universal flu vaccine desperately needed- to protect people and agricultural animals against most forms of IAV
including seasonal & zoonotic strains
viral genome replication likely proceeds first thru theta replication and secondary thru rolling circle replication
infected cell nuclei ultimately fill w/ concatamers of viral dna
what is latent infection?
infections where host cell contains a viral genome & a few other viral macromolecules, but it is mostly inactive for a long time (i.e., years) and no virions are produced
although seasonal flu vaccines are useful, universal flu vaccine = highly sought after
influenza A (IAV) is major pathogen; causes millions of serious infections and 250-500k deaths every year worldwide
outcome of dsDNA virus infection determined by:
interaction of particular virus and host cell; same virus can have different outcomes in different host cells
first wave of gene expression = production of proteins to counteract host immunity in various ways
intermediate gene expression = induces replication of viral genome; late gene expression = focused on production of structural proteins-- assemble into progeny virions in nucleus-- leave cell thru lysis
rational vaccine design
involves study of immune response to virus to determine which viral antigens are capable of inducing a strong sterilizing adaptive immune response
single infected cell typically produces 100,000 progeny virions
is 10-100 times more than burst size of most viruses that infect animal cells
when cell is co-infected w/ 2 different viruses, can create recombinant (hybrid) offspring w/ new combo of genome segments
is origin of most pandemic influenza strains
polyprotein
large proteins that are digested into individual protein components, each w/ unique activity
DNA replication coincides w/ late gene expression
late genes encode structural and assembly proteins that allow new virions to assemble and ultimately escape from the host cell by budding
late transcription does not occur until genome replication has begun
late genes encode structural proteins needed to complete replication cycle
attenuated vaccines, cont.
made from microbes that can still replicate, to some extent, in human body but cannot cause symptomatic infection in healthy people; attenuated by propagating virus in nonhuman host or host cell under different environmental conditions than those in human body; in situation other than humans, virus must acquire mutations that enable replication
multivesicular endosomes (MVEs) are complex intracellular organelles that function in endocytosis
major function of cell's endocytic pathway: sort internalized macromolecules and membrane proteins; interior contents of vesicular body remains interior to vesicle after pinching off
IAV has segmented genome where major antigenic proteins are encoded by different segments
makes possible for 2 different flu viruses to enter cell at same time
both mutation & recombination (forms of genetic variation) = problematic for vaccine development
manufacturers produce ~500 million doses of vaccine yearly; volume needed means vaccine manufacturers begin many months before flu season; a. manufacturers make educated guess about which forms of flu will be circulating during following flu season-- part of data collection = US manufacturers monitor flu strains in Australia during summer before fall flu season in US (their winter flu)
herpesviruses have very large enveloped virions and large linear dsDNA genomes
many w/ large spherical enveloped virions w/ several distinctive layers, including envelope spikes, outer & inner tegument, and inner icosahedral capsid
ultimately, new virion assembly occurs in nuclear viral factories
mature virions exit host cell thru lysis
RNA vaccines only have to cross plasma membrane (not nuclear envelope as w/ DNA)
may improve possibility of successful in vivo (inside organism) transfection- under certain conditions, mRNA is taken by cells
current attenuated vaccines
measles, mumps, rubella, seasonal flu, chicken pox, polio, rotavirus, yellow fever, and rabies
adenoviruses produce 2nd protein (death protein) that kills cells when it accumulates during late stages of infection & causes lysis
mechanism not understood; other animal viruses that exit by lysis encode proteins that enhance or cause lysis of plasma membrane
most common gene therapy vectors in development today =
modified adenoviruses (dsDNA), parvoviruses (ssDNA), or retroviruses
polycistronic =
molecule of mRNA that can encode for ≥ 2 proteins
natural selection & pesticide resistance-- same principle applies to viruses & anti-viral drugs
more drastic the difference between normal & mutated individuals, the stronger the selection; by contrast, if the pesticide only reduced reproduction somewhat, the selective pressure would not be as strong & it would take longer for the mutant strain to increase significantly in the population
plant cell walls are metabolically inert layers; provide protection from osmotic shock, mechanical strength, and rigid support for whole plant
most plant viruses also require some type of cell damage to exit cells; asexual reproduction in clonal plants can spread virus to different clones arising from same rootstock (virus does not need to cross thru cell wall)
b/c of the differences, viruses cannot use secretory machinery for budding
must use proteins designed for pinching off so that the contents inside of vesicle remain on the interior; such a system exists among host's endosomes b/c contents of endosomes becomes pinched off during normal endosome maturation to form multivesicular bodies (multiple vesicles)
polyomaviruses, papillomaviruses, & adenoviruses
naked, assemble in nucleus
first wave of HSV-1 transcription (immediate early) promotes transcription of next wave of gene expression, also interferes w/ host's immune response
next wave (early gene expression) encodes proteins needed for replication of viral genomes
before Pol II can initiate transcription, chromatin has to be remodeled (spread apart) so the promoter DNA is available
next, transcription initiation requires assembly of a complex array of basal transcription factors
when prodigy virions escape by budding, does the cell usually recover and continue living?
