MLS 3312 - Module 4 ALL
Baltimore Classification *Class IV*
(+) ssRNA (-) ssRNA
Baltimore Classification *Class V*
(-) ssRNA
HIV Early Therapy:
(1987) Early therapies only targeted one portion of the HIV lifecycle - AZT (zidovudine) - first antiviral used for treatment, though resistant strains were seen weeks to months after introduction. (Now see HAART)
HAART:
(1995) Saquinavir was introduced (protease inhibitor) and combined with available drugs to create the first combination therapy (HAART) The introduction of HAART has changed the natural history of HIV-1 infection and has *increased the average life span of individuals infected with HIV by decades* *Consists of 3 or more antiviral drugs*
Eclipse Phase (HIV Acute Infection):
(7-21 days) The *period between when the first cell is infected to when HIV is detectable* in the blood - a subclinical phase where HIV sets up low levels of replication in the mucosa, submucosa, and draining lymphatics. During this period HIV makes its way to the *gut associated lymphatic tissues (GALT)*, this is a key anatomical site in acute & chronic HIV infection
Hepatotrophic viruses (tropism):
(Viral hepatitis) Viruses that specifically seek out cells of the liver (tissue tropism) - Hepatitis A, B, C, D, & E
HIV Natural history of infection:
(graph) First couple of weeks - Primary infection, acute HIV syndrome, Wide dissemination of virus, seeding of lymphoid organs --> 9ish weeks to years - Clinical latency, constitutional symptoms, opportunistic diseases, death
Viral set point:
*A stable plasma viral load that is predictive of HIV disease progression to AIDS* - the *CD8 T cell (CTL) response controls HIV replication* to this stable plasma viral load following peak HIV viremia - may persist for years
Capsid:
*Contains viral genetic material* In the case of an enveloped virus, the virion is the entire virus and the nucleocapsid is the capsid and nucleic acid, minus the envelope.
Hepatitis Diagnostic laboratory results:
*Elevated levels of ALT, AST, Bilirubin, PT* (clotting time increased)
HEV Transmission:
*Fecal-oral* - rare in the US, usually associated with *travel*
Mixed essential cyroglobulinemia:
*HCV infection is the most common cause*, Immune complexes form with virus, antibody, complement, and *rheumatoid factor*, Cause symptoms of type III hypersensitivity (rashes and joint pain)
Raynaud's phenomena:
*If exposed to the cold*, HCV patients can develop - pain, numbness, and tingling of the fingers and toes
Hepatitis Common causes:
*Inflammation of the liver*, the specific cause can vary (viruses, alcohol, drugs, toxins, autoimmunity)
**Reverse transcription:
*Initiation of (-) strand DNA synthesis* second template exchange is facilitated by annealing of PBS sequences
Variolation:
*Inoculation* of healthy individuals with material from smallpox pustules into a scratch was widespread in China and India ~1000 A.D.
