Transcript Viruses

Viruses
Is a Virus Alive?
• Viruses are not considered living because
they are missing key characteristics of
living organisms.
Viral Structure
• All viruses have nucleic acid and a capsid.
Nucleic Acids
-The genetic material of a virus can be
either RNA or DNA.
RNA versus DNA
• DNA viruses
– The genetic material can become inserted into
the host cell’s DNA or may remain separate
– The virus makes copies of its DNA by using the
host cell’s enzymes and nucleotides.
• RNA viruses
– When the genetic material of an RNA virus
enters a host cell, reproduction can take place
by 2 methods.
Capsid, Nuclear Envelope, and
Bacteriophages
• Capsid- protein coat that encloses the
genetic material.
• Envelope- a membrane surrounding the
capsid.
• Bacteriophages- viruses that infect bacteria
and have complicated structures.
Reproduction
• Viruses can reproduce by a lytic life cycle
and a lysogenic life cycle.
Lytic Cycle
• The cycle of viral infection, reproduction,
and cell destruction.
• Viruses that reproduce only by the lytic
cycle are often called virulent.
Lysogenic Cycle
• When viral DNA becomes part of its host cell’s
DNA, the virus is called a prophage.
• When the host cell replicates its own DNA the cell
also replicates the provirus. New cells produced,
then, also contain the provirus. In this process, the
host cell is not destroyed. = lysogenic cycle.
• A virus whose reproduction includes the lysogenic
cycle is called a temperate virus.
Viroids and Prions
• Viroids and prions are molecules that are
able to reproduce and cause disease.
– Viroids- a single strand of RNA that has no
capsid.
– Prions- are misshapen versions of proteins that
are found in the brain.
Roles of Bacteria and Viruses
• Bacteria play an important role in the
environment and in industry. Both bacteria
and viruses are important in research.
Bacteria and the Environment
• Bacteria play a vital role in all Earth’s
ecosystems.
Bacteria and Industry
• Bacteria are important in a variety of
industries.
– Example:
• Many of the foods we eat, such as pickles, soy
sauce, and sourdough bread, are made using
bacteria.
Bacteria, Viruses and Research
• Bacteria and viruses have been very
important in genetic research.
Koch’s Postulates and Disease
Transmission
• The 4-step procedure for identifying a diseasecausing agent. (= a pathogen)
– 1 = the pathogen must be found in an animal with the
disease and not in a healthy animal.
– 2 = the pathogen must be isolated from the sick
animal and grown in the laboratory.
– 3 = When the isolated pathogen is injected into a
healthy animal, the animal must develop the disease.
– 4 = the pathogen should be taken from the second
animal, grown in the lab, and shown to be the same as
the original pathogen.
Bacterial Diseases
• Bacteria can cause disease by producing
toxins and destroying body tissues.
• Toxins- poisonous chemicals.
Antibiotic Resistance
• Antibiotics – chemicals that inhibit the
growth of or kill micro-organisms.
• Development of Resistance
– Antibiotic resistance is the ability of bacteria
to tolerate antibiotics.
– Antibiotic resistance spreads when sensitive
populations of bacteria are killed by antibiotics.
As a result, resistant bacteria thrive.
Consequences of Resistance
• Diseases that were once easy to treat with
antibiotics, such as staphylococcal
infections, are now more difficult to treat
because of resistance to multiple antibiotics.
Viral Diseases
• Because viruses enter host cells to
reproduce, it is difficult to develop a drug
that kills the virus without harming the
living host.
Emerging Diseases
• Emerging diseases are infectious diseases
that are newly recognized, that have spread
to new areas or a new host, or that have
reemerged when a disease that was once
considered under control begins to spread.