no, cell usually dies- its amino acids, nucleotides, & ATP are depleted, so it cannot maintain homeostasis
do walls protect cells in a hypertonic environment from drying out?
no, cell walls do not prevent water from leaving the cell
checkpoint during G1
normal cell = s phase promoters repressed--no DNA replication (cell stays in G0 phase w/o passing checkpoint), vs. w/o repression of S phase promoters-- DNA replication (cell passes checkpoint into S phase); **the tp53 gene (human version of p53) is the most frequently mutated gene (>50%) in human cancer
late gene expression
occurs after genome replication has begun; late genes encode structural proteins needed to complete virus reproductive cycle
offspring viruses collected and infection under non-human conditions repeated many times =
passaging; virus becomes attenuated b/c now adapted to favor infection of nonhuman cells-- viruses collected from patient and then propagated in avian tissue culture cells at a temp. cooler than the human body, shed viruses are collected and procedure repeated many times-- as virus adapts to in vitro passaging, it becomes attenuated for replication in the human body)
how is peptidoglycan critical in the bacteriophage replication cycle
peptidoglycan degraded as part of new virion release
advantage to using phages to treat bacterial infections =
phages extremely specific- kill pathogen w/o affecting commensal and beneficial microbiota (unlike antibiotics)
DNA replication always begins at the same seq. of DNA, the origin of DNA replication (ori)
present in non-coding control region
prophylactic/preventative vaccines
prevent disease
late transcription terminates approx. halfway around genome--
produces 2 alternatively spliced mRNAs that together encode 4 proteins
viral genes are transcribed by host enzyme (Pol II)--
produces typical eukaryotic capped and polyadenylated mRNA
different forms of the polymerase are specialized for
producing mRNA, rRNA, and tRNA; **RNA polymerase II (abbreviated as Pol II) catalyzes mRNA synthesis
early gene expression
production of nonstructural proteins-- manipulate cell cycle, regulate viral gene expression, & ultimately initiate viral genome replication
gene expression occurs in somewhat overlapping waves
progeny virions assemble in dedicated cytoplasmic viral factories-- released by both lysis and budding
what is apoptosis
programmed cell death; natural pathway used during development and during immune responses; also a defense to protect whole animal from uncontrolled cell proliferation (aka cancer); protect whole animal from a virus attempting to complete its replication cycle
stratified epithelium
proxmial/first layer of cells = basal stem cells, actively dividing to give rise to the rest of the epithelium; midzone cells are nondividing; upper level formed by dead keratinized cells = stratum corneum; **virus can only infect the living basal cell layer; injury is necessary to allow tiny virion to bypass upper layers of epithelium
what is a frameshift
reading frames (3-base codon) are shifted by one or more individual bases, either upstream or downstream, in this case, -1, the ribosome slips back one nucleotide base and continues translation
early viral transcripts
regulatory (non-structural) vs. viral proteins (structural)
herpesvirus genome results in concatamers
replication of HSV-1 DNA takes place in different biochemical context than polyomavirus, papillomavirus, and adenovirus, which force cell to express S phase genes
diseases eradicated thru vaccination
rinderpest (cattle) & smallpox (humans)
what type of assembly would include a procapsid
sequential assembly process (vs. concerted)
sometimes manufacturers guess on target, other times is a mismatch between vaccine and most prevalent form of flu
situation can discourage public from getting vaccinated at all
b/c supply of basal transcription factors is limited, they cannot assemble on all promoters simultaneously
situation provides opportunity for regulating gene expression
alternative splicing used to produce multiple HIV-1 pre-mRNA molecules w/ same promoter
some of exons for one protein overlap w/ exons or introns from other genes
retroviruses are enveloped and have RNA genomes yet express their proteins from dsDNA
some steps of retrovirus reproductive cycle occur in cytoplasm; others occur in nucleus