HDV
*Requires co-infection with HBV* - uses HBV surface antigens to make viral envelope, subviral satellite
HIV At risk populations:
*Risk factors vary by country and the overall economic status of those countries* [MSM, IV drug use, unprotected sex, multiple sex partners, sex workers]; Globally, young woman are twice as likely to be infected than men and HIV-1 is the leading cause of death in women of reproductive age
HLA homozygosity:
*Speeds progression* to AIDS
Nucleocapsid:
*The protein coat (capsid) and the nucleic acid together*
Icosahedral symmetry (capsid symmetry):
*most efficient way of forming a spherical shell to maximize internal volume* (the simplest case is an icosahedral symmetry with 20 triangular faces)
Viron:
*refers to the entire virus* - a complete virus particle that consists of an RNA or DNA core with a protein coat sometimes with external envelopes and that is the extracellular infective form of a virus
Most viruses appear:
*rod-shaped or spherical* under electron microscopy
Chronic carrier (HBV):
- After acute infection is cleared virus persists - Patients can be asymptomatic for 20 - 30 years - Chronic infection leads to liver scarring (cirrhosis) - Hepatoma (liver cancer) results in 15 - 25% of chronically infected - Both cirrhosis and hepatoma can lead to death
Viral history:
- Greece/Mesopotamia (The Iliad, Homer describes Hector as RABID; ~ 1000 B.C. Mesopotamian law dictates how to be responsible for RABID dogs) - Egyptian hieroglyphs depict withered legs, typical of poliomyelitis - Evidence of Smallpox being ENDEMIC in the Ganges River basin ~ 500 B.C. (later to decimate the native peoples of the Americas ~1400 A.D.) - Agriculture and the domestication of animals changed the ways humans and viruses interact
HCV Clinical testing (diagnostic algorithm using EIA, RIBA, NAT:
- Molecular testing for HCV RNA are both *qualitative and quantitative* - After positive molecular test, genotyping is performed because different types respond differently to treatment - Liver biopsy is performed to assess cirrhosis and hepatoma
HCV Treatment:
- No postexposure prophylaxis is available - No vaccine is available - *Pegylated interferon-α + ribavrin* is effective in ~55% of patients - Patients with cirrhosis do not respond to treatment - Transplantation can be performed in liver failure
HIV Antiretroviral Drug classes:
1) *Protease Inhibitor* 2) *Nucleoside Analog Reverse-Transcriptase Inhibitor (NRTI)* 3) *Non-Nucleoside Reverse-Transcriptase Inhibitor (NNRTI)*
Polyproteins (Main):
1) *gag* (group-specific antigen) - core and matrix proteins 2) *pol* (polymerase) - reverse transcriptase, protease, integrase 3) *env* (envelope) - transmembrane glycoproteins, gp120, gp41 Accessory Proteins: tat, rev, vif, vpr, vpu, nef
HBV Viron:
1) Enveloped virus 2) Nucleocapsid core protein: HBc/HBcAg 3) Envelope surface antigen: HBsAg 4) Structural E antigen: HBeAg
HIV Viral diversity and ancestral lineage:
1) Fast replication (10^10 virions/day) with high rate or error (3x10-5 / base / cycle) result in a *high amount of viral diversity* 2) HIV is a *zoonotic infection that crossed into humans* from different primate species (simian immunodeficiency virus - SIV) - HIV-1 : Chimapnzee (SIVcpz) - HIV-2 : Sooty mangabey (SIVsmm) 3) HIV-1 is found throughout the world and the more virulent of the two main strains that infects humans (HIV-2, West Africa and Asia) - HIV-1 has been isolated from African patients in the 1950s 4) HIV-1 is further divided into: - Groups (MNO) - Group M most prevalent and subdivided into 8 clades
Tobacco mosaic disease (TMV):
1) First virus discovered 1892, Ivanovsky 2) Beijerinck discovered the agent causing this disease was ultrafilterable (smaller than bacteria, virus = poison)
HBV At risk populations:
1) Having sex with an infected person 2) MSM 3) People with multiple sex partners 4) Healthcare workers 5) Hemodialysis patients 6) Travelers 7) IV drug users 8) Newborns from infected mother
Shared properties of viruses:
1) Infectious obligate intracellular parasites 2) Genome is either DNA or RNA 2) Viral genome is replicated and directs synthesis, by cellular systems, of other viral components 4) Progeny virus particles, VIRIONS, are formed by de novo assembly from synthesized components in host 5) A progeny virion assembled during the infectious cycle is the vehicle of transmission of the viral genome to the next host 6) TWO principle life cycles - lytic & lysogenic 7) NOT the simplest biologically active agents - viroids & prions
HBV Treatment:
1) No treatment is given for acute HBV infection due to spontaneous recovery 2) Antivirals are given to severely ill patients but little evidence they work 3) Chronic infection with active replication is treated with: - Interferon-α - Reverse transcriptase inhibitors - Severely cancerous or cirrhosis can be treated with liver transplant along with anti-HBV immunoglobulin 4) Five available vaccines in the US
HEV Clinical testing:
1) Rarely performed in the US 2) Immunoassays to detect IgM & IgG 3) RT-PCR (reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction) for detection of viral genome No vaccine or treatment is currently available
HIV Structure:
1) Surface (SU) 2) Strands of mRNA (+) 3) Lipid bilayer 4) Integrase (IN) 5) Reverse transcriptase (RT) 6) Capsid (CA) 7) Nucleocapsid (NC) 8) Matrix (MA) 9) Protease (PR) 10) Transmembrane (TM)
HBV Global prevelance:
1.5 cases per 100,000 US population - greatly reduced by vaccination program started in 1991; 2 Billion people infected worldwide // ~350 million develop chronic infection; HBV tenth major cause of worldwide mortality
HAV Vaccine introduced in:
1995 - greatly reduced prevalence, 1 case per 100,000 in US
AIDS:
<200 CD4+ Tcells / uL
HAV Clinical testing:
A variety of immunoassays exist for testing: - Indirect enzyme immunoassays - Competitive direct enzyme immunoassays - Capture immunoassays
28
Acute HAV occurs after an incubation of _______ days.
