MicroBio Chapter 13: Viruses, Viroids, and Prions
True or False: Viroids contain a capsid but lack an envelope.
False Recall: They do not have a capsid or outer envelope
When two different strains of a segmented virus enter the same cell, reassortment of the gene segments can occur, resulting in ____.
antigenic shift
Through the process of phage ____, a prophage is excised and enters the lytic cycle.
induction
A viral infection in which the viral genome is intergraded into an animal host cell chromosome, yet can reactivate to cause a productive infection, is categorized as a(n) ____ infectious.
latent
Some pathogenic bacteria produce toxins that are encoded on prophage DNA, and these are examples of ____ conversion.
lysogenic
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies are caused by ____.
prions
To maintain the lysogenic state, a ____ protein prevents expression of the gene required for excision.
repressor
Reassortment of gene segments that encode viral surface proteins that are recognized by the immune system can result in a loss of the immune system's ability to recognized and respond to the virus. This phenomenon is called antigenic ____.
shift
A ____ phage can either cause lytic infection or can incorporate DNA into the host genome as a prophage.
temperate
Which are the two major categories of viral infections?
-Acute -Persistent
Which cytopathic effect is a distinct region representing the site of viral replication? -Tumor -Inclusion body -Giant cell -Syncytium
-Inclusion body
Which of the following directs the incorporation of phage DNA into a bacterial chromosome? -Gyrase -Isomerase -Integrase -Polymerase -Lysozyme
-Integrase
Match each possible outcome of phage replication with the correct definition. -Productive infection -Latent state =New viral particles are produced =Viral genome remains silent within the call
-Productive infection= New viral particles are produced -Latent state= Viral genome remains silent within the call
Which of the following are cytopathic effects of viruses? -Syncytia -Inclusion bodies -Elementary bodies -Reticulocytes -Encapsulation
-Syncytia -Inclusion bodies
What mechanism do newly assembled viruses use to leave their host cell? -Triggering endocytosis -Triggering apoptosis -Fusion -Budding
-Triggering apoptosis -Budding
A prion is best described as ____. -an obligate aerobe -an obligate intercellular parasite -an RNA-based infectious agent -a proteinaceous infectious agent
-a proteinaceous infectious agent
When cultivated in flasks, human cells from solid tissues ____. -grown in suspension -adhere to the bottom surface (substrate) -grown as a monolayer -form multi-layered, tumor-like masses
-adhere to the bottom surface (substrate) -grown as a monolayer
True or False: All non-cellular infectious agents are viruses.
False
True or False: Lysogens are more susceptible to reinfection by the same type of phage.
False
True or False: Most bacteria engulf bacteriophages as a part of the phage replication strategy.
False
True or False: When a bacterial culture is infected with a temperate phage, all particles of the phage will lysogenic their host.
False
____ is a change in the phenotye of a lysogen as a consequence of the specific prophage it carries.
Lysogenic Conversion
One of the system of a respiratory virus infectious is coughing and sneezing. This allows. -viral particles to be shed from the host and transmitted to a new host - even more viral particles from environment to access the host respiratory tract
-viral particles to be shed from the host and transmitted to a new host
Viruses that infect bacteria are called ____.
-phages -bacteriophages
The physical rupture of a cell is termed ____.
Lysis
____ transduction is the result of excision errors made as temperate phages transition from a lysogenic to a lytic cycle.
Specialized
Bacteriophages play a fundamental role in which type of horizontal gene transfer?
Transduction
Phage heads that contain only bacterial DNA are called generalized ____ particles.
transducing
Infection of bacteria by ____ phages always ends with lysis of the host cell.
virulent
The number of phage particles released from a host cell is called the ____ size.
burst
Although live animals and fertilized chicken egg have been used to cultivate animal viruses in the past these have now been largely replaced by ____ culture.
cell
In a lysogenized bacterium, ____ of the prophage results in a lytic infection.
excision
Animal viruses _____. -can be grown in bacterial cell cultures -can only be grown in animal cells
-can only be grown in animal cells
Symptoms of acute viral diseases result from ____. -viral budding -host tissue damage -lysogenic conversion -host immune response
-host tissue damage -host immune response
All of the following are common features of primary cell lines EXCEPT _____. -protein synthesis -limitless growth -DNA replication
-limitless growth
Protection of lysogens from infection by the same phage is called ____.
immunity to superinfection
In enveloped viruses, sandwiched between the nucleocapsid and the envelope is the ____.
matrix protein
One of the early proteins expressed in the T4 lytic cycle is an enzyme called a ____ that degrades the bacterial DNA.
nuclease
The binding of a bacteriophage surface protein to a host cell receptor is called ____.
Attachment
In ____ transduction, only bacterial gene adjacent to the prophage can be transferred; whereas In ____ transduction, any bacterial gene can be transferred.
Blank 1: Specialized Blank 2: Generalized