metagenomics =
study of genetic material recovered directly from environmental samples (collective genome of microorganisms from an environmental sample)
reverse transcriptases do not have 3' to 5' exonuclease editing activity--
their mutation rate is about 10,000 times higher than the DNA polymerase used during host DNA replication: a. reverse-transcribing viruses give rise to offspring populations w/ tremendous genetic diversity
sterilizing vaccinated person completely protected from acquiring viral disease
then viral antigens classified as exhibiting high or low levels of antigenic variation, **best candidates for effective universal vaccine = proteins capable of evoking a strong adaptive immune response and also exhibit low antigenic variation
b/c inactivated virus cannot replicate--does not induce cell death--may be recognized as foreign, but is not recognized as dangerous...
therefore does not result in strong innate immune response (required for long-lasting immunity)
unlike all other groups of dsDNA viruses, poxvirus expresses its genome and replicates its DNA entirely in cytoplasm
therefore, nuclear host proteins not available for gene expression and genome replication, e.g., a. host splicing machinery confined to nucleus; b. b/c poxviruses do not encode splicing machinery, vaccinia mRNAs do not have introns
how do plant viruses infect other cells in the same plant?
thru plasmodesmata
gene therapy can also be used to treat cancer, e.g.
transform cancer cells w/ gene to make them more sensitive to apoptosis or sensitive to pharmaceutical
therapeutic vaccines
treat existing infection
viral replication also causes enough destruction that damage-associated molecular patterns are produced
triggers additional immune response
pregenomic RNA is encapsilated, then reverse transcribed inside new capsid-
ultimately forming new relaxed circular DNA
most diversity at level of molecular genetics
use every possible strategy for encoding protein & many employ unique gene expression & genome replication strategies not otherwise found within molecular hosts
COVID-19 vaccines are only authorized/approved mRNA vaccine
use mRNA to direct cells to produce copies of a spike protein; **researchers studying how mRNA might be used to develop vaccines for additional infectious diseases (research has been ongoing for decades)
after attachment, is partial uncoating of the virus genome; next is long process of reverse transcription where infecting (+) mRNA genome is converted into dsDNA
viral dsDNA enters nucleus-- viral integrase enzyme inserts viral dsDNA genome almost randomly into host genome (unique)
besides high mortality rate, zoonotic flu has possibility that w/ only few mutations in right places--
virus might gain ability to be passed from human to human and still maintain high mortality rate
as part of host antiviral response, host packages viral DNA into heterochromatin (condensed form of chromatin)
viruses have mechanisms to counteract problem-- changes its genome into euchromatin (loose form of chromatin) during lytic infection
recombination (larger scale genetic change than typically classified as mutation)
when 2 viruses coinfect same cell and offspring virus contains combo of genes that originate with both parents (vs. one parent); aka reassortment (sometimes used only for segmented RNA viruses; recombination applicable to all viruses); **form of horizontal transfer
zoonotic disease
when flu or other illness jumps from animals to humans/crosses species barrier
when histones are tightly packed together-- transcription is blocked, vs.
when histones are associated more loosely w/ DNA-- transcription machinery (i.e. polymerase) can access DNA
dna of viral origin, once inserted into host chromosome = provirus
when provirus has formed, viral gene expression can occur
mRNA vaccines
work by introducing piece of mRNA that corresponds to a viral protein, usually for small piece of protein found on virus' outer membrane
reducing # of people infected by avian flu important for reducing possibility of virus developing ability to be transmitted from person to person
zoonotic IAVs that have gained ability to be transmitted from human to human are very dangerous b/c they can cause pandemics w/ high fatality rates