HCV Confirmatory Testing
After a positive screen, would perform: 1) Recombinant Immunoblot Assay (*RIBA*) or 2) *NAT*
B, C, and D
Blood borne Hepatitis
HDV Transmission:
Blood borne/Body Fluids
No
Can HAV become chronic?
HDV Clinical Testing
Can be detected by antibody product to HDV antigens and RT-PCR *Can be prevented with HBV vaccine*
HDV Genome
Circular ssRNA (only known *animal virus*) - only codes for two proteins (long and small delta antigen)
Capsid symmetry forms:
Constructed from a small number of protein subunits
ssDNA, dsDNA
DNA viruses contain both _______ and _______
ds (double stranded)
DNA viruses contain mostly ___ DNA
anti-HAV IgM
Diagnosis of HAV usually involves _______
Bacteriophage (phage=eating):
Discovered by Twort 1915 and named for their ability to *lyse bacteria on agar plates*
No
Does HEV become chronic?
milkmaids
Edward Jenner (1790's) observed that _______ were protected against smallpox
Founder Strain (HIV Acute Infection):
Establishes a local site of infection
cowpox lesions
Extracts from _____ _____ protected individuals against smallpox
HAV Transmission:
Fecal-oral
Hepatotrophic viruses are spread through 2 distinct routes:
Fecal-oral: A and E Blood-borne: B,C, and D
HIV Clinical testing:
Generally performed in a *two-step classical fashion* - Screening test followed by confirmatory test HIV-1 Ab ELISA was the first assay developed for screening blood products in 1985 New guidelines issued by the CDC in 2014 to screen for HIV-1/2 antibody and antigen, along with NAT testing
Class IV
HAV falls under which Baltimore Classification?
rash, joint pain
HBV symptoms are similar to other hepatitis infections with the addition of _______ and _______
Chronic cyroglobulinemia:
HCV Chronically infected patients: 75 - 85% develop chronic infection, 60 - 70% will progress to chronic liver disease (5 - 20% will progress to liver cirrhosis or hepatoma [~20 years])
A and E
Hepatitis spread through fecal-oral route
6-7 weeks
How long is the incubation period for HCV?
4 million
How many people are chronically infected with HCV in the US?
HIV
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
HCV At risk populations
IV *drug use* (60%), Blood transfusions prior to implementation of standard testing in 1992
asymptomatic
In HBV most people are _______
Australian Antigens
In HBV, excess HBsAg is produced and forms particles called _______ _______
Viral load vs CD4 cell counts:
Individuals with *Low set points and High CD4 counts* will *survive LONGER and progress SLOWER* to AIDS than people with a high set point and low CD4 count
Yes
Is HAV reportable to the state health department?
Vaccination (vacca = cow):
Louis Pasteur coined the term _______ in the 1800's in honor of Jenner
HAV At risk populations:
Men who have sex with men (MsM), International travelers, Illegal drug users
HIV History of US epidemic/world pandemic:
Most new (~ 70%) HIV-1 infections are transmitted heterosexually and of the ~ 30 Million people world wide infected with HIV-1 half are women
Hepatitis General symptoms (Physical):
Nausea, Abdominal pain, Fever, Malaise, Anorexia, Dark urine, Clay-colored stool, Jaundice - yellowing of skin and whites of eyes (Hepatitis with jaundice - icteric, Hepatitis without jaundice - anicteric)
HIV Clinical definition of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS):
Positive HIV-1 infection (ELISA, Western blot, RT-PCR) with EITHER: 1) *CD4 T-cell count < 200 cells/uL* or < 15% of total lymphocyte population 2) One of the defining illnesses (Cryptococcosis, Pneumocystis, Kaposi's Sarcoma, other *opportunistic infections* and rare or aggressive cancers)
HIV Transmission:
Predominately sexually transmitted infection (STI) can be blood-borne / body fluids
Differences in HIV progression:
Progression to AIDS is variable based on an individuals genetics or pre-existing immune states 1) *Rapid Progressors (RP)* 2) *Long-term Non-progressors (LTNP, viraemic controllers)* 3) *Elite Controllers (EC, elite suppressors)*
ssRNA
RNA viruses are mostly _______ molecules and can be (-), (+), or ambisense
HIV Life cycle:
Receptor recognition (CD4, CCR5 [dual binding], CXCR4) --> Membrane fusion --> Infuse viral RNA --> RT --> Viral DNA (variation) --> Integration (host DNA, provirus DNA) --> Transcription --> Assembly (viral proteins, RNA) --> Budding --> Maturation
RIBA (HCV):
Similar to a western blot, uses synthetic antigens placed on a nitrocellulose strip (C33c, NS5, 5-1-1, c100, and c22 peptides) - *Indirect immunoassay* is performed with *enzyme labeled secondary antibodies*
Diagnostic algorithm:
Since 1989, the diagnostic algorithm for HIV testing in the United States recommended by CDC and the Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) initiated testing with a sensitive HIV-1 antibody immunoassay. Specimens with repeatedly reactive initial immunoassays were then tested with a more specific HIV-1 antibody test, either the HIV-1 Western blot or HIV-1 indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA), to validate those results
HBV Clinical testing:
The levels of antibody are different in acute resolving patients and acute becoming chronic patients. Both antigens and antibodies are detected and have distinct clinical outcomes - HBsAg - Anti-HBs+ (anti-HBsAg) - HBcAg - Anti-HBc+ (anti-HBcAg) - HBeAg - Anti-HBe+ (anti-HBeAg)
HIV Tropism:
There are two HIV-1 tropisms: 1) *Macrophage Tropic (M-tropic, non-syncitia-inducing strain, R5)* - these strains infect cells that express *CD4 and CCR5*, typically *macrophages and effector T helper* cells 2) *T-Topic (syncitia-inducing, X4)* - these strains infect cells expressing *CD4 and CXCR4*, broad range of cells notable long lived *central memory cells and lymphoid progenitors*
HIV Acute Infection:
Usually across mucosal layers (e.g. genital); once exposes, there is a 10 day "Eclipse phase" - cannot detect, can *detect RNA first*
mRNA, Baltimore Classification
Viruses are classified based on their strategies to create _______. This is called the _______.
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) -
Was first described in homosexual men in the US in 1981; HIV-1 was identified as the causative agent in 1983
40%
What % of HBV patients need hospitalization?
In 1% of cases the disease is fatal - Pregnant women infected and in their third trimester have a nearly 30% mortality - If previous liver damage present mortality can be up 70% in infected people
What % of HEV cases are fatal?
40%
What % of HEV infected individuals become ill?
70%
What % of acutely infected HCV patients asymptomatic?
Class VII
What Baltimore Classification does HBV belong to?
Class IV
What Baltimore Classification does HEV belong to?
Class VI
What Baltimore Classification does HIV fall under?
Class IV
What Baltimore Classification is HCV under?
Hepeviridae
What Family does HEV belong to?
Total anti-HAV
What can be used to assess HAV immune status?
HIV1/2 Ag/Ab combinations
What does the HIV screening method test for?
Picornaviridae
What family does HAV belong to?
Hepadnaviridae
What family does HBV belong to?
Flavivirdae
What family is HCV part of?
90 days
What is the incubation period for HBV?
2 weeks to 2 months
What is the incubation period for HEV?
0.8%
What is the mortality rate for HAV?
0.5-1%
What is the mortality rate for people with HBV?
NAT
What method is used for HIV confirmatory testing?
5%
What percentage of HBV infections become chronic?
35%
What percentage of people infected with HAV are hospitalized?
Stool
What specimen are high levels of the HAV virus found in?
2 weeks prior to symptoms, 1 week post symptoms
When are high levels of HAV found in the stool?
HLA-B*27 and HLA-B*57
Which HLA variations *slow HIV disease progression*?
HAV
Which form of hepatitis can people NOT be re-infected with?
Symptomatic
_______ HCV patients are less likely to progress to chronic infection (like HBV)
CCR5-Δ32
_______ is a 32 bp deletion in the CCR5 gene which infers *HIV resistance* (predominate in northern European populations)
cowpox, vaccinia
_______ virus and _______ virus are not the same. At some point during the history of passing cowpox from animal to human vaccinia appeared... no one definitively knows how
*Non-Nucleoside Reverse-Transcriptase Inhibitor (NNRTI)*
binds allosterically at a site away from the active RT pocket
HBV Transmission:
blood-borne / body fluids
HCV Transmission:
blood-borne / body fluids
Tropism:
cells that express specific surface receptors, which make them permissive to infection by a particular virus or bacteria
Naked viral particle:
does not have an envelope
Baltimore Classification *Class I*
dsDNA
Baltimore Classification *Class VII*
dsDNA-RT
Baltimore Classification *Class III*
dsRNA
Complex particles (capsid symmetry):
form complex capsids with structures that are poorly understood (e.g. Retroviridae,)
Enveloped viral particle:
has a *lipid membrane* acquired from the host that surrounds the capsid
HDV Also called:
hepatitis delta virus
Positive strand / SENSE (+):
immediately translatable information
Lytic
infection resulting in lysis
Lysogenic
infection results in the integration of viral DNA into host genome (PROPHAGE)
Viroids
infectious agents of plants, a single molecule of RNA
Prions
infectious protein molecules
*Nucleoside Analog Reverse-Transcriptase Inhibitor (NRTI)*
nucleoside analog that blocks RT binding pocket
HBV Genome:
partial dsDNA
Protease Inhibitor
prevents the cleavage of viral polyproteins which prevents the formation of a mature HIV virion
Helical symmetry
rod-shaped
HAV Genome
ss(+)RNA
HEV Genome:
ss(+)RNA
HCV Genome:
ss(+)RNA - six genotypes with 50+ subgroups
HIV Genome
ss(+)RNA (two copies)
Baltimore Classification *Class II*
ssDNA dsDNA
Baltimore Classification *Class VI*
ssRNA-RT DNA/RNA dsDNA
Platonic Polyhedra Symmetry
tetrahedron, icosahedron, etc. (spherical)
Negative Strand / SENSE (-)
the *complement* to a positive sense DNA or RNA molecule
HCV Screening Testing
third-generation *indirect enzyme immunoassay* using a mixture of *viral antigens on microbeads* - measures structural and nonstructural antigens *qualitatively*
Helical symmetry (capsid symmetry):
two-dimensional lattice and rolled into a cylindrical structure
Nonhepatotropic viruses:
viruses that primarily infect other cells but can infect cells of the liver - *Herpesviridae:* Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV-Mono), varicella zoster (chicken pox), cytomegalovirus (CMV)
*Rapid Progressors (RP)*
will progress to AIDS in ~ 2 years or less
*Elite Controllers (EC, elite suppressors)*
~ 1 in 300 of infected will not progress to AIDS and maintain undetectable viral loads
*Long-term Non-progressors (LTNP, viraemic controllers)*
~ 7% of infected will not progression to AIDS even after decades of low-level viraemia in the absence of treatment (< 2,000 copies/